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| Deep Space Nine What We Left Behind, we will always have here. |
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#121 |
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Admiral
Location: In the Before Time - the Long, Long Ago
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Re: TheGodBen Revisits Deep Space Nine
Still, they're certainly not enough to save the episode.
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Vote Obomney 2012! "All governments suffer a recurring problem: power attracts pathological personalities. It's not that power corrupts but that it's magnetic to the corruptible." - Frank Herbert, Dune |
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#122 | |
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Rear Admiral
Location: Ireland
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Re: TheGodBen Revisits Deep Space Nine
Dax (**) In some ways, this is a vital episode of the show, but it's not an episode that holds up to repeated viewing. It's clearly based on the desire to explore the nature of the Trill and how the host/symbiont relationship works, and that something that DS9 needed to explain, especially since these Trill appear to be different from the ones shown in TNG. But that's the episode's weakness because most of the episode is centred on people explaining stuff that I already know. It's possibly the most realistic interpretation of a court proceeding that I've ever seen as it involves people repeating the same points over and over again with nothing dramatic happening. Well, one dramatic thing happens at the end, the revelation that Curzon was having an affair with the wife of the man he is alleged to have murdered. I was going to say that this is a get-out-of-jail-free card, but I guess Dax having an affair with a married woman is a stain on the character. Still, it leaves the case unresolved and we never get closure on whether Jadzia should be responsible for any crimes committed by the Dax symbiont. In fact, it's difficult to buy into the notion that there's no precedent in Trill laws or customs as to whether the joining of host and symbiont creates a new person. Even if this is a new area for Bajoran law, surely they would lean heavily towards what Trill or Federation law has to say on the issue. Sisko tells Kira to look into this angle of the case, but it seems that Kira just forgets and it's not brought up in the rest of the episode. Ultimately, this is an interesting concept for an episode that doesn't quite follow-through, and it gets quite dull if you've seen it before. That being said, there's two interesting things in this episode from the perspective of someone that has seen the whole show. The first is that the Dax symbiont was involved in murdering someone when it was joined with Joran, so it's not hard to imagine that Curzon may have had similar impulses on some level. Secondly, the episode ends with Curzon's ex-lover telling Jadzia to live a long life, followed by a long shot of Jadzia to finish the episode. My initial instinct was to chuckle, but the shot of Jadzia standing there smiling was almost tragic.
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...so many different suns... |
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#123 |
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Admiral
Location: In the Before Time - the Long, Long Ago
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Re: TheGodBen Revisits Deep Space Nine
I'll give this episode credit for fleshing out the nature of the Trill, especially since they changed SO much from the TNG version of the species. But, the episode really needed some energy. It just drags, almost to a standstill in places. Meh, only if you like Jadzia. ![]() I kid, I kid. I don't hate her that much.
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Vote Obomney 2012! "All governments suffer a recurring problem: power attracts pathological personalities. It's not that power corrupts but that it's magnetic to the corruptible." - Frank Herbert, Dune |
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#124 |
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Fleet Captain
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Re: TheGodBen Revisits Deep Space Nine
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#125 |
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Commodore
Location: Staffordshire, United Kingdom
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Re: TheGodBen Revisits Deep Space Nine
These days I can tell that she was maybe the weakest link in the cast, but I still like her somewhat. Season one is definitely where she was a bit dull, so this episode goes to some lengths to explain just what her deal was. I enjoyed how stubbourn she was in not saying anything because of what happened with Curzon and the wife. It's was somewhat honourable. I agree that Curzon killing someone would have been a better hook, but I suppose we got Joran further down the line. I understand your point of the episode repeating things that we know now over and over again. I still see it as a brighter spot in the first season, which isn't hard really at this point.
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I love how coffee makes me feel. It's like my heart is trying to hug my brain! |
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#126 | |
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Admiral
Location: In the Before Time - the Long, Long Ago
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Re: TheGodBen Revisits Deep Space Nine
I've been called a sexist, accused of being against womens' empowerment and accused of only liking women to be submissive just for saying that I don't care for her character.
__________________
Vote Obomney 2012! "All governments suffer a recurring problem: power attracts pathological personalities. It's not that power corrupts but that it's magnetic to the corruptible." - Frank Herbert, Dune |
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#127 |
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Admiral
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Re: TheGodBen Revisits Deep Space Nine
She's probably my least favorite character out of the regulars (not including Jake, who isn't around nearly as often as the others).
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#128 |
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Admiral
Location: In the Before Time - the Long, Long Ago
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Re: TheGodBen Revisits Deep Space Nine
I'll wait until TheGodBen gets to that episode to say what helped me realize my dislike for Jadiza.
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Vote Obomney 2012! "All governments suffer a recurring problem: power attracts pathological personalities. It's not that power corrupts but that it's magnetic to the corruptible." - Frank Herbert, Dune |
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#129 |
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Rear Admiral
Location: Ireland
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Re: TheGodBen Revisits Deep Space Nine
The Passenger (*) In my time as a TV viewer, I have seen many horrific things. I've seen a man poison his wife and son before shooting his brains out. I've seen a body, semi-dissolved in acid, come crashing through a ceiling. I've seen a woman floating in space, shooting laser-beams from her hands and feet while screaming her head off. But none of those things can prepare yourself for the horror of Sidig el Fadil playing Rao Vantika. It's the sort of thing that nightmares are made of. I can't quite get my head around what happened there, he has played Dr Bashir quite well up until now, finding that grey area between being obnoxious and strangely likeable. But that Vantika scene is just plain bad, not just the stilted voice and weird facial expressions, but also his reaction to being shocked by the <tech>. As a story, it's straight-up TNG, so this gets a point deducted for that. The story itself isn't that bad, and handled differently it could have been a good episode, but as is it's rather humdrum with a terrible finish. There's also the fact that the episode raises interesting issues that don't get developed in a satisfactory way. The ability to download your brain into an SD card is raised, but not really addressed. The episode ends with Kajada vaporising the hard drive containing Vantika's brain, which is arguably murder (or execution without trial). That's not addressed. The Kobliad are dying out without the magical deuridium. That's not really addressed. Quark aides Vantika in his crime. That's not addressed. The best thing about this episode is the conflict between Odo and Primmin and how Odo feels his authority is threatened. Primmin isn't a particularly interesting character, but he doesn't seem like a bad guy and apologises once he realises he was out of line. He's also a competent officer, preventing Vantika's plot to disable the station when Odo missed it. He may have been a valuable recurring character if he had stayed around for more than two episodes, but he's also not a great loss.
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...so many different suns... |
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#130 | |
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Admiral
Location: In the Before Time - the Long, Long Ago
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Re: TheGodBen Revisits Deep Space Nine
![]() As for el Fadil - yeah, I can't get my head around why he's so awful in this episode either. It's true that he has played Bashir fairly well up until now and of course he'll only get better at it as the series progress. But whenever he plays someone who is not Bashir, he tends to falter. He has the same problem, IMO, with Mirror Bashir, though that performance is certainly no where near as bad as this one. I've seen him in other works as well, and he often seems a little off. Maybe he was just able to completely lose himself in the Bashir character and thereby deliver a good performance, but anything outside of that character is more difficult for him. I have the same opinion about Jolene Blalock. I thought she nailed the role of T'Pol perfectly. However, anything else I've ever seen her in has been dreadful. Maybe Bashir and T'Pol just happened to be tailor made for these two actors. ![]() As for Primmin - while not a great addition, I am pleased that he's essentially an "outsider" character coming into the realm of the main cast and yet isn't corrupt or thoroughly incompetent.
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Vote Obomney 2012! "All governments suffer a recurring problem: power attracts pathological personalities. It's not that power corrupts but that it's magnetic to the corruptible." - Frank Herbert, Dune |
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#131 |
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Admiral
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Re: TheGodBen Revisits Deep Space Nine
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"What do you hear, Starbuck?" "Nothing but the rain, sir." "Then grab your gun and bring in the cat." |
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#132 |
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Rear Admiral
Location: Ireland
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Re: TheGodBen Revisits Deep Space Nine
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...so many different suns... |
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#133 |
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Rear Admiral
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Re: TheGodBen Revisits Deep Space Nine
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--DonIago It was the best of Trek, it was the worst of Trek... "If I lean over, I leave myself open to wedgies, wet willies, or even the dreaded Rear Admiral!" |
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#134 |
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Vice Admiral
Location: Cardăsa Terăm--Nerys Ghemor
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Re: TheGodBen Revisits Deep Space Nine
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Are you a Cardassian fan, citizen? Prove your loyalty--check out my fanfic universe, Star Trek: Sigils and Unions. Or keep the faith on my AU Cardassia, Sigils and Unions: Catacombs of Oralius! |
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#135 |
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Fleet Captain
Location: In here. In my mind.
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Re: TheGodBen Revisits Deep Space Nine
What's odd about it is you see actors do this kind of thing all the time, where they get to act out of character and be all evil or whatever... and almost always the results are at least interesting. But here it's just awful. At least it doesn't last very long.
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I feel like I'm having a conversation with one of the bulkheads. |
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These days I can tell that she was maybe the weakest link in the cast, but I still like her somewhat.
She's probably my least favorite character out of the regulars (not including Jake, who isn't around nearly as often as the others).










