Just updating this thread to acknowledge that it hasn't been active for the past week or so. I've been fairly busy these last few days, but I have every intention of proceeding with DS9. I've left off partway into "The Circle".
Don't worry, I plan to keep going.Don't stop now!
Just updating this thread to acknowledge that it hasn't been active for the past week or so. I've been fairly busy these last few days, but I have every intention of proceeding with DS9. I've left off partway into "The Circle".
This is probably the most concise and accurate summation of Kira, and it's also the reason I love her as a character. In S1, she had several solid episodes that established who she was at the end of the Occupation, her growth of the entire series makes her the best character in Trek, IMHO."Progress"- When Kira chooses to burn down Mullibok's house to get him to leave the moon of Jeraddo, it's a real make-or-break moment for her character. You really begin to see that under all the hostility and toughness she tries so hard to exude, Kira ultimately acts out of desperation. She desperately doesn't want to leave Mullibok to die, she desperately doesn't want to be the thing she fought so hard against but has become ("the uniform"), and she is desperate to do what is best for Bajor. We're beginning to see that Kira isn't mean or cruel or uncaring, she is wounded.
It's one of the best episodes of the franchise."Duet" is one of the best DS9 episodes.![]()
- It's because of this that I've just watched "Emissary", and will have to continue with the entire series. So, thanks @USS Firefly and @CRM-114. This is not a complaintWhat could be more important than watching DS9?
From what i recall (haven't seen the episodes in years) the episodes deal with the deceptive nature of politics, how people self-deceive themselves and are deceived by others. Li Nalas is a parallel to Sisko, a chosen political hero like Sisko is a chosen religious icon, neither asked for their role but has to deal with it. You also have their counterparts, Minister Jaro (a self-made politician) and the Kai (a self-made religious leader) who are jealous and want the status they can't earn. In the end, Li Nalas choses to be a hero even though he was originally accidentally taken for one. I don't know if there is more the episode is trying to do other than make those points. It is a stand-alone series of episodes that don't really tie into the larger seasonal arc or series.All right, I'm back, starting in on Season 2, episodes 2 and 3, "The Circle" and "The Siege".
Overall, I'd say that the three-parter was okay. It started strong but ended fairly weakly. Li Nalas, whether a consequence of the writing or the performance, never quite makes the impact the show wants him to be. It's almost as if he's too much of a regular guy, instead of a guy who rises to the occasion and really earns his status as a hero.
Also, there's no payoff yet to Minister Jaro, and the realization that he was being used by the Cardassians, or the consequences of his being the mastermind of a failed coup. He should be out of power at this point, but the end of "The Siege" doesn't really address it.
Still, I appreciate that the show explores the fragile nature of life on Bajor post-Occupation. This is a world in which its' people are still picking up the pieces after decades of brutiality and exploitation and it left an atmosphere where people could in turn exploit others for their gains. The Cardassians were practically counting on the Circle learning all the wrong lessons from them.
From what i recall (haven't seen the episodes in years) the episodes deal with the deceptive nature of politics, how people self-deceive themselves and are deceived by others. Li Nalas is a parallel to Sisko, a chosen political hero like Sisko is a chosen religious icon, neither asked for their role but has to deal with it.
It is a stand-alone series of episodes that don't really tie into the larger seasonal arc or series.
..but I hope it really takes off in Season 3.
The Ferengi episodes were a mixed bag, some good, some bad, some middling, though the same can be said about Klingon episodes.
Yep, some of them were great: "Little Green Men," "House of Quark," etc.
Others . . . not so much.
In general, I think the Ferengi work best when they clash with other cultures, like 20th century humans or Klingons or whomever. When it's all Ferengi all the time, as with Quark's family dramas, it can get tiresome.
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