Goodness, how this thread has taken a life of its own! It's been nearly four pages since I did the last Week; DS9's first season took a mere five pages to wrap up.
Sykonee, re this "special occasion", is this something to do with the mid-point of the show? But, then again, Season 1 was only 19 episodes, so... I'm confused!
Indeed right. Well, actually, I don't know if
Return To Grace is the Absolute Middle of DS9 (oh God, I still have some Calculus terminology stuck in my head), but it's the middle episode of the middle season, which is good enough for me. That means we're about half-way done! But, considering folks are making predictions that are four years away tells me I better get crackin' on this again. So...
Week 19: (Ending 02.05.96)
B5 -
Voices Of Authority (Airdate 02.01.96)
DS9 -
Return To Grace (Airdate 02.05.96)
VOY -
Meld (Airdate 02.05.96)
After all those stand-alones, B5 comes back with more arc stuff -clever, heading into Feb Sweeps and all. However, despite starting out as though we were going to get a big, rollicking adventure in finding the First Ones,
VoA turns somewhat straight-forward and predictable. It's entertaining and all, just not exactly gripping. It feels like a lot of stuff is being set up for future episodes, especially so considering the Clarke Conspiracy's now out in the open.
DS9 seems to be the same as well, although more heavy on the character stuff than the arc stuff. It's got the Klingons involved again (hey, remember they were the bad guys now?), the continuing story of Dukat's life, and, um... hmm, that's about it, really. Hey, it's strong character stuff, and shakes up the DS9 universe a little bit more, which is always good. Still, it lacks something the viewer can feel properly attached to, and it's primarily because it's a Dukat episode, who's still a supporting character at this point. There does seem to be the promise of him being more of a player in future shows though, since he now has a 'proper' personal connection to Kira.
It's surprising, then, that VOY actually comes off better than either show, especially so since there isn't any apparent arc stuff. Mind, we've sort of come to expect that from VOY at this point, so you only hope that a stand-alone episode is good. If you're one for a gripping episode of psychological tension and trauma, then you're in for a treat. If not, well, you're still in for a treat. Alright, so it isn't much of a stretch to see Dourif as a mentally-instable killer -hell, we 'just' saw him in a similar role in the last episode of B5 (though technically that was 'two months' ago

)- but he pulls it off so well, why should we complain? It's the crux of what happens to Tuvok, though, that's fascinating. We seldom get the opportunity to see Vulcans lose all control of their emotions in such the way we see here, and Russ pulls it off excellently.
Who wins? VOY, by a bit of a squeaker over DS9. B5 was good too, but too focused on moving plot without it being overly eventful, and lacking focus on its characters to make up for it (though Ivanova was plenty entertaining). DS9 seemed to be in the middle of these two, doing a Character Episode within an Arc Episode without going full-out with an Event Episode. VOY, in simply being a strong Character Episode, is able to effectively hold your attention with a striking dilemma.
But we're
all winners for such a solid week of TV.
Weekly Winner
VOY
Next:
DS9 -
Sons Of Mogh
VOY -
Dreadnought
B5 -
Dust To Dust