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Appreciating Nor the Battle to the Strong

Bad Thoughts

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Today is a big day for my son. It is his 11th birthday, and it is his last day of elementary school. His school held a "moving up"/graduation ceremony yesterday. As they were calling up kids to get special awards, I started to worry how he would feel if he got nothing. My son is very smart, but he daydreams like no one else. He needs focus and organization without a doubt. I would have hated if he felt that there was a ceiling to his abilities. Yet he won and award for computer class. I was really happy, but also relieved that he received solid affirmation of his abilities (strangely, he and his buddies were the only boys to get awards in academic subjects.)

We let him open some presents early and took him to his favorite restaurant. Late last night, after everyone else was asleep, I look for a Trek episode to watch. I threw on Nor the Battle to the Strong. I know some people dislike the episode because it shows a type of cowardly behavior that they don't think should exist in Roddenberry's 24th century. I've seen it as, first, an episode about how people face war and, second, a father worrying about his son. It was in the light of the latter that I decided to watch it.

What I hadn't appreciated enough before was the story about Jake maturing. On its surface, the title is about facing war and violence, and how what makes one a hero might arise from the same motivations that might also make one a coward. But the Biblical verse from which it is drawn is more about the futility of trying to control our fate in absolute turns. As the Yiddish saying goes, "Man plans, but God laughs." The episode revolves around Jake's own misperceptions, his desire to fit the things happening around him into a tidy story in which right and wrong are clearly defined and greatness derives from the character of the individual. The story--the mature story--he finally tells is one about his experiences, not the tropes he wants to affirm. All this is not to say that I should not prepare my son, to help him with lessons, but not to see the course of his life in terms of those lessons. He will fail, succeed, and grow in ways I cannot predict.
 
I love this episode of Deep Space Nine, even though it does go against the Roddenberry vision. But it's an extremely powerful character piece, and like mentioned above, it's about Jake maturing. Jake's a "Starfleet Brat" who, aside from Wolf 359, hasn't personally had to face battle, and certainly not up close. I also liked the episode for not doing the standard Star Trek happy save. I expected Jake to be able to save the guy in the ditch. This one and Siege of AR-558 are both very good "horrors of war" episodes, in my opinion.
 
I really like this episode. It's much better than that "Siege or AR..."(That episode annoys me). I always love the voice over episodes like Data's Day, Doctor's Orders, and Pale Moonlight. I wish there were more produced.

Deserving of Praise:
-Jake pretending to follow along with Bashir's MedicalBabble in the shuttle, while he's really tuning it all out.

-Nice, rare accurate portrayal of the medical staff in a war zone. They joke around a lot about what are pretty horrific circumstances. This is exactly what people do in real life, especially in a combat zone.

-A nice portrayal of Bashir working as a professional. When I see Bashir exhausted after a long day in surgery, or the way he carries himself in the d-fac, I really get the sense that this is a real doctor that knows what he is doing.

Deserving of...something else?
-Cliché "Siege of..." suffers from never ending Hollywood war movie clichés. This one has a few, but I think they still help the story. There's the guy who shoots himself in the foot. I think this cliché was fine as they follow up with him later in the episode. It works well actually. The other one is the dying soldier in the pit. Again, it's not there for no reason, but is an important plot related conversation.

So I guess my only complaint is:

That stupid look on Jake's face for like all of the episode after he abandons Bashir. I seriously think it would have been much better if he just looked depressed and guilty. The guy's a good actor. Why did they have him look so constipated?
 
I really like NTBTTS, it's a really good Jake story and shows how him as a reporter/writer could've fit in well with the show (something they never really exploited, even with him staying on DS9 during the Dominion occupation). It also shines more light on the parent/child dynamic, with a boy becoming a man and a father learning that he has to let his son spread his wings--though still moves heaven and earth to protect him when the moment comes.

The scene at the end between the Sisko's is also very touching.
 
So I guess my only complaint is:

That stupid look on Jake's face for like all of the episode after he abandons Bashir. I seriously think it would have been much better if he just looked depressed and guilty. The guy's a good actor. Why did they have him look so constipated?
The guy eats a lot of jumja sticks and Idanian spice pudding. Constipation is bound to happen.
 
"Nor The Battle" is one of those that has JUST enough little execution flaws to hold it back from being truly great, though I do like it. I'm always happy to have a Jake story, the Jake/Bashir pairing is a good one, DS9's examination of the Federation underbelly makes for good drama, it's a smart way to use Jake the writer, the location is well-realized. I've never been on board with the criticism that this episode is problematic because it shows Federation characters behaving in a cowardly way. The back half of the episode is just overwritten -- if they just pruned these speeches some, it's could be one of the great episodes, instead of just a solid one. I do view "The Siege Of AR-558" as the truly exceptional execution of this same basic concept.
 
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