Vortex
Synopsis
Quark is an accomplice to murder. No one cares. The suspect whispers 'shapeshifter' and Odo is completely under his spell. DS9 is interesting again. NOW WITH SPACE BATTLES!
Review
This episode started awfully mediocre, with a lot of bad DS9-season-one-tropes. Quark cons a (as it's later reveald innocent) man into staging a robbery, leading to the murder of a criminal. Sisko and Odo are dickheads to the alien twin of the murdered. Seriously, even if he's a gangster, having his brother killed is a tragedy. And Sisko and Odo should sympathise with him, not talk down to him with "see crime is no good?".
The twin swears to have revenge, and the (suspected) murderer is in Odos jail. After he tells Odo about a colony of changelings and shows him a shapeshifting artefact, Odo is completely smitten to his charms. And then it's Odo and him alone in a runabout, bringing him to his homeplanet where he should be trialed. Been there, done that.
But then something happened.
Odo may have looked completely gullible. But he isn't. He is still a man of honour, doing his job. And even though he desperately wants to find out more about his people, he's still reliable! It's the furios twin, following with another spaceship, that forces Odo to change course. We learn that the backstory of his suspect is actually quite more complicated and convincing. He does everything (even crimes) to protect his little daughter, but once she is saved gives in, and in the end even saves Odos life and tells him everything what he knows, even giving him his little gimmick. Odo, being convinced of his innocence, let's him go, to live as an outsider on Vulcan, a strange alien world, much like he himself does on DS9. (Even though he could have used his testimony to convict Quark, but that's a different story). Making this quite an emotional journey!
And there's a bitchin' space battle in a nebula at the end!
Pros
-The story started slow, but turned out to be great!
-The space battle at the end was awesome! It looked much better than most space battles in TNG, and because of the superb model work even better than a lot of the later CGI-battles
-The vulcan ship exploring the Gamma quadrant was so nice to see! And it adds a lot to the world-building.
Cons
-Why did Sisko decide to transfer the guy back to his homeworld in the first place? He is suspected of murder, there should be a trial and prosecution! The Federation did not have an extradition treaty with his people in the Gamma quadrant. For all they know, they could lie and not punish him after all, or put him on a death row without a proper trial (turns out, he was innocently convicted on his homeworld the first time).
-The Quark-subplot goes nowhere. At this point, Quark is involved in so much serious crime there's literally no reason why anyone still allows him to be on board (besides being an interesting character of course). A few chady things here and there, okay. But currently we have robbery, murder, small arms traffic and what the hell not. That's a bit much.
Others
-How does Odos shapeshifting work exactly, especially in the beginning of the episode? I totally believe that he can change his volume. But unless he's a walking nuclear reactor, there is no chance he could change mass (and thereby weight). So when he changed into the glasses Rom served during the robbery, Rom should really have wondered why a few drinks weighted as much as a human being. Also, can Odo split up? Because he was the glasses, the tablet fell on the ground!
-A few of the shots were recognizable re-uses of the Mutara nebula from Wrath of Khan. But for a TV-show there was a remarkable number of new VFX-shots!
-Another species from the Gamma quadrant turns out to be just rubber forehead aliens. But DS9 is relatively good with them. On TNG and VOY I often asked myself if they even had a make-up departement for their aliens of the week.
Grade
7/10
Started slow, became a really good episode in the end.
Dr- Evil-Award
Quark: For conning an innocent man into a staged robbery, leading murder.
Honourable mention: Sisko. For transferring a suspect, not a convict to a civilisation he knows nothing about, especially not how their justice system works.