The Siege
Synopsis
The Bajoran military leads the Coup d'Etat and takes over DS9. Sisko, O'Brien, Bashir, the Bajoran war hero and John McLane hide in the vents of DS9 and resist the occupiers. Kira and Dax try to get to the Bajoran civil gouvernement to present proof that the Coup is orchestrated by the Cardassians.
Review
The big conclusion to the 'circle' arc. And it's an alien takeover story. On the other series the starship is taken over every other week. But on DS9 this is a really big event. And all about the takeover works really well. What doesn't are the conclusions from the plot threads from the previous episodes. But more on that later.
Pros
-The episode feels big. The Bajoran warships approaching, the evacuation of all non-Bajoran personal and visitors of DS9 is a huge event, and some of the Starfleet personal staying behind and our main characters saying farewell to each other really hits home the importance of the events.
-The Starfleet personal crawling through the inner workings of DS9 has a good 'Die Hard'-feeling to it. The duell with the Bajoran military is both technological and psychological.
-I really like the interactions between Kira and Dax on their voyage to Bajor. Dax is afraid of the big dog-spider on Bajors moon, and Kira is a hardened resistance fighter.
-When they fly to Bajor there is a very nice starfighter battle in the atmosphere.
Cons
-The conclusions to the plot threads from the previous episode really fail to live up to their premises:
~The circle is 'defeated'(?) by prooving they were armed secretly by the Cardassians. An information that was acquired by one of Quarks shady contacts. Like the secret prison camp in the first place. None of the important plot information was discovered by our heroes. And don't tell me an armed Insurrection is halted by an argument of whom backs them up. They are fanatics. They should have fought 'till the end (at least the leaders of the circle, probably not the military supporting them).
~Sisko resisting on DS9 is ultimately meaningless. The only part that was important was Kira and Dax getting the proof to the gouvernement (they don't have transporters or Mail in the future?). Sisko could have left the station with the rest and it wouldn't have changed the outcomings of the story.
~The story about the former Bajoran resistance leader is the biggest dissapointement: He contributes absolutely jack sh*t to the overall story. He gets rescued in the first part, is unconfortable in the second, and dies in the third. But his death is ultimately meaningless. He doesn't contributes anything to the story about the Coup d'Etat, and his death doesn't solve anything. It doesn't even unite the Bajorans after the big struggle, nor does it help to stop the bad guys (neither the military nor the civilian leaders). The story would have worked completely without him (probably even better, as it would have reduced the number of minor characters).
-All in all the episode felt very bloodless. It was a freaking Coup d'Etat and an occupation of the station! I would have expected at least a FEW dead guys at the end of the day (other than the Bajoran fighter pilots. whoops).
This episode gets quite a few awards:
Set course to crash - Award
After the fighter battle, the Bajoran fighter with Kira and Dax in it crashes off-screen. Kira wakes up outside and learns she got 'hurt' (she has no wounds, but her uniform is tattered) but both survived. It has ALL the tropes of a Star Trek shuttle crash.
+ 10 character shields - Award
The fighter Kira and Dax are in takes at least five hits from the two Bajoran fighters and is still working. They shoot the bad guy once(!) and he immediately crashes and burns. Now that's how Star Trek battles usually go. But usually our heroes are in their superious Starfleet vessels and the bad guys have some thirld-world starships. But this time it was an important plot point that Kira and Dax flew in a run-down, barely functional 10 years old, never maintained piece of crap, while the bad guys got brand new Bajoran military fighters. The only reason Dax and Kira still live is because they are main characters and immune to be gunned down by evil mooks.
Cave set counter: #2
This time, the cave set is used as one of Bajors moons.
Grade
7/10
The plot and the resolutions to the plot threats barely make sense. It's style over substance. But this episode is just so much fun to watch! It has enemy take-overs, battles of wits, starfighter battles, phaser battles, it moves quickly forward and has a very strong narrative. All while providing great character moments (Kira and Dax on a mission, Jake and Sisko saying goodbye, the departing from DS9), all while showing grand and important events (the conflict between Starfleet and the Bajorans, the evacuation of DS9, etc.).
Finally, some general thougts after the first big arc:
The Bajorans in general
The Bajorans still don't feel like a major Star Trek race. They feel exactly like all the other aliens of the weeks from TNG and VOY. The ones that are basically humans with one special character trait and one(!) bit of Latex make-up in their face. They are bland. The only characteristics they have is that they have a religion and once were occupied by the Cardassians. There is literally nothing else defining them. It is as if DS9 has a whole series set around one boring alien race of the week. I'm much more interested in Quarks Bar and what lies beyond the wormhole. Bajor is, as of now, the weakest part of DS9 as a series.
Vedek Bareil is probably the least interesting character to ever appear on Star Trek. Wesley and Neelix at least trigger an emotional reaction. Bareil is just bland. This guy is so perfect, he belongs in a shampoo commercial and not a drama. I'm actively rooting for Vedek Winn to try another assassination attempt at him and succeeding, just so that I don't have to see him anymore...
The three-part story arc
The story arc as a whole is a bit hit and miss. I think it's comparable to TNGs Redemption (the klingon civil war two-parter) and Unification (where Old Spock wants Romulus and Vulcan to reunite) in that all of them are big political stories about a major Star Trek race (Klingons and Romulans in the first, the Bajorans in the latter) where ultimately an evil race wants to invade something (The Romulans wanting influence on the klingons, to take over Vulcan, and the Cardassians Bajor). This three-parter doesn't reach the perfection of TNGs 'Redemption', it's more comparable to 'Unification' in terms of quality. 'Unification' has the stronger guest characters (Spock and Sela compared to a bunch of Bajorans) and a much better conclusion, where all the main characters contribute to the finale. But overall I would say the DS9-three-parter was a bit more enjoyable, especially considering it manages to hold your attention over three(!) consecutive episodes. The biggest problem of 'the circle' is that it wasn't planned out very well (if at all). It seems more like the writers decided where the story was going while they were writing it, and so a few plot threads came out of the blue or fell flat in the end. But you definetely have to give the creators of DS9 props for trying something completely new (a big thematically arc over many episodes). I would rather watch someone trying something new and not succeding on all fronts than watching them do the same stuff over and over again (lookin' at you, late Voyager and early Enterprise...). I think the writers learned a lot about handling characters and plots in longer arcs and are willing to try something new, so overall the story arc is a big success for the series. And all the while it was very fun and entertaining!