^ITA!
Frankly, DS9 fixed a major flaw in Worf's character: namely, the "enemy beats Worf so we know it's tough" gag.
In TNG, when Worf fights someone--75 to 90% of the time, he's knocked flat. For all the talk on the show about his being a great warrior and fighter...he almost always loses miserably. Note "Conspiracy". When the possessed Admiral Quinn fights Riker, it takes a much longer time to knock out Will--when he's thrown across the room, Riker is still concious and calls security. With Worf, however--when he's thrown across the room in the exact same manner--he's out for the count, and it's up to Dr. Crusher to zap Quinn.
In DS9--that all changed, to the legendary point of having him fight and beat all the Jem'Hadar unit's best fighters in "By Inferno's Light".
And for that...I will always be grateful.
^ITA!
Frankly, DS9 fixed a major flaw in Worf's character: namely, the "enemy beats Worf so we know it's tough" gag.
In TNG, when Worf fights someone--75 to 90% of the time, he's knocked flat. For all the talk on the show about his being a great warrior and fighter...he almost always loses miserably. Note "Conspiracy". When the possessed Admiral Quinn fights Riker, it takes a much longer time to knock out Will--when he's thrown across the room, Riker is still concious and calls security. With Worf, however--when he's thrown across the room in the exact same manner--he's out for the count, and it's up to Dr. Crusher to zap Quinn.
In DS9--that all changed, to the legendary point of having him fight and beat all the Jem'Hadar unit's best fighters in "By Inferno's Light".
And for that...I will always be grateful.
was helped more by being on DS9 than DS9 was helped by the Worf character.
Feel free to disagree.
DS9 remained a great show whether Worf was there or not but the attn to character...he grew and became a likable person.
My Worf-facepalm moment was in Qpid when Worf takes on the portly Sir Guy and gets knocked down. Sure, Worf gets up, but Picard is forced to call a retreat, and the look on Worf's face that Sir Guy got away spoke volumes. I mean, no way Worf would ever lose to that guy, NO WAY.
With that said, while I'm glad that DS9 gave Worf the combat feats he should've had from the start, I'm also glad the show developed his sense of humor and personality a bit more. He's still the loyal, fiercely devoted Worf we've always known, but now he's not so stiff and he seemed to act more comfortable than before. The latter I'd chalk up to just character evolution and the fact that Dorn had played him for years, it just happened on DS9.
Strangely enough, I didn't like his relationship with Jadzia, but I greatly enjoyed the way his character played off the other regulars: nostalgia with O'Brien, his respect of Odo and Kira, the stature he held over Bashir, his deference to Sisko, etc. Some relationships could've been better developed (Odo and Worf in particular), but it was nice to see a different team dynamic. Sometimes I like to juxtapose TNG and DS9 using Worf as the center of two circles, and it goes to show that the two crews weren't carbon copies and weren't interchangeable -- they were both unique and competent in their own right.
Frankly, if Bashir is a "child" in Worf's eyes...our Klingon friend is guilty of projection. Worf is often a proverbial four-year-old. He's cool, don't get me wrong...but often immature.
Productively, the addition of Worf didn't work. DS9's ratings did not improve, and we all know that in the TV industry characters are added to boost ratings.
Artistically, it did improve it somewhat. We saw more development of Klingon culture and more of the essence of the Worf character (stuck between his Klingon heritage and his life in the Federation). That said, I preferred TNG Worf to DS9 Worf. Of course the basic traits were the same, honour-bound, stoical, a man a few words. But Worf in DS9 was sometimes too grumpy and mopey, something that wasn't there in TNG.
I think it's because in TNG, Worf was one of the major comic characters, along with Data to some extent. Because Worf is a stoical character, placing him in comic situations or giving him comic lines melds well with the stoicism. In DS9, most comic material was cited via Quark, and the Ferengi in general.
I was initially stoked about Worf coming to DS9 and I really liked his introduction. But I felt that his time there was mostly superfluous. I think he got lost in the shuffle a bit, but the writers eventually found something for him to do, pairing him with Jadzia, and I do think he shined more during the Dominion War. I also liked his relationship with Ezri. I thought that was well done.
Overall I just think he was a better fit on TNG because he stood out more. On DS9 he didn't seem that much different than a lot of the characters on there.
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