2x20
"The Maquis, Part I"
"I'm glad to see you had no trouble finding us, Ben. It seems that one disaster after another keeps bringing us back together again."
-Calvin Hudson
So, we've finally arrived at the formal introduction of the political group largely created with Star Trek: Voyager in mind. While a thousand Trekkies could argue for a thousand days and a thousand nights about whether or not the Maquis in the Delta Quadrant live up to the potential provided in their setup, I'd rather just stick with the Deep Space Nine presentation. Which is good, because as I recall, they're done quite nicely back home in the Alpha Quadrant, anyway.
Building on events recently developed in The Next Generation's "Journey's End", the construction of a Demilitarized Zone between Federation and Cardassian space and the signing of a treaty to that effect is causing quite a bit of harm in the name of peace. Various colonies once belonging to both sides have now found themselves on the opposite end, and so everything many of the colonists have known is thrown aside when they're told to abandon their worlds or find themselves in Cardassian space, abandoned by the Federation, or vice versa. TNG had already made it known that this matter was not going to be a simple one, shoved under the rug; "The Maquis" two-parter goes a long way toward furthering that sentiment.
The Bok'Nor, a Cardassian freighter, is stationed at Deep Space Nine; we see a quick shot of an apparent Starfleet maintenance officer tampering with something, then we see the Bok'Nor exploding as it departs the station. Probably one of the more effective teasers in the show's run as of yet, this likely got folks going back in 1994 for the simple fact that it looks like that's a human fiddling around with things and quite possibly responsible for the destruction of the ship. In the Federation utopia of the earlier 90's Trek seasons, this would have been a big shocker. Oh, almost an aside, Kira and Dax have a conversation played for humor about one Captain Boday before all this goes down. I'd leave this out of the review were it not for the recurring mention of said captain later on in the series.
The investigative scenes that play out for some time thereafter are handled well, with enough character and impact to avoid the dreaded Trekkian Technobabble Overload (TM), a common disease among Starfleet officers and their allies which spreads quickly with no known cure. It's been known to contaminate entire episodes, killing them with the merciless vigor and determination of a Heisenberg compensator and a cross-phasic Baryon sweep combined. It can even derail reviews with frightening accuracy.
Thankfully, the dialogue in "The Maquis, Part I" is recognizable even throughout these proceedings.
More interesting than anything Dax or O'Brien discover, however, is the sudden arrival of some much-needed backstory (and, soon enough, character development) for Sisko in the form of Lieutenant Commander Calvin Hudson, an old friend we've never heard of played by the talented Bernie Casey. In true form to anyone Sisko knows, Dax must know them too, and indeed Cal was friends with Curzon as well. There's a very foreshadowing line here when Hudson tells Sisko he wished it didn't take a disaster to bring them together. The recent loss of Hudson's wife goes a long way toward explaining how he could find himself making the kind of stand we later learn he's made, and the chemistry between Brooks and Casey is top-notch.
A web of complex intrigue continues to spin, one of Deep Space Nine's many hallmarks of excellence shining brightly today. The man who sabotaged the Bok'Nor is abducted, but not before we see him consorting with a Vulcan woman, who Quark soon takes a strictly selfish interest to. (That's the Quark I know, not some love-starved twit.) The woman, Sakonna, soon reveals that what she desires are weapons of all kinds, and Quark, not the sort to deal in such a trade directly, acts as the middle-man he loves to be. The scenes between Quark and Sakonna, the Ferengi and the Vulcan, are highly successful because they're played for all the laughs they're good for and really highlight the array of differences between the two cultures, while still somehow maintaining a degree of respectable similarity through analogy and metaphor.
The arrival of Gul Dukat into the slow-cooker is all the more welcome as Marc Alaimo delivers his A-game yet again. Here in "The Maquis" is where the multifaceted, brilliant relationship between Dukat and Sisko is truly born, and we see more into Dukat's character in just the first episode than we've seen thus far. Here, he's boldly three-dimensional, and he shifts from calm, coy and collected to crisp, chiding and cunning as quickly as he pleases. And yet this is that same demon we saw in "Necessary Evil", that same devil who was last prefect during the Occupation. Everything the writers do here works: from his arrival to 'assist Sisko in house-cleaning', to his gradual proving to Sisko that matters in the Demilitarized Zone are out-of-hand, to the little revelation that the man has seven children. If the chemistry between Brooks and Casey is respectable, the chemistry between Brooks and Alaimo is extraordinary, and no doubt the production staff saw this.
All this talk of characters and chemistry, and so little on the story. Dukat arrives to bring Sisko to the DMZ, but en route, the pair witness a conflict between a Federation merchant ship and Cardassian vessels which ends in disaster despite Dukat's attempt to prevent it. They soon arrive at the Volan system, where we meet the character of Gul Evek, who makes several franchise appearances around this time, once again. He is Hudson's Cardassian equivalent, an attache to the Demilitarized Zone for their side of the game. Also present are influential people across the formerly-Federation colonies shaken by the recent treaty, and it's heated. Hudson is present as well, and in a variation of the classic 'court room angst on all sides' angle, things go harshly for everyone involved. And then we learn a startling fact: a full confession of a Federation terrorist responsible for the bombing of the Bok'Nor, the man apprehended on the station. He also just so happened to have 'killed himself' afterward. Very Cardassian.
A fight breaks out, and when it's over, Sisko and Hudson are alone and share their best scene of the episode. Hudson is adamantly anti-Cardassian despite his position, because in spite of it he's seen the truth. The Cardassians are far from cordial with their new, formerly Federation guests, and the real grip to this scene is the fact that Commander Benjamin Sisko, Starfleet, is trying desperately to see a Federation utopia angle here and fixate on that, but Lieutenant Commander Calvin Hudson, Starfleet, is making him realize that things are deadly serious around these parts and the Federation hasn't done a damn thing about it. This is imperative to the success of Sisko's character in part two, but obviously we won't get into that just yet.
There's also a blatant continuity error in the script here, where Sisko states that not long ago, the Cardassians were secretly shipping weapons to a Bajoran extremist group via a third party, the Yridians. He is, of course, referring to the events of the season opener, but it wasn't the Yridians the Cardassians were working with. Funnier still is Hudson's response: "That sounds about right." No, it doesn't! I feel it necessary to subtract about a half-point for making such a mistake, but in the grand scheme of things this error is nothing but a piece of trivia.
Sisko and Dukat continue to steal the show despite terrific Sisko/Hudson pairings, reminding us endlessly that above all else, "The Maquis" is the best Benjamin Sisko story up to this point. In particular, Dukat's 'don't give me your Federation holier-than-thou dogma' line strikes true; it's like the sharp, biting blade of a dagger just slashed its way into Jean-Luc Picard's beating artificial heart in order to remind us viewers that no matter how much of a paradise Earth may have become, there will always be conflict, always animosity, somewhere. Anywhere. It's the core of Deep Space Nine's human element in a lot of ways, and its first real incident is here in season two. More on that paradise thing later...
And then there's the Sisko/Kira scene soon after that. This is certainly one of their best. Not only does it highlight the marked differences between them, but it also continues the beating into Sisko's head that these dark times are probably justified. And that no one is completely sacred, or above such violence. Sisko is the perfect captain (well, commander at this point) to go through these things, because when first we meet him he's already lost his wife in a bitter struggle. He's already darker than the rest. When Kira calls the Federation 'even more naive than she already thought it was', and Sisko doesn't do a thing to defend it, this really rings true. Feel that, Picard? I'm sorry, buddy, and I love you, and I'm gonna let you finish, but someone just stabbed you again. Hard.
Dukat gets kidnapped, Sisko gets bitched at, Kira and Odo bicker, Sisko goes guns-blazing to find The Maquis and... bam, the last piece of the episode and Hudson's a Maquis leader. The relevance of his previous statement to an old friend comes full circle here, when he notes that one disaster after another is what's bringing them together. We're left on quite the cliffhanger.
Yes, I really liked "The Maquis, Part I".
Rating: 9/10