Yup. You can tell he's stung when Sisko mentions Wolf 359.
Yup. You can tell he's stung when Sisko mentions Wolf 359.
I highly recommend Diane Carey's novelization of this episode--especially with regards to this scene. Sisko's conflict of "dont blame this man...don't blame this man..." is well depicted, I must say.
I highly recommend Diane Carey's novelization of this episode--especially with regards to this scene. Sisko's conflict of "dont blame this man...don't blame this man..." is well depicted, I must say.
Thanks for the recommendation. I intend one day to pick up all of the DS9 novels and give them a read. It's just going to take a while!
I just noticed I misspelled "Danar" through my entire review. I was tired--but that is a very embarrassing mistake for a Cardassian to make!
speaking of the Bajorans and their relationship with the Cardassians have either of you (NG and DN) read The 34th Rule?
speaking of the Bajorans and their relationship with the Cardassians have either of you (NG and DN) read The 34th Rule?
I have, yes. I enjoyed it.I'm guessing you're thinking of the insane Colonel who, having internalized the brutality the Cardassians inflicted so seriously, he wanted to be "the Gul". That was disturbing, and also fits what Nerys Ghemor says about some Bajorans essentially adopting Cardassian mindsets themselves.
Sorry, I'm missing where that quote comes from and what it refers to?
No, it's not just you. The writers apparenetly always thought of Garak as heterosexual, but Andrew Robinson said he played him as "omnisexual", until "it started giving people fits" so he decided to tone it down.And then there's plain (HA!) simple (HA!) Garak. He had a VERY interesting introduction indeed...though one would think a tailor wouldn't be caught dead wearing what he was wearing. (UNLESS...unless...he was taking a rather subtle poke at some of the hideous things Federation civilians wear?That's the ONLY way I can understand that green abomination.) One thing to me that was immediately obvious--though I tried to tell myself that I was imagining it...is that Garak was definitely hitting on Bashir. Whether or not Bashir was interested--there's a lot more ambiguity there. Not to mention that with how unbelievably, hilariously oblivious Bashir was to other things in this episode, we may never have even had a chance to know given that he probably would've missed anything short of an outright declaration of "I WANT A DATE."
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Well I have to say I have no idea what you mean! What popped into your mind?OK, just re-watched "Past Prologue."
The first thing I found myself wondering, just as I've seen other people speculate on in DS9-related threads, is how this episode would have been tackled...indeed, how it would have been written today. I know, certainly, that my perspectives have shifted. The person that I was when I first watched DS9, and who I've become now...definitely very, very different. And I realized there's only one reason that these plots still work, to my mind.
And that is the conduct of the Cardassians during the Occupation--which was, of course, WAY beyond the pale. Given that the Bajoran Resistance was fighting an enemy that was CLEARLY committing atrocities, we are able as viewers to sympathize. And yet even back then, before the way society changed, it was clear that there are lines you just don't cross, whatever the provocation, and that Tahna Los had gone WAY over that line.
But, I must admit there was part of me that, when Gul Donar began his "I Told You So," felt like Sisko and the Feddies deserved it. If it hadn't been for Kira having an attack of conscience, the naive Starfleeters would almost certainly have been played and Kira would likely have died a traitor, never having a chance to repent for her mistake. (Or at least Odo would've had a MUCH harder time gathering the necessary evidence to stop things from getting out of hand, before time ran out.)
I do think this episode could've taken an interesting, even darker turn, if Sisko had been forced to make good on his promise to the Cardassians...a promise that I think helped set DS9 further away from its TNG origins. I simply cannot imagine Picard playing that kind of hardball, and the fact that Sisko did--wow. (On the other hand, such a scenario would've been right at home on RDM's later work, Battlestar Galactica...and I must note how interesting it is as a nuBsG fan to watch DS9 and see some of the "roots" of certain things that were explored in greater depth on nuBsG.) But considering this is Trek we're talking about, and Sisko hasn't actually had his major dalliances with the devil yet, even the very threat must have been shocking to Trek fans of the time.
And then there's plain (HA!) simple (HA!) Garak. He had a VERY interesting introduction indeed...though one would think a tailor wouldn't be caught dead wearing what he was wearing. (UNLESS...unless...he was taking a rather subtle poke at some of the hideous things Federation civilians wear?That's the ONLY way I can understand that green abomination.) One thing to me that was immediately obvious--though I tried to tell myself that I was imagining it...is that Garak was definitely hitting on Bashir. Whether or not Bashir was interested--there's a lot more ambiguity there. Not to mention that with how unbelievably, hilariously oblivious Bashir was to other things in this episode, we may never have even had a chance to know given that he probably would've missed anything short of an outright declaration of "I WANT A DATE."
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But let's put aside any possible shipping (which I'm not 100% sure of myself, anyway), and look at something else interesting: Garak's motivations in letting Bashir overhear the deal he cut with Lursa and B'Etor. Why would he do something so beneficial to his people, something likely to result in setting Tahna up for arrest, and let a Starfleet officer overhear? I think there are a LOT of possible motives here. I wonder which one you guys will think is likely? Or is it all or none of the below?
1) A move to curry favor with Starfleet and thus avoid getting kicked off the station--and being able to continue as a spy.
2) A way to LOOK good to whoever he's reporting to--and then burn them in revenge for ditching him on the station, without looking like he's involved in it. ("Oh, the Feddies just happened to figure it out. I have NO idea how THAT happened!") From what we now know, this would frak with both the Obsidian Order AND with Central Command at the same time.
3) Maaaaaybe some part of Garak was a little bit tired of all the bloodshed and torture, at least right in that moment? Getting Tahna caught by the Federation certainly ensures different treatment than letting Donar do it. (Though I would say, if this theory is true, it would be a temporary sentiment brought on by the first shock of exile.)
My last point has to do with the Cardassians. It's very strange to me, knowing what we know about them by the end of the series, to see them played as strictly bad guys in this episode--well, except for Garak, of course, who is...who knows what. But when you think about it, it really is remarkable just how far the Cardassians are going to come. At this point in Trek history, we've only had one clear hint of something different with a Cardassian...and that is Glinn Daro in "The Wounded." So given that, the way they're played here makes sense. But isn't it amazing just how far the Cardassians will come from this point?
All the way to a point where at the very end, when Tahna insults Kira as a "traitor," the first rebuttal to pop into my mind was in THE most inappropriate tongue possible--the language I created because of how I was inspired by what the Cardassians eventually become!![]()
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