The whole Pah-wraith arc was shark-jumping, I though.I wasn't keen on Dukat suddenly getting religious, either. I thought it didn't fit his character to actually believe it.
The whole Pah-wraith arc was shark-jumping, I though.I wasn't keen on Dukat suddenly getting religious, either. I thought it didn't fit his character to actually believe it.
I wasn't keen on Dukat suddenly getting religious, either. I thought it didn't fit his character to actually believe it.
I'm curious: would you have felt differently if the explanation was: Nog needs to get away; he could go on a cruise, but he'll be close to home in the holosuite?Ezri gave the okay for Nog to be treated by Vic. Without her, they would probably have hauled him out of the holosuit and made him see a conventional therapist.
I'm curious: would you have felt differently if the explanation was: Nog needs to get away; he could go on a cruise, but he'll be close to home in the holosuite?
I think that when most people evaluate Ezri in this episode, it is on the basis of her inaction. Indeed, you seem to suggest that the only thing separating Nog from direct intervention is Ezri's recommendation, and that he should be in intensive therapy. However, Ezri deciding that the holosuite respite is little more than leave, separating Nog from the operations and the station and the war in general. It's possible that we, as the audience, are too invested in believing that Nog is beyond fucked up. Ezri saying that Nog is seeking out his own treatment might sound like an amateur judgement, but it might also be sound judgement. (The cruise was just an example about how people normally might deal with stress.)I'm not sure I follow. The explanation for what, exactly? For Ezry being there? For Nog not being on duty?
What kind of cruise? Most of Starfleet was assigned to war duties, which (I could be wrong) probably wouldn't help Nog recover.
If he wasn't in the holosuite, they couldn't have had scenes with the regular characters, like Jake, coming in and interacting with him.
I am a fan of Worf and Jadiza, I missed her and them as a couple. Worf had the worst luck! Their wedding episode is a favorite of mine also their "honeymoon mission, I call it." I didn't really go for Ezra too much. But I didn't really go for having a counselor of a star ship on Next Generation either. Did the station really need her? I don't know, maybe Garak did at first. I was never fond of how they ended the show. I wanted Garak to be the one to take out Dukat. I I liked their banter. I wonder what would a better end have been to the show?
Nog on a cruise doesn't imply that he would have been on a Starfleet vessle. Starfleet probably makes a small percentage of the tonnage of starships at that point. People historically get pulled of the front lines for RNR, especially if they're showing signs of battle fatigue. This wasn't a situation like Siege of Stalingrad where there was no where to go. OTOH, having Nog self-treat with the assistance of the Vic Fontaine program at least has Nog near to Ezri, who has some insight into his case history.I'm not sure I follow. The explanation for what, exactly? For Ezry being there? For Nog not being on duty?
What kind of cruise? Most of Starfleet was assigned to war duties, which (I could be wrong) probably wouldn't help Nog recover.
If he wasn't in the holosuite, they couldn't have had scenes with the regular characters, like Jake, coming in and interacting with him.
Discofan, I disagree completely. The Niners should not have gotten a single run. It's like the NY Yankees challenging an after-work team. As was pointed out in the episode, every Vulcan is three times the strength of humans and more agile besides; the only Niner who should have been able to touch them was Worf. Besides that, the Logicians practiced together for some time before they even came to DS9. Many of the Niners were completely new to the game with only two weeks to learn everything they needed to know. The Niners getting one point is a moral victory.
Solok became angry and poked Odo and got himself thrown out of the game. It's no surprise that Sisko did the same thing; being emotional is what humans do. But for a Vulcan to do that shows that Vulcans are not the creatures of pure logic Solok has been letting on all these years. They can be just as emotionally handicapped as humans, Bajorans, Ferengi, Trills, Klingons. Solok was not only wrong to challenge them to a one-sided game but wrong all the times in the past when he put on airs about how superior Vulcans are because they'd never allow themselves to lose their tempers in the slightest.
I'm currently re-watching DS9 and I love the entire show, but for me the show hits it's stride in Seasons 4-6. Then all of a sudden toward the very end of season 6 and much of Season 7 things just go downhill. There is still a lot of good in Season 7, but it feels almost like driving down a road with huge pot-holes in it after you just got off the freeway...
Ezri Dax- I did not like Jadzia being killed off, but introducing this new character for season 7 was just terrible. Here we are, the last season of the show, in the middle of the dominion war, where we still have tons of unfinished arcs from the first 6 seasons of DS9, and in some cases even arcs from TNG (Gowron, Worf, O'Brien, etc) that need to be wrapped up. Instead, part of every episode (Ezri was in EVERY season 7 episode) and in several cases entire episodes were wasted introducing this useless, obnoxious, annoying new character. I would have loved to have simply given other cast members like Martok, Garak, Nog, Rom or others more screen time instead. I get that they needed a certain minimum of female cast members though - only legit reason I've ever heard. Maybe they should have simply made Leeta a main cast member somehow? Could not have been any worse than Ezri.
Vic Fontaine- WTF? I don't know about you, but it's pretty lame to watch Sci-Fi about a 24th century space-station in the middle of an intergalactic war only to be forced to constantly indulge what was obviously one of the writers obsessions with early-mid 20th century Jazz music. Every time he is on screen we have to sit through what seems like an entire 5 minute song, I guess because he is so amazing.
Kira and Odo- This just never came off as natural for me, and in most cases sort of made me cringe. I think part of it is because Odo always gave me that humble grandpa-style vibe, and that isn't the sort of character that works well for making-out on-screen all the time. Maybe it's also because the actors never really thought it was a good idea either and you could always sort of tell via their acting.
Dukat religion- I liked Dukat a lot more earlier in the series when he was a more complex character that even had a bit of good in him. When he devolved into a much more simplistic, almost stereotypical, evil religious bad guy, the character just wasn't as interesting anymore IMO.
Mirror universe- This was only one episode thankfully, but one too many. I hate the entire mirror universe concept, particularly the way they shoe-horn in "mirror-universe" things from the regular universe regardless of any logic. The mirror-universe certainly is not unique to season 7, but it is another wasted episode that should have been used to help wrap up the series.
Overall I still enjoy Season 7, and I love DS9. I think part of what makes me a bit bitter about this is how this ended up being not just the end of DS9 but largely the end of Alpha-quadrant Star-Trek from this era. Voyager ended instantly when they got home so did nothing in regards to furthering any alpha-quadrant arcs (except for Barclay I guess?). Star-Trek: Nemesis Sucked to the point of ending the franchise (until the "Reboot" obviously) even if it did provide a tiny bit of resolution for some of TNG-related arcs.
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