I now watch as the regulars and some very impressive guest stars battle...
"To the Death"
Well, nearly. OK, some characters fight to the death, but not all of them. Actually, none of the regulars do. Does that make this episode the most blatant case of Trek false advertising since "Year of Hell?" (It was only 257 days of hell, after all.) I don't care, because it's a great episode.
The basic plot--we've got to find someone who did something bad--feels like it's been done before. Has it? It just seems that they go off chasing a lot of people on this show. But some new dimensions to the Jem'Hadar and two outstanding guest actors make this feel new.
I get my first proper view of Jeffery Combs as Weyoun, and I love it. He's like a used car salesman.
The episode starts with O'Brien complaining about Molly having trouble sleeping for two months. Heh. Call me when you hit two years of being woken up every night, Miles, then I'll feel sorry for you. I don't think I've had an uninterrupted night of sleep about 3.5 years.
Bashir is sitting in Worf's chair. So Worf is like the Archie Bunker of the Defiant? I can live with that. And he walks in and orders a prune juice from the replicator, because on Star Trek, you're only allowed to drink one thing, ever, so choose wisely. Tea, Earl Grey, hot; coffee, black; prune juice. Are there any other examples?
But now they've got to go to the bridge, because Sisko has something he wants them to see. What is it? Avery Brooks is completely inscrutable here--is he feeling shock? Rage? Boredom? Who can tell? I'm thinking that maybe the Klingons tagged the docking ring with graffiti when...
HOLY SHIT! They blew up one of the pylons! Now I know why it's taking them so long to fix it in the opening credits.
They also injured Kira's arm, a foreshadowing of the arm injury Sisko will suffer at the episode's climax. And Nog's all right, which gives Quark a reason to wander on the set and deliver a few lines. Good for him.
It turns out the Jem'Hadar stole some of DS9's stuff, so Sisko's going to take the Defiant to get it back. And he asks Kira, 45 minutes after the attack ends, to call Starfleet and ask for help. Shouldn't she have done that 45 minutes ago?
The quibbling makes it fun. I'm not this way IRL, honest.
While they're tracking the Jem'Hadar, they find another Jem'Hadar ship that's about to go boom. So they beam the Jem'Hadar over, trade insults, then get to meet...Weyoun. I like the reveal.
Why they didn't think of giving a high-profile role to Jeffery Combs four years earlier is beyond me. Like Andrew Robinson, he just does so much with what he's given.
In fact, I'm hoping that somewhere over the next three seasons we get a good Weyoun/Garak scene. Is that too much to ask for?
And he plays Weyoun as simultaneously bored, scheming, and superficially charming. a nice combination.
Clarence Williams III as Omet'iklan is great as well. He's completely convincing, and is a great foil for Sisko. And it lets me do my Neil Diamond impersonation by singing, "They're coming to Omet'iklan! Today!"
So the renegade Jem'Hadar (are these the same guys Bashir and O'Brien were with?) have captured an Iconian gateway--a nice shout-out to "Contagion." Worf even reminds us that he was on the mission that ended up destroying the gateway the Enterprise found. If the Jem'Hadar activate the gateway, bad things will happen.
Did the renegade Jem'Hadar find their own source for the white, or did they get the monkey off their backs? I don't think we're told. I guess either is plausible. But man, those Jem'Hadar are ornery. No food, no sleep, no sex--I can see why.
I liked the scene Dax had with Virak'kara, who is eight. For some reason that makes me think he should be wearing Underoos and watching Saturday morning cartoons. I love that look on his face when he finds out she's over 300--not an easy thing to pull off under all that makeup. And it actually gave Dax something to talk about.
Toman'torax and Worf have a fight. Toman'torax gets whacked by Omet'iklan in a sequence I'm surprised actually made it on TV--it's quite brutal the way he snaps his neck. Nice direction by Levar Burton, with the body lying on the floor as Sisko and Omet'iklan have their discussion after everyone else leaves. Worf, meanwhile, gets grounded and sent to his room without prune juice. Being that he chooses to live on the ship so he can get away from everyone, it's a particularly inane punishment.
I liked, however, Worf's promise to Sisko, that, if Sisko gets iced by Omet'iklan, Omet'iklan won't live to boast about it.
Then it's time to fight! We get to see how the Jem'Hadar psyche themselves up for battle, by saying they're already dead and must fight to reclaim their lives. "Victory is life!" Then O'Brien takes the piss out of them (after they've safely gone) by saying he's very much alive and wants to stay that way. Good stuff. I also liked him talking about writing the letter to Keiko. This is good television.
The battle for the gateway (which keeps one circling back to a scene of Paris--I guess the Iconians like croissants) is just OK--it's hard to tell who is on which side, since both groups of Jem'Hadar seem to be wearing the same uniform. But at the climax of the fight, Sisko wounds himself saving Omet'iklan, amazing the Jem'Hadar first. After the fighting's over and the gateway is blown to smithereens, he repays the favor by letting Sisko and company leave. Weyoun, who beams down with the white, isn't so lucky. He gets totally vaporized.
I make a joke about the Defiant calling down to Sisko; "Hey, we let Weyoun borrow the keys...can you ask him for them back now?" But luckily they left the keys in the ignition, and everyone goes their separate ways. I'm not too sure how long the Jem'Hadar will hold out with that one case of white, but that's a problem for another day, I guess.
One of my favorite things about the writing here was the way they got a lot of bang for their buck. They didn't show the fierce attack and firefight on the station at the beginning (which would have been incredibly expensive to stage), and didn't show the gateway getting blown up, either. Neat.
All those quibbles I mentioned didn't get in the way of my enjoying the episode at all. Great one, no question.