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169 lines
8.8 KiB
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WARNING! The following post contains spoiler information about the
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long-awaited new TNG episode, "The Defector". If you want spoilers,
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read on. If not, avoid this review.
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Be vewwy vewwy cawefuw. I'm giving spoiwews. Hehehehehehehehe.
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Okay, okay, so it's a little late. Sheesh...can't a guy even go home for New
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Year's any more? :-)
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I don't know if this review will be worth the wait, but the episode certainly
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was. Run, DO NOT walk, to your nearest television to see it.
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Those of you who know me know I tend to give more spoilers if I like the
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show, so I can discuss the episode in a bit more detail. I suspect that's
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going to hold true here. Be warned. Anyway, here's a summary:
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The Enterprise detects a Romulan scoutship crossing over into Federation
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space, with a Warbird (y'know . . . the Magpie of Prey) hot on its heels. As
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it happens, the scout contains one Romulan requesting asylum. (Where's a
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Papal Nuncio when you need one, eh?) The Warbird manages to cripple the scout
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just as it crosses from the Neutral Zone to Federation space, and is about to
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destroy it. At this point, the Enterprise positions itself within 5 km of the
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scout and extends its shields around her. The Warbird, surprisingly, turns
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around and heads back across the Zone. The plot, as they say, thickens.
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The defector, Sub-Lt. Setal, claims to be a logistics clerk who has
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discovered a plot for a new Romulan offensive. If he is to be believed, there
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is a planet in the Zone, Nelvana III, on which a base is nearly completed.
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Furthermore, there are *21* Warbirds in orbit around her, just waiting to
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make a first strike. If this is all true, going in and destroying the base
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might possibly prevent a war. If it's not, though...you start a war, and
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the Romulans have legitimate reason to respond in heavy force.
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Most of the facts seem to indicate he is lying and probably a spy. His ship
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explodes before Geordi has a chance to inspect it. The defector claims he set
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the Auto-Destruct before he was beamed over. Ship's sensors scan absolutely
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NOTHING at Nelvana III. (Cloaking device? Of that magnitude?) The defector
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himself is somewhat unwilling to give any information beyond the details of
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the plot. The facts seem to say he can't be trusted, and yet...
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And yet. Many of the bridge officers (and Geordi) have a gut feeling that
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he's telling the truth, but there's no way to tell without going in.
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Starfleet is sending communique after communique to Picard, basically saying
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"Well, Jean-Luc, you found him -- you decide if he's right. We'll back you up
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if we have to." Picard receives a transmission from a Klingon admiral, which
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we don't see. Curiouser and curiouser.
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Things seem to be going against the truth argument, when the defector makes a
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surprising confession. I quote (the Romulan, speaking to Data): "Arrange a
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meeting between me and Capt. Picard. [pause] Tell him...that Admiral
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Jerroc [sp?] wants to speak to him."
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Yep. He's an Admiral, whose first child was just born. As a result, he's
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realized that he has to "change the world" for her. He argued against a new
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war for months. Finally, he was censured, and reassigned to a somewhat
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isolated sector...where he found the plans of which he spoke. The ante,
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as they say, has been upped.
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Unfortunately, Jerroc is also responsible for a couple of Romulan
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"massacres", and is deemed an untrustworthy source by Starfleet. Picard
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eventually tells him, "You've crossed over, whether you like it or not. If
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the bitter taste of that galls you, I am truly sorry. But I will not risk
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starting a war because you think you can dance on the border of the Neutral
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Zone!!" He demands that Jerroc give him details on the Romulan fleet, Romulan
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technology, etc.
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This Jerroc DOES. They decide to go in. Once they reach Nelvana III, they
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find . . . nothing. No base, no secret offensive. Jerroc can't believe it.
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They quickly reach the awful truth: the Romulans were feeding Jerroc
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disinformation. This was a double plan: to test Jerroc's loyalty (a test he
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quite clearly failed), and to lure the Enterprise into a trap.
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The irony of the situation becomes even clearer when we discover who's
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leading the 2 Warbirds who suddenly decloak and lock onto the Enterprise: our
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old friend from Galornen Core, Commander Tomolok. He urges Picard to
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surrender, but is quite clearly hoping to have to blow the Enterprise out of
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the water.
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Time for the Picard Maneuver, Mark II. No, no fancy helm jockeying: just
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three Klin Birds of Prey that suddenly decloak and lock on the Warbirds.
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"Well, Commander, shall we die together?" Tomolok declines, but says,
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"Captain Picard, I look forward to our next meeting."
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On a tragic note, Jerroc is found dead within hours. He couldn't believe that
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he sacrificed his whole future (and, quite probably, his family) for nothing.
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He takes a poison pill he brought with him. No antidote.
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Phew. I ran on a bit there, but the plot's somewhat involved. Now, for a bit
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of New Year's Rambling:
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Considering that I'm in the middle of rereading all my John le Carre novels
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at present, I found this sort of intricacy very, very nice. They did a good
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job here (and caught me completely flatfooted with the Klingon vessels at the
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end).
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Commander Tomolok seems to be being put in the role of the long-running
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Romulan adversary. I'm not enchanted by the idea, since his acting leaves
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something to be desired, but I like the idea of a recurring Romulan
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commander.
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They had some fairly good continuity. There were plenty of references to the
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events on Galornden Core (though, sadly, we STILL don't find out what the
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Romulans were doing there), including one interesting exchange with Bev.
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She's busy fixing up some of Jerroc's wounds, and he says that he's lucky she
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knows something of Romulan physiology. She replies that she recently had the
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chance to gain a LOT of experience, and she fixes a withering gaze on Worf.
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Still a little bad blood from that incident, I guess.
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I forgot to mention the first half of the teaser. Data is trying to
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understand more of human behavior. Apparently, somewhere before the show
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started, he asked Picard for advice, and he suggested Shakespeare. We see
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Data playing Henry V, and doing a more than reasonable job. (Note: Not only
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do we see Stewart as Picard, directing, but we also see Stewart under a
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rather bushy beard as one of the holodeck simulations Data is working with. I
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knew he wouldn't be able to resist doing a little performing. Nice job, too.)
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Irrelevant, you say? Read on.
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The Henry V analogy carries through a great deal of the story. The scene we
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see in the teaser is that of Henry disguising himself and going out among his
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soldiers to share their fears. More to the point, there is a discussion of
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leading one's men to die. Picard is placed in just that position throughout
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the story. I'm not going to list references, though -- watch 'em for
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yourself.
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Well, okay, so I do have one or two MINOR gripes. Here they come.
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The "What Kind of Security Officer Am I?" award goes to Worf, for not
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searching Jerroc and finding the poison pill.
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Data claims, when asked, that Romulan ale is not in the food synthesizer's
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memory because "it would require a detailed molecular breakdown of the
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beverage, and knowledge of your home planet, as you know, is quite scarce",
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or something like that. Here's a double gripe:
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1) Considering all the times McCoy drank ye olde blue ale way back when, I
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can't imagine it hasn't been analyzed by now. However, it's been pointed
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out to me that it may still be a black market product, and hence not in
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the memory. Maybe.
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2) Five minutes later, Data takes Jerroc to the holodeck, and presents him
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with a picture perfect representation of part of ch'Rihan. Uh-uh. Wrong.
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Speaking of ch'Rihan, no, they DON'T call it that. Jerroc himself refers to
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it as Romulus. That's a personal disappointment, though, not a gripe. (For
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anyone who doesn't know what ch'Rihan means, dig up Diane Duane's novels.
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Enjoy.)
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Well, this is shaping up to be rather LONG, so I'm going to go away now.
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(Hey, stop that cheering!) The ratings, pleeze:
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Plot: 9.6 - Very slightly predictable that they were giving him
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disinformation, but splendidly written for Picard's decisions.
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Plot Handling: 10 - I can't think of how it could've been done better.
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Characterization: 10 - Splendid, folks, splendid.
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Technical: 9.5 - A lil' off for the holodeck blunder, but some beautiful
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effects, and I really really like the look of the scoutship.
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TOTAL: 39.1/4=9.775 -> 10. Well worth its wait in reruns. (Ooch.)
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Tim Lynch (Cornell's first Astronomy B.A.; one of many Caltech grad students)
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BITNET: tlynch@citjuliet
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INTERNET: tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
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UUCP: ...!ucbvax!tlynch%juliet.caltech.edu@hamlet.caltech.edu
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"Your knowledge of Klingon curses is very extensive, but, as your people
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might say, only a VERRUC would use such language in public."
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--Riker, W.T.
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--
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Copyright 1990, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...
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