Showing posts with label B'Moth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label B'Moth. Show all posts

Sunday, March 15, 2015

6-20. His Way.

Odo seeks romantic advice from hologram Vic Fontaine (James Darren)

THE PLOT

Dr. Bashir has created a new hologram: Vic Fontaine (James Darren), modeled as a 1960's Las Vegas crooner. Vic is an unusual hologram, who actually knows he is a computer program on a 24th century space station. He has keen insight into human nature, recognizing without being told that Worf and Dax are married, that Chief O'Brien misses his wife, and that Odo has feelings for Kira.

When Kira visits Bajor to meet with First Minister Shakaar, her former lover, Odo fears she will rekindle that relationship. He accesses Vic's program, to solicit the entertainer's advice. Vic encourages him to pursue Kira, saying that since she already likes him and that he's "halfway there!" He tells Odo he needs to become more relaxed, and of his own accord creates a simulation of a Vegas act with Odo as the piano player, following that up with simulated dates to use as practice.

When Kira returns from Bajor, Vic takes one final liberty. He sets up a date between Odo and a "Kira hologram," holding back one small bit of information: That the Kira Odo is meeting is no hologram, but the real thing!


CHARACTERS

Capt. Sisko: After beginning his "lessons" with Vic, Odo catches himself singing while Sisko reviews a security report. odo stops as soon as Sisko brings it to his attention, but Sisko tells him not to, instead clicking his fingers and singing along with him. It's a perfect little moment that's just right for Sisko, but which wouldn't work at all with any of the other Trek captains.

Kira: When she returns from Bajor only to find Odo nervously avoiding her, she's clearly disappointed and confused - Which reminds me of her reaction to Odo's romance in A Simple Investigation, where she clearly wasn't happy about Odo being in a relationship. These cues make it more plausible when she is persuaded to go on a date with Odo. When both of them realize at the same time that Vic has lied to them about the nature of the date, Kira is angry - but refreshingly, her anger is directed only at Vic and not at all at Odo.

Odo: Another terrific performance by Rene Auberjonois, who perfectly captures the anxiety of a socially awkward man pushed into pursuing a woman. I particularly enjoyed the scene in which Vic pushes Odo into acting as the piano player during a performance of "Come Fly with Me." Odo starts out absolutely awkward, sitting at the piano and concentrating a little too hard on pretending to play it, clearly self-conscious even though there's nobody who isn't a hologram watching. As the song progresses, he starts to enjoy the music and the act and, by the end, he's showing off with the glee of a child make-believing himself to be a sports hero or rock star. Most of this is nonverbal, seen through his shifts in body language and facial expression as he sits at the piano, and it's marvelously well-done.

Quark: It's notable that, for all their constant bickering, Quark is the first one Odo turns to about his problems with Kira. For his part, while Quark enjoys needling the constable about his failure to pursue Kira, he does so with an undertone of sympathy. When Odo asks for a favor - to access the Vic program - Quark not only goes along, he thinks fast to stop Bashir from interrupting.

Vic Fontaine: The debut of Vic, the holographic crooner from Las Vegas' golden age. I'm not sure how I feel about him becoming a recurring character, but he works well in this episode. James Darren is just right for this sort of Frank Sinatra/Dean Martin hybrid, slick enough for us to believe him as a representation of a 1960's nightclub singer, sincere enough for us to believe that he genuinely wants to help Odo. Darren also has good comic timing and shows strong screen rapport with Rene Auberjonois, which goes a long way toward selling the episode. I wouldn't say I'm looking forward to more of Vic in future episodes - But I'm not dreading his reappearance, either, and that in itself is a pleasant surprise.


THOUGHTS

His Way is a likable little story, a bit of whimsy to light up the darkness that has dominated much of the season. A breezy romantic comedy punctuated by several well-performed musical interludes, it has much to recommend it: Rene Auberjonois and Nana Visitor are terrific, as always, as James Darren does a fine job of making Vic work as a character in his own right. The musical numbers add to the atmosphere, and even the regulars who are only peripherally featured feel "right." Objectively, this is a good episode.

It just isn't the kind of episode that particularly hooks me, which makes it a very difficult one to review. I wasn't bored while watching it. The story followed a very predictable pattern, but writers Ira Steven Behr and Hans Beimler know the characters so well that Kira and Odo never feel less than completely themselves, and director Allan Kroeker - who labeled this episode a personal favorite of his - does sterling work in every scene. It's enjoyable... It just isn't my particular cup of tea.

I do wonder whether putting Odo and Kira into a relationship is a good thing for the series. Yes, there have been indications that Kira enjoys at least knowing that Odo has feelings for her, and the two actors and their characters always play well opposite each other. I'm just uncertain that I will find this relationship a convincing one as the show moves forward. This episode also appears to be the final nail in any hopes I may have had that Odo's betrayal earlier this season will ever receive any followup, and that irritates me considerably.

But that's more a fault with the season's failure to address that plot turn than with this episode specifically. And as I said, by any objective measurement His Way is a good piece of television. Since my scores are representing my personal reactions, and not going for some objective measurement of merit, I refuse to give this a high score - But since it was well made and I didn't dislike it, I won't be giving a low one either.

If romantic/comedy/musical is the type of episode you enjoy, then you should add two full points to this score. But for me, this gets an unenthused but respectable:


Overall Rating: 6/10.

Previous Episode: In the Pale Moonlight
Next Episode: The Reckoning

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Monday, March 24, 2014

5-21. Soldiers of the Empire.

Worf begins to doubt Martok (J. G. Hertzler)'s resolve.

THE PLOT

General Martok (J. G. Hertzler) extends an invitation to Worf: Join him as first officer on the Rotarran, a Klingon Bird of Prey. The Rotarran has been assigned to find the B'Moth, a battle cruiser that disappeared near the Cardassian border. It is a great chance at redemption for both men: Martok, to prove that he remains a strong leader after two years in a Dominion prison camp; Worf, to earn honor in the eyes of the Empire that disbanded his House. Dax also insists on coming along as Science Officer, determined to protect Worf from a crew that she can tell is dangerous.

Dax is right: The crew of the Rotarran is in a dark state. Ever since the Cardassians allied themselves with the Jem'Hadar, the Klingon ship has suffered one defeat after another. The Klingons are hungry for a victory, any victory. When Martok plots a course designed to avoid battle, insisting on focusing on the mission, the atmosphere goes from dark to dangerous. And when Martok plays it safe a second time, passing up a potentially easy kill for fear of a Dominion trap, the crew starts to hover on the edge of mutiny!


CHARACTERS

Capt. Sisko: Talks with Worf before granting the request to temporarily release him to be Martok's first officer. He mainly wants to make sure that Worf genuinely desires this. When Worf explains why he feels loyal to Martok, he adds that he isn't sure Sisko, a human, can understand. Sisko's expression says otherwise, and he grants the request with no further questions.

Worf: His loyalty to Martok stems from his time in the Jem'Hadar prison camp. When the Jem'Hadar forced him to fight in their arena, he could see no end to the cycle and considered letting them win. Martok recognized his intent and stopped him with a single look, saving Worf's life and allowing him to eventually escape. His defense of Martok even when it becomes clear that the general is going out of his way to avoid a fight feels more like something from his human upbringing than from the Klingon values he has always prized. When situations force him to finally confront Martok, that loyalty is still in evidence - something Martok again recognizes, fortunately for Worf.

Dax: With Worf behaving more like a human, it falls to Dax to be "more Klingon than Klingon" this week. She bonds with the crew quite quickly, having calculated exactly how to ingratiate herself: Her first day in the mess hall, she picks just the right fight as a prelude to delivering three crates of blood wine. She quickly recognizes that the crew is in despair over their string of defeats. Worf sees this too, but Dax sees what he does not: Namely, the danger to Worf and Martok in this situation. She pushes Worf at every turn, reminding him that this is not a Federation ship: "If you think the blood looks bad on my uniform, wait until the decks are dripping with it!"

Martok: "Broken" by the Jem'Hadar, just as the crew of the Rotarran has been. Like the crew, he needs a victory to restore his confidence. But he's too fearful of the Jem'Hadar to actually get one. Having fallen victim to them once, he sees Dominion traps in every situation. His first choice, to avoid a nebula where warships are certain to be, is sensible: Their mission is to find the B'Moth, not to endanger the ship needlessly. But when he avoids a fight with a Jem'Hadar ship directly in their path just because a trap is possible, it's clear that he is afraid. Once again, his crew directly reflects him, as we see one Klingon officer drunkenly talk about how the Jem'Hadar's lack of honor makes them "better... they're faster and they're stronger than we are!" When Martok refuses to rescue the ship they've been sent to retrieve just because it drifted across the border, he sparks a challenge - and when Martok wins that challenge, his crew begin chanting his name, then singing as he recovers his Klingon blood lust and presses forward into the very battle he (and the ship) have dreaded.


THOUGHTS

In terms of developing the Klingons, Soldiers of the Empire doesn't add anything new to Trek lore. The Klingons live by a warrior code. There is a very specific structure to the way in which a Klingon warrior may advance by challenging his superior, and that structure and code keep the society from chaos despite the chaotic way their culture may appear from the outside. An honorable victory is what a warrior lives for, and defeat is ignominy... All of which is ground tread by previous TNG and DS9 episodes many times before.

What keeps this episode from feeling like a stale retread is the way it is framed. Putting our regulars on a Klingon ship, serving with a Klingon crew, heavily recalls TNG's A Matter of Honor. But the ship Worf and Dax serve on is a ship that has endured a series of defeats, to the point at which the crew now goes into battle expecting to be defeated. This gives it a different flavor from other Klingon episodes, as Worf and Dax must watch their backs around this dangerously demoralized crew even as Worf slowly comes to realize that he will have to challenge Martok for the captain's seat.

Like many Klingon episodes, this is very broadly played, almost operatic in tone and style... Which works, because the Klingons feel right and the dimmer lighting and more claustrophobic set design of the Bird of Prey interiors adds an atmosphere well-suited to the proceedings. It isn't actually an action episode - A brawl that's cut short by Dax and a knife fight at the climax are the only two "action" pieces in the show. But Moore's script and Levar Burton's steady directing keep the tension of the situation tangible, with the viewer left waiting right along with the characters for it to reach its boiling point.

What keeps this from reaching the heights of the best Klingon episodes, such as TNG's Sins of the Father or DS9's The Way of the Warrior, is the guest cast. The crew of the Rotarran are a bunch of one-dimensional "types." There's the drunken one, there's the dangerous one, there's the sympathetic woman... I couldn't even tell you any of the characters' names unless I wanted to look them up. The script is effective in having the crew's fractured state reflect Martok's fractured state, and in bringing the crew together as a unified force just as Martok recovers his old Klingon fire... But I can't help but think that the same could have been accomplished while making at least one or two members of the crew into layered characters.

The weak guest characters are made up for by very strong characterizations of the regular and recurring cast. Moore's script gives Worf and Dax very strong material, with this being one of the best Dax episodes in a while. Martok continues to develop as a memorable and interesting recurring character, and his friendship with Worf promises to become another of the several wonderful character relationships this show has created.  That's more than enough to make this a good episode... Even if it leaves it short of being a great one.


Overall Rating: 8/10.

Previous Episode: Ferengi Love Songs
Next Episode: Children of Time

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