| liz_marcs ( @ 2007-09-06 17:02:00 |
|
|
|||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Current mood: | geeky |
| Entry tags: | fandom: deep space nine, review: dvd |
DS9: Doing hard time in second episode hell
The short summary is pretty straightforward: Security Chief Odo is accused of murdering a Bajoran with whom he has a dicey history. The dead Bajoran was a black marketeer in medical supplies during the Cardassian occupation. He was seen as one of the "good guys" by a lot of Bajorans, but Odo claims that this fine fellow would let people die who couldn't or wouldn't meet his price. In the end, Odo put him away for murdering a Cardassian who demanded money to "look the other way." Occupation over, the man is out of prison and on the station. Within hours of Odo attempting to throw him off the station, the man turns up dead.
This is one of those episodes where the concept is good, and the logic is solid, but the script is a strictly paint-by-the numbers thing. It never really gets off the ground and instead remains somewhat mired in its own material. The saving grace of the episode is that there are a lot of nice character set pieces, especially for the secondary and tertiary characters that will eventually become more important than these early glimpses suggest.
In the end, the B story of Keiko O'Brien deciding to set up and run a school for all the Federation and non-Federation children on the station and the C story of Sisko coming to grips with the fact that he has to get to know Dax all over again as Jadzia are far more successful to the point of nearly overshadowing the A story line. That's not a good sign.
The things that bug: Even though the police procedural stuff is nice to see and, in fact, is actually logical in its technobabbly, Trekkian way, the twist is, well, kind of stupid (A man murders his own clone and frames Odo for the murder out of revenge for his imprisonment? Bwhunh?)
In addition, the Bajorans on the station have plenty of reason to be distrustful of Odo, starting with the fact that he was the security chief of Terok Nor (the Cardassian name for Deep Space Nine) in the waning days of the occupation operating under the authority of the Cardassians. So, really, having their distrust rooted in the fact that Odo is a shapeshifter makes approximately zero sense.
Also, the actors are still feeling their way through their roles. Rene Auberjonois goes back and for between Odo's gruff and gravely voice and his real-life, notably higher speaking voice in a jarring show of switch-speaking from one scene to the next.
And then there's...Rom. Ahhh, Rom. Quark's brother. Nog's dad. Most of us who have already watched DS9 know Rom to be Quark's sweet and much, much dumber brother. When he was introduced in this episode, it actually took me well into his conversation with Keiko for me to realize that I was actually looking at Rom. This initial glimpse of him is light years away from the Rom we're all more familiar with. His voice is completely different, he actually walks instead of scurries, and he actually sounds like he has an I.Q. higher than a rutabaga. Bwhunh? Who are you and give me back my Rom, you pretender!
That's not to say that there aren't some stand-out points in this episode: