| liz_marcs ( @ 2007-09-18 13:42:00 |
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| Current mood: | geeky |
| Entry tags: | fandom: deep space nine, review: dvd |
DS9: Boldly ho-humming where everyone has ho-hummed before
A little lunchtime watch.
The straight up: Some old, forgotten bit of biological warfare has come back to haunt the station, resulting in something called the "aphasia virus" that results in, well, aphasia. Oh, and eventually the neural pathways in the brain break down and kills the person. One by one the crew falls until everyone is affected except Quark and Odo. What is at first thought to be a bit of sabotage left behind by the Cardassians turns out to be a booby trap built into the replicators during the station's construction by the Bajoran underground.
Obviously, they found a cure before the end of the episode otherwise there'd be no show. This is a bit of an issue. Not that a cure was found before the end of the episode: just that it was found so quickly and easily and that much of that was handwaved by the writers.
It's a nice little morality play in how biological warfare has a nasty habit of biting everyone in the ass, including the people who created it (Bajorans are affected as well as everyone else).
Again, this is a case where there's some really clever execution. The virus is released into the general population via the replicated food, which means everyone who's eaten anything is down and out. The fact that some people are affected more quickly than other individuals in the same species is easily explained with zero technobable (the virus is adaptive so it customizes the attack on each host). The nature of the virus and what it does actually sounds like it could come from a regular medical drama (well...a non-science fiction one at any rate). And Kira's hunt for the virus's creator is also logically and methodically carried out.
Why this episode doesn't live up to its premise, I don't know. I was mildly entertained by it (especially Kira's kidnapping of the one man who could find a cure for it), but I wasn't terribly engaged or all that worried about the fate of the crew.
Some stand-out points from this one: