Showing posts with label Chris Derrick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chris Derrick. Show all posts

Friday, December 20, 2024

3-05. Imposters.

Picard is interrogated by Ro Laren (Michelle Forbes).
Picard is interrogated by Ro Laren (Michelle Forbes).

Original Air Date: Mar. 16, 2023. Written by: Cindy Appel, Chris Derrick. Directed by: Dan Liu.


THE PLOT:

The Titan is safely back in Federation space, away from Capt. Vadic and the Shrike. But Picard and Riker now face an inquiry by Starfleet security. The USS Intrepid meets the Titan and orders all but a skeleton crew be transported over for reassignment during the investigation. The officer in charge is none other than Ro Laren (Michelle Forbes), the Bajoran officer who betrayed Picard to the Maquis decades earlier - and Ro seems to be harboring a personal grudge.

Meanwhile, Worf and Raffi are denied access to Daystrom Station, leaving them to find another way to look into the theft of Starfleet weaponry and its connection to the changelings. Since Worf was forced to kill Sneed, the Ferengi gangster, in order to save Raffi's life, they seem to be at a dead end. But Worf knows of another potential information source: Krinn (Kirk Acevedo), a Vulcan crime lord who was an associate of Sneed's. Krinn is far more clever and dangerous than Sneed, however, and getting to him may require a sacrifice Raffi isn't willing to make...


CHARACTERS:

Picard: He's incensed that Ro has the temerity - let alone the position - to question him. Even thirty years later, he feels personally betrayed that she chose the Maquis over Starfleet, and he wastes no time in turning her interrogation of him around on her. He also wonders if she might be a changeling, particularly given that "Commander Ro" isn't wearing her Bajoran earring.

Riker: He was never close to Ro, so her past decision did not hit him personally. As a result, he's more laid back about her position in Starfleet. He even attempts to mediate between Picard and Ro, an effort that is stymied by Ro insisting on questioning Picard alone.

Seven: When the security team takes a shuttle to the Titan rather than simply beaming over, Picard is spooked into asking for one more favor. She agrees to hide Jack from the investigation. She does this by giving him a Starfleet uniform to wear. "If security officers come looking, it's best to hide you in plain sight."

Dr. Crusher: She's a picture of crisp professionalism as she performs her autopsy on the changeling corpse, calmly observing the differences between this changeling and the ones Starfleet warred with decades earlier. She can see that Jack is troubled, and she urges him to talk to her about whatever is wrong.

Jack Crusher: The disguise of a Starfleet uniform works surprisingly well, though his aversion to Starfleet makes him reluctant to wear it. That's a secondary character beat, however. Most of his role centers around visions he's having of himself committing violent acts. The writers seem to badly want us to suspect that he's a changeling without knowing it - which is exactly why I'm sure that he isn't.

Capt. Shaw: Is positively giddy at the thought of Starfleet punishing Picard and Riker. When the two older officers point out that they've saved the galaxy multiple times, Shaw reminds them of some of the less spectacular aspects of their record, grinning as he recalls "that time that someone threw the Prime Directive out the window so they could snog a villager on Ba'ku." However, the events of the previous episodes are enough that he's willing to listen as the security investigation grows increasingly strange.

Commander Ro: Michelle Forbes returns to the franchise for the first time since TNG's Preemptive Strike, and she's still convincing as Ro. Her best moments, unsurprisingly, come opposite Picard. Her emotions toward him are every bit as raw as his toward her, with her feeling that his mentorship was always conditional on her upholding his values over her own. "I joined the Maquis because belonging there meant standing up to injustice, even if it meant betraying your beloved Starfleet!"


THOUGHTS:

If the first four episodes formed an action/suspense story, then this episode conveys more of a "conspiracy thriller" vibe, with the characters uncertain who to trust. They can't even be certain which officers actually are themselves, with Picard and Ro each showing suspicion that the other might be a changeling. It's an effective change-up, though I hope the show doesn't try to hold this particular tone and style for too long.

Imposters is not as good as No-Win Scenario was, but that would be an unfair expectation. It's still a good episode that continues to reflect one of the major strengths of this season: good use of the characters. The heart of the episode is the confrontation between Picard and Ro. Plot-wise, each suspects the other might be an imposter... but the real emotional core comes from each airing the pain inflicted by the other. Picard's anger rings true, but so does Ro's, and Patrick Stewart and Michelle Forbes play as well off each other now as they did back in the day.

The Worf/Raffi subplot is less interesting than the rest, and I rolled my eyes at a particularly clichéd plot development once they finally came face-to-face with Krinn. Still, Michael Dorn and Michelle Hurd work well together, and this episode finally connects their strand to the main plot. While Krinn's method of dealing with them is ludicrous and - for a Vulcan - rather illogical, the scene is at least watchable, even if it's the episode's weakest.

More importantly, in a season that's managed consistently strong episode endings, this one might have the most startling ending yet...


OVERALL:

Imposters is another good episode in what's shaping up to be a good season. The story moves to its next phase, with a shift in tone that should keep the arc from becoming stale. The episode gets an extra boost from the dynamic between Picard and Ro, with the characters' emotions feeling authentic and true to who the two of them are.

The Picard/Ro material earns an already good episode an extra point, leaving me awarding a strong...


Overall Rating: 8/10.

Previous Episode: No-Win Scenario
Next Episode: The Bounty

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Saturday, February 3, 2024

2-09. Hide and Seek.

The Borg-possessed Jurati and her drones come for La Sirena!
The Borg-possessed Jurati and her drones come for La Sirena!

Original Air Date: Apr. 28, 2022. Written by: Matt Okumura, Chris Derrick. Directed by: Michael Weaver.


THE PLOT:

Time has run out. The Borg Queen-possessed Jurati has taken control of La Sirena's transporters and has beamed herself and her Borg-possessed soldiers to the ship. Her intent is to take the ship, destroy the Europa from orbit to prevent the Federation from forming, and then get a 400-year head start on forming a Borg Empire capable of either wiping out or assimilating the fascist Confederation and anyone else who tries to get in her way.

Rios, Teresa, and Teresa's young son barely manage to escape the ship, even as Picard and the rest of his crew beam to the abandoned Chateau Picard. The primitive Borg drones, under the command of Adam Soong, have no intention of allowing Picard anywhere near the ship.

Rios is injured, so he is beamed to Tallinn's apartment with Teresa and her son. Seven and Raffi attempt to approach La Sirena from the side, hoping to avoid the bulk of the drones. It falls to Picard and Tallinn to draw Soong and his forces into the Chateau, where Picard uses the tunnels underneath to play a particularly deadly game of hide and seek...


CHARACTERS:

Picard: "I refuse to accept an outcome that has not yet occurred." Picard draws on his childhood memories of the tunnels under the Chateau to evade Soong's forces. He tries to persuade Soong that the future the Borg Queen has promised him is a horrible one, but he isn't at all surprised when the other man is unmoved.

Jurati: Even if she did a horrible job of guarding the Borg Queen, she at least had the presence of mind to take precautions against the Queen's desire to take the ship. She locked out systems with a security code that she took care not to memorize, transforming La Sirena into "the world's biggest paperweight." She challenges the Borg Queen about her own loneliness and points out that in every timeline, the Borg end up failing.

Seven: A few snatches of her post-Voyager life get filled in. She attempted to enter Starfleet after the ship returned to Earth, only to be rejected for being Borg. Janeway threatened to resign in protest, but Seven chose to withdraw her application and join the Rangers instead. It's unspoken, but she wasn't willing to see Janeway throw away her career on her account. She refuses to allow any illusions about their situation. The enemy soldiers are no longer human; they are Borg. When Raffi starts talking about what they will do after this crisis, she flatly states, "We're not getting out of this."

Capt. Rios: He's been sidelined for pretty much the whole season... and it happens again after he gets injured during the initial attack. Picard beams him to Tallinn's apartment, then locks him out of the transporter so that he can't come back. Rios spends the bulk of the episode trying to break into the system to get back to help. Both Picard and Teresa are right, of course; if he beamed back right at that moment, he would only succeed in getting himself killed. But his stubbornness does pay off at the end.

Elnor: One of Jurati's safeguards was to program an emergency security hologram with the likeness of Elnor. The hologram also seems to have both his personality and memories. He grins when picking up Elnor's old sword to fight the Borg drones, then does his best to console Raffi about Elnor's feelings for her.

Tallinn: Remember the tough, wary Watcher who trained a gun on Picard and told him that she didn't like time travelers? Or the uneasy ally who needled him about Laris? Well, now she's his unapologetic sidekick, tagging along after him like a lost puppy. Or possibly his roaming therapist, given how much time she devotes to trying to get him to reconcile with his childhood... while men with guns are chasing them. Even Troi would have more common sense. (Or, recalling some of Troi's TNG lowlights, possibly not). All told, it's a rather sad decline for an initially fun and interesting character.

Teresa: Is awed at Rios having what amounts to a full emergency room inside his pocket, and confronts him with the effect this has on her: "You have no idea what this is like for me, do you? ...Surrounded by miracles, knowing win or lose, I'll have to let them go?" This does not stop her from bluntly pointing out that the injured Rios is currently not in shape to help anyone. The Rios/Teresa scenes work much better in this episode than last time. I think the writers should have saved their first kiss for here, where the situation makes it feel more natural and less shoehorned-in.

Adam Soong: He was introduced proclaiming, "Imagine, if you will, I am a god." Here, he declares himself to be a captain of industry. He's neither. He's gone from being Q's lackey to being the Borg Queen's; from having the love of a daughter to being alone; and he's so self-absorbed that he's incapable of seeing that his obsession with legacy has all but guaranteed that he won't have one. Brent Spiner is very good, as he has been all season. It's notable that the same actor who made Data so beloved can create a villain so despicable and ultimately pathetic.


THE PICARD SLEDGEHAMMERS:

It might be more accurate to label this one the Jurati and Tallinn sledgehammers. Picard gets a speech, of course, talking about moments in time we wish we could return to - but it's actually fairly effective on its own. Too bad it's flanked by two that are much worse.

Jurati lectures the Borg Queen about embracing uniqueness and even apparent weakness; Tallinn earnestly talks to Picard about how love can be a source of grief, but it's always "a gift." Both of these feel ridiculously heavy handed, and coming so rapidly one after another, the speechifying destroys the momentum in the final Act.

I think this was entirely fixable. Tallinn's should have been dropped entirely, as Patrick Stewart and Orla Brady are more than capable of conveying Picard's acceptance of his past nonverbally. I also think Jurati's attempts to alternately needle and persuade the Borg Queen would have played more convincingly in small interactions spread across the full episode, rather than being compressed into a single monologue.

As it stands, though, the succession of speeches kills the momentum of the final Act - which is a shame, as the episode is generally gripping up to that point.


OF MONSTERS, MEN, AND FLASHBACKS:

Most of the flashbacks of this episode simply re-tell the "young Picard" story that had been told in Monsters, only minus the fairy tale nonsense. Hide and Seek tells it better, not least because this time the flashbacks are actually motivated by the present-day story, as Picard goes through the same tunnels he once went through with his mother.

Nearly all the information given in Monsters is repeated here, only with additional context and an ending. If you missed Monsters entirely, nothing in the flashback plot here would seem at all confusing. This episode, in itself, gives you all the information you need to follow along.

Meaning that, yes, one of the season's weakest episodes was also pure water treading.


OTHER MUSINGS:

For the most part, I quite enjoyed Hide and Seek. Director Michael Weaver does a fine job at keeping the pace moving and the action easily understandable. The script finds time for good character moments for multiple members of the cast - not only Picard, but also Seven, Raffi, and even Rios. The Elnor hologram even allows him to receive some decent material, six full episodes after his death.

As was true of Mercy, this episode builds some honest-to-goodness momentum, and it manages to maintain it even during the flashbacks. Yes, when Tallinn and Picard pause in the tunnels to have a chat, I can't help but snap: "Is this really the best time?" - but it doesn't lose the tension, particularly with Soong finding the secret passage soon after.

The episode ends with a strong final note. It's not quite a cliffhanger. "The Siege of Chateau Picard" is fully resolved here, and the characters aren't in any immediate jeopardy at the end. Instead, we end on the heroes fully resolved in their next course of action, which I think is a lot more effective than, say, having someone pop up and train a gun on them.


OVERALL:

Hide and Seek has its faults. Tallinn has been completely flattened as a character by this point, and scenes with her and Picard talking about his childhood while actively being pursued just... annoy. Worse, a series of speeches badly disrupts the final stretch.

I'd still rate it as a good episode, however. For the bulk of its run, it builds tension and momentum. It offers strong moments to several characters. And it does an excellent job of giving every character something to do, even the ones who have often been sidelined this season.

Had the speeches been reduced or at least better spread out, this might have been one of the season's best. Even as it stands, I'd rate it as solidly above average.


Overall Rating: 7/10.

Previous Episode: Mercy
Next Episode: Farewell

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