 |
|
|
Dax Production 408 2/14/93 Stardate 46910.1 |
Media Archives:
- 30-second episode preview (AVI, 2Mb)
- Jadzia Dax faces trial.
Synopsis:
Curzon Dax, Jadzia's former Trill identity, is accused of murder. Lieutenant Dax, preparing to return to her quarters for the evening, is being observed by a male Trill named Selin Peers. Ilon
Tandro, a humanoid from Klaestron Four, joins him in the shadows. Confirming Dax's identity with Peers, Tandro and two of his officers succeed in taking her hostage. Bashir, unable to save her, alerts the other officers. Sisko, Kira, and Odo attempt to locate them, but Dax's combadge was removed and left behind. To Odo's amazement, Tandro and the two officers, with Dax in tow, avoid the security tracking grid with ease. To complicate matters, Sisko realizes that the abductors have disabled the station's tractor beam. Kira finally discovers them in an airlock and imprisons the group in a force field. However, they deactivate it and board a Klaestron ship. Sisko, though, manages to get the tractor beam working again, and they are able to keep the ship from escaping. Forced to re-enter the space station, Tandro informs Sisko that this is an extradition mission. Dax is under arrest -- charged with treason and the murder of Tandro's father, General Ardelon
Tandro, thirty years ago. Sisko realizes that he is accusing Curzon Dax, not Jadzia, of committing the crimes on Klaestron Four. For some reason, however, Dax refuses to tell Sisko what happened back then. In Dax's defense, Sisko and Kira tell Tandro that, since the space station is technically Bajoran, an extradition hearing must be held before they can release Dax to him. Quark reluctantly agrees to allow the hearing to be held in his bar. At the hearing, Sisko tries to convince Judge Els Renora that Jadzia Dax is an entirely different entity than
Curzon. Due to the unusual circumstances, Renora agrees to extend the proceedings. Sisko, determined to keep Dax alive, directs Kira, Bashir, and Odo to dig up all of the evidence they can find to prove Dax's innocence. Odo, on Klaestron Four, contacts
Enina, Tandro's mother, who claims that Curzon Dax had nothing to do with the death of her husband. She also claims that Tandro is obsessed with his father's death, and that Tandro believes Curzon was responsible because he can establish the whereabouts of all suspects except himself. In short, Dax has no alibi. The hearing resumes, and Tandro calls Selin Peers, the Trill who helped locate Dax, to the witness stand. Although Peers confirms that if a Trill committed a crime, the symbiont's future host body would know and feel everything involved with that crime, Sisko establishes that with each new host, a new and different personality results from the joining. A recess is called, and Dax remains tight-lipped. She asks Sisko to please end his efforts on her behalf, which leaves him wondering. Bashir is called to testify that Curzon and Jadzia are two physically distinct individuals. Unfortunately, Tandro then indicates it is impossible to determine whether or not the brainwave patterns of the symbiont have changed since they joined the new host, Jadzia. In a last effort, Sisko calls himself to the witness stand and allows Kira to interrogate him. She and Tandro take their turns questioning Sisko, after which a one hour recess is declared. Suddenly, Sisko receives an urgent message from Odo on Klaestron Four, that reports all evidence points to Curzon Dax and Enina Tandro having an affair thirty years ago -- which grants Curzon a perfect motive for murder. Jadzia, confronted with this information, admits shame over the marital indiscretions, but still neither admits or denies any knowledge of the murder. Returning from the recess, Dax takes the witness stand. Tandro proceeds to pin her down with questions, when he is interrupted by the surprise appearance of his mother,
Enina. She admits, to everyone's astonishment, that Curzon could not have been responsible for her husband's murder. When the crucial transmission was made that resulted in his death, she and Curzon were in bed together. Dax is free to go, Sisko and the other officers are relieved, and life on Deep Space Nine returns to normal. Timothy
Lynch DS 9 Episode Review: WARNING:
This article has spoiler information regarding
"Dax", the latest
episode from DS9. Those sentients not wishing to hear
lots of discussion
about it are probably better off jumping ship here.
Once again, the plot gives way to characterization -- but
*good*
characterization.
This is beginning to be almost expected with DS9 so far as I
can tell. I've
yet to see any plot aside from the second half of
"Emissary" that has jumped
out at me as strikingly original (as opposed to, for
instance, "Ship in a
Bottle" or "Tapestry" for TNG lately), and
this murder mystery was no
different.
Here, however, DS9 took full advantage of the situation to
tell us a lot more
about Sisko, about Dax's past, and about Trills (the last
answering many
questions that have been raised ever since "The
Host").
The answers about Trill physiology and Trill culture were
for me the most
interesting part of the show, and meshed nicely with many of
my own
speculations. For instance:
-- I don't remember if I ever brought this up publicly (I
tend to doubt it),
but I'd theorized a number of weeks back that there were
probably two classes
in the society of the Trill "host" species.
Those who did become full Trill
were most likely honored and treated well, and the others
(whether majority
or minority) were stuck looking longingly from afar.
We didn't have anything
confirmed quite to *that* extent, but it apparently does
take considerable
competition and diligence to be selected for full Trillness.
That should
reduce the cries from those claiming that Trilldom is
"slavery" for the host,
I hope.
-- The most interesting thing I heard was that the memories
and personalities
of both host and symbiont mesh in the joining. That
makes a great deal of
sense in Trill culture, especially given the competition to
become a Trill;
if the host will only be a physical shell, what's the point?
However, let's
remember "The Host", the first time we saw Trills.
How much of *Riker* was
involved in the continuing Odan/Crusher relationship?
-- Along those same lines, how much does the host *remember*
after a
separation? Obviously, 99 times out of 100 that's not
a valid question,
because the separation doesn't happen until the host dies.
The events of
"The Host", however, were again an exception --
and how much does Riker
remember of what happened during Odan's tenure in his body?
Hmm ... there's
a juicy followup story happening there if anyone wants to
ever get around to
telling it...
The elements of Trill physiology were not quite so
interesting in and of
themselves as the societal and psychological issues, but
made themselves
extremely useful in Bashir's testimony. I rather
expected that Bashir's
testimony would backfire (after all, anyone *that* naive
shouldn't be allowed
within a hundred meters of any lawyer :-) ), but the
skillful manner in which
Tandro turned Bashir's own smug analyses and raw talent
against him said a
lot, both about Bashir's character and about Tandro's
ability to pursue his
obsessions.
Speaking of smugness, Sisko's shown now that he can get as
smug as Picard --
but he shows it far more on the surface than Picard ever
has. His response
to Selin Peers's testimony and to forcing the hearing in the
first place is
that of a man who knows he's wrestling the situation into
the form he wants,
and is quite prepared to let his foes know he's enjoying it.
Sisko would
make a lousy diplomat (like Riker, he shows too much in his
face), but he's
great viewing when done right, as he was here.
In fact, Sisko probably got the most development of anyone
we saw in "Dax",
including Dax herself. The situation is vaguely
analogous to "The Measure of
a Man", which while ostensibly focused on Data really
gave most of its
strength and its work to Picard. ("Dax" was
nowhere near that level,
though.)
Thinking about it, actually, we found out surprisingly
little about *this*
Dax, given the title. We found out a lot about Trills,
and a lot about
Kerzon Dax, but not too much about Jadzia Dax. I'm a
bit surprised at that.
It's not necessarily a bad thing -- after all, it makes
sense to fill in a
lot of gaps about her situation and her background -- but
now that it's done,
we'd better see what *this* "new friend" is like.
So far, it's been awfully
tough to tell.
Despite not getting much of a chance to work most of the
episode, Terry
Farrell acquitted herself quite honorably, and has begun to
ease many of the
worries I had about the role. Two scenes in particular
stood out:
1) The teaser, in which Dax more or less completely
ignores Yet Another
Come-On [TM] from Bashir. Given the outrageous lines
Bashir was using [and
the fact that, given her looks, Ms. Farrell has probably had
to deal with
similar ones in her own past], it's probably difficult to
ignore them quite
as well as Dax did.
2) The scene where she finally talks a bit to Sisko.
Her speech about
Kerzon's ring no longer fitting her finger *finally* cracked
through the
serenity that has sometimes seemed out of place even for
Dax. It's quite
possibly the first time we've seen Dax act in any way other
than serene,
smug, or threatened -- and I think she nailed it.
In other respects, we've found out (or may have, at any
rate) a few things
about Dax that explains some of her behavior. For
instance,
-- Her insistence that physical attraction is no longer
particularly relevant
to her, despite the admission that her host's body may feel
otherwise, could
now be looked upon as springing from Kerzon Dax's
indiscretion with Enina
Tandro. It's clear that Dax feels no small guilt about
the affair, and may
have gone overboard with her reticence in trying to ensure
that it never
happens again. (It will be interesting to see if, now
that the news of the
affair is out, it dampens Bashir's interest or strengthens
it, and what form
Dax's response will take now.)
-- The reason we may not have seen much of the Dax/Sisko
friendship yet could
be that Dax isn't quite sure how much of it is *there* now,
or what form it
will take. Their friendship has taken on a very
different tenor since the
transition from Kerzon to Jadzia, clearly [witness the
"if you were still a
man" incident with Sisko here], and I don't think the
symbiont and the host
have agreed yet on what they think of this guy. If
done right, it'll be very
interesting.
Turning away from that for a moment, let me deal with the
plot. Again, it
was somewhat routine -- we've had lots of murder mysteries
lately. (This was
by far the best done of the three, though -- I found both
"A Man Alone" and "
Aquiel" to be very disappointing.) The
investigation and resolution of the
whodunnit fell squarely under the heading of
"competent, but no big deal"; I
am glad, however, that they decided not to have Enina
actually responsible
for the general's death, which was my hunch.
Where the plot worked beautifully was in forcing the hearing
(thus setting up
a great courtroom drama, which I'm a sucker for), and in
making the central
issue not Dax's innocence or guilt, but the "What is a
Trill?" question.
That, I suspect, is what saved "Dax" from being a
very mundane story, and
instead made it a good "cultural" character study.
The aborted kidnapping was among the best example of such a
sequence we've
seen in a long while. Unlike the Enterprise, it is not
unbelievable to see
that the security plans can be found -- and both the
kidnappers and the
station personnel worked quickly and admirably. The
one particularly *dumb*
move in the whole affair was Bashir rushing in by himself
without letting
anyone know what was going on -- but that's a particular
brand of foolishness
that fit Bashir perfectly. (The first thought that
went through his mind was
probably how grateful Jadzia would be for the rescue...)
In addition, the
"snaring" of the kidnappers with the fixed tractor
beam was arranged so
beautifully as to make me really wonder if they'd gotten
away -- a great
rarity in Trek. Very nice all around.
Similarly, forcing the hearing was a little underhanded on
Sisko's part, but
sprang from a great scene of teamwork between him and Kira.
The line about
how their sabotage "not only compromises Bajoran
security, but also ...
_annoys_ us" was probably the best zinger Kira's gotten
to have in ages; it's
about time something happened with her.
We could see Sisko's desperation mount further and further
as the odds
stacked up. I'm not sure a man so desperate is a man
I'd want to have
running such a key installation, but that ties in again to
Sisko being a very
un-reserved, "perceptible" character. Not
all of his traits are good ones
(given some of his slightly violent tendencies, I'm a little
curious about
how Jake was brought up, for instance), but they're all his.
And his final
exchange with Tandro on the witness stand brought the very
best of "The
Measure of a Man" to mind. This, like all good
courtroom dramas, had a
strong air of theatricality about it -- worked like a charm,
too.
Quark had a token scene which said a lot more about Odo than
it did about
him. Odo himself is being seen as relentless as ever
(even given his own
setup in a murder investigation recently), and not
particularly sympathetic
to anyone's feelings. Odo was a good choice to get the
information, but I
don't think there was much new about *him* to see.
(However, Sisko
upbraiding *Odo* for jumping to conclusions was a great
companion piece for
Odo's tasking Sisko about unjustified faith in "A Man
Alone".)
All the guest characters were fine (and better, in some
cases). Richard
Lineback was a little bland as Selin Peers, but I think most
"socially
acceptable Trill" are intended to be that way.
Gregory Itzin as Tandro was
properly obsessive, and also nicely skilled in his
arguments. Anne Haney
(a return guest; you may recall her from "The
Survivors" about three years
ago as Rishon Uxbridge) was truly delightful as Judge Renora.
"I intend to
be here until supper, not senility." Finally, we
have Fionnula Flanagan as
Enina Tandro. While her scenes tended to border ever
so slightly on being
too over-the-top, I found her quite believable in her
bitterness.
Lastly, the epilogue really got to me somehow. The
plot resolution contained
therein was a waste, but Enina's final request to Dax --
"Live, Jadzia Dax.
Live a long, fresh, and wonderful life" struck a chord.
I don't know why,
but it did. (It could mean almost anything, and I hope
we see Jadzia acting
on it somehow, sometime soon.) Add that to the
fade-out (the only such
closing fade-out I can ever recall seeing in TNG or DS9),
and it made a very
touching coda to a nicely constructed show.
Anyway, I'm rambling. On to a few short takes:
-- The "split her down the middle" solution was
great, and nicely countered
by the 93-hour criterion (which lets Riker off the hook :-)
). However, that
93-hour limit must have exceptions -- otherwise, how could
the symbiont ever
change hosts?
-- Klaestron Four must be *awfully* close for Odo to be able
to get there and
back so fast. I wish we'd been given some sense of
scale.
-- I was a little disappointed to see that Dax's reticence
was only due to
her vow of silence. Somehow, based on her controlled
anger at Sisko's line
of defense, I'd gotten the idea that his argument was a
*major* cultural
taboo among Trills. I'd like to hear more about this
sometime.
Well, that ought to do it. So, some numbers before I'm
outta here:
Plot: 7. Fairly routine, and mostly setting up
for a lot of information.
Plot Handling: 10. Smartly executed and sharply
done.
Characterization: 9. I wish we'd found out more
about *Jadzia* Dax, but
we'll see...
OVERALL: 9. Nice job. "Q-Less"
is now forgiven. :-)
NEXT WEEK:
Murderer, murderer, who's got the murderer?
Tim Lynch (Harvard-Westlake School, Science Dept.)
BITNET: tlynch@citjulie
INTERNET: tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
UUCP: ...!ucbvax!tlynch%juliet.caltech.edu@hamlet.caltech.edu
"Live, Jadzia Dax. Live a long, fresh, and
wonderful life."
--
Copyright 1993, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved,
but feel free to ask...
This article is explicitly prohibited from being used in any
off-net
compilation without due attribution and *express written
consent of the
author*. Walnut Creek and other CD-ROM distributors,
take note.
Related
Links:
Where
to Watch - Local channels and airtimes.
VHS, Laserdisc and DVD availability.
Cast:
Avery
Brooks as
Benjamin
Sisko™
Rene
Auberjonois as Odo™
Terry
Farrell as Jadzia
Dax™
Cirroc
Lofton as Jake
Sisko™
Colm
Meaney as Miles
O'Brien™
Armin
Shimerman as Quark™
Siddig
El Fadil as Dr.
Julian Bashir™
Nana
Visitor as Kira
Nerys™
Guest Cast:
Richard Lineback
as Selin Peers
Anne Haney
as Judge Renora
Gregory Itzin
as Tandro
Fionnula Flanagan
as Enina
as Selin Peers
Anne Haney
as Judge Renora
Gregory Itzin
as Tandro
Fionnula Flanagan
as Enina
Richard Lineback
as Selin Peers
Anne Haney
as Judge Renora
Gregory Itzin
as Tandro
Fionnula Flanagan
as Enina
Creative staff:
Director: David Carson
Story By: Peter Allan Fields
Teleplay By: D. C. Fontana and Peter Allan Fields
|