Synopsis:
Dax risks her life and her future with Starfleet to fulfill a blood oath made with three aged Klingons.
The relative calm of Deep Space Nine is shattered by the arrival of three aged Klingon warriors -- drunken, overweight Kor; warlike Koloth; and their leader, Kang. The three came to find Curzon Dax, and are surprised that he is no longer alive. Kor has no problem adjusting to Dax in her new, female form, while Koloth scoffs at the idea that she was once his old friend Curzon. However, Kang has the most trouble accepting Jadzia, because he has come with a mission. The group's greatest adversary, a man known as the Albino, has been located, and the foursome can now fulfill the blood oath they made decades ago to kill him.
Dax is unsure of whether or not she can go through with the oath that Curzon made. Kang reminds her that as a Trill, she has no obligation to fulfill what her symbiont promised. Still, Dax knows that a Klingon blood oath can never be broken, and confused, she seeks Kira's advice, telling her the story of how this began. After the Klingons were victorious over the Albino, he murdered the firstborn sons of Kor, Koloth, and Kang. The three took a blood oath of revenge, and Curzon Dax, as the godfather to Kang's slain son, took one as well. Compelled to keep that oath, Dax visits Koloth in a holosuite and engages in battle with him, successfully holding her own and winning his support. However, Kang still refuses to let Dax participate.
Dax meets with Kang and uses Curzon's deep understanding of the Klingon race to force him into changing his mind. However, while Kang agrees to let her go, Sisko, who has learned of Dax's plan from Kira, does not, and reminds her of her duty to Starfleet. Dax tells him that she will still go, and is ready to face the consequences when she returns -- if she returns.
The foursome travels to the Albino's world, and almost immediately, Dax and Kang clash over the best course of action -- Kang wants to march up and fight the Albino in full view of everyone, while Dax believes a more clandestine course of action would be more appropriate. Meeting privately, Kang admits to Dax that the Albino actually invited him, giving the aged warriors a chance to die with honor. Dax suggests it would be better to win with honor, and proposes a plan to increase their advantage. Kang, newly impressed, agrees to go along.
The group puts their counterattack into effect, surprising the Albino in his command post. The Klingons perform admirably despite their age, defeating the guards before Koloth is killed and Kor wounded. Kang is mortally wounded and falls to the ground, but Dax is then able to disarm and corner the Albino. Faced with the opportunity to kill him, she hesitates, but Kang is able to summon the last of his strength and deliver the death blow himself before dying. After bidding farewell to Kor, Dax returns to the station, a different person after her experience.
Timothy Lynch
DS 9 Episode Review:
Review Date: 3/26/94
WARNING: This post contains large amounts of spoilers for
DS9's "Blood
Oath". Those opposed to spoilers may have to swear eternal
vengeance if they
read this article early, so be warned.
Ahhh. *Much* better. Not perfect, but a very nice way to
spend an hour.
I suspect the nostalgia factor may end up skewing
opinions a trifle higher
than "Blood Oath" really deserves, but nostalgia or not, the
show was
entertaining and gripping, which is, after all, its primary
mission.
Those clamoring for a spinoff series devoted entirely to
Klingons had better
get ready for this, because it's as close as we're ever
likely to get. While
Dax's position was far from incidental, the show was
arguably *about* Kang,
Koloth and Kor, not her. This was a "Klingon view of the
universe" show, and
at least some aspects of it really need to be considered on
that basis.
While that aspect of it worked fine, I thought the
casting choice for the
show (i.e. the nostalgic, "hey, it'd be neat to get all
three of the main
original Klingons!" idea) was forced. In the Trek universe,
the only common
thread we've ever really known about these people is that
they all had events
occur where they strongly opposed the Federation, and Kirk &
company in
particular. For "Blood Oath" to basically say "we just want
to use three old
Klingons, but these three could be fun" without a real,
strong *reason* to
get those three characters in particular together feels more
like a marketing
ploy than a creative one, and that's not so pleasant.
However, taking the casting as a given, it's then
imperative to make sure all
three of the Klingons are believable: both as themselves,
and as the same
characters we saw a century ago in Trek time.
Kang definitely fit the bill. I'll admit that my memories
of the TOS-era
Kang are well beyond sketchy (I doubt I've seen that
particular episode in
at least five years), but both the writing and acting seemed
very consistent
with what little I remember. And as for being convincing as
a Klingon ... no
question in my mind. Ansara, despite his semi-betrayal, was
probably the
most intensely noble of the three guest Klingons, and had an
intensity that
came right through the screen to push me against the wall.
Very, very
impressive.
Koloth (William Campbell) may have been the weak link. On
the one hand, it
may make sense for him to be the least convincing Klingon of
the three, as I
always felt he was the least convincing, most dandyish of
the three TOS
Klingons *anyway* -- so he might get major "in character"
points there. On
the other hand, he was at times really _not_ very convincing
as a Klingon; he
seemed almost too precise, too meticulous. He was fairly
good in the
strategy-planning meetings, and more or less fine in the
bat'leth practice
when Dax convinces him she's worth bringing along, but even
so I was
extremely conscious of the fact that I was watching an
_actor_ there -- a
feeling I did not have with either of the other two (or with
Dax, for that
matter).
Kor, on the other hand, was probably my favorite. Yes, he
was somewhat
different in many ways from the Kor we saw a century ago,
but he's also the
only one that *acknowledged* any sort of change from what he
was. Kor struck
me as the one of the three with the least regard for
traditions and the least
regard for ethics; he didn't care much for the forms of the
oath or the exact
issues involved, he just wanted vengeance and was happy to
take it in
whatever form presented itself. (That also might explain
why, at the close,
there was neither a death-chant for Kang and Koloth nor the
actual eating of
the albino's heart; the only Klingon left was Kor, and he
wasn't particularly
interested with their mission accomplished.) The lack of
regard for ethics
certainly sums up the original Kor to a T, and the rest is
something I could
see coming with age. Kor worked beautifully.
Besides, I've been a John Colicos fan for a very long
time (since his
"Battlestar Galactica" days if not longer), and this gave
him the opportunity
to have a good deal of fun. The direction he got must have
amounted to "open
mouth, insert scenery, chew vigorously", since that's
certainly what he did
on several occasions. :-)
Enough of the guest stars, then; what about Dax? Well,
this was definitely
"a good day to act" for Terry Farrell; she made Dax about as
believable as
I've ever seen her. While Kang was right, that the Klingon
phrases didn't
quite fit in Jadzia Dax's mouth, I got the strong, strong
impression that
they fit in her *mind*, and that Dax was very frustrated
that Jadzia didn't
sound as convincing as she should. That's a very tough image
to project, and
I thought Farrell did an expert job. Kudos to her, and to
Peter Allan Fields
for continuing to give the character something interesting
to *do*, something
which, though improving, remains depressingly rare.
While Dax's scenes with the Klingons were supposed to be
much of the meat of
the show, I actually thought the most powerful moment she
had was in her
conversation with Kira early on. The "how many Cardassians
did you kill?"
question Kira was asked last year by "Gul Darhe'el" came
home to roost here,
to fairly devastating effect; that, combined with the
interplay between Kira
and Dax, really delivered a blow, I thought. (Dax's "who,
me" when asked if
she was thinking about killing someone was just perfect --
the sort of "who,
me" that can only be interpreted as "I *must* talk about
this with
somebody...") [As a side point, the *lighting* during that
Kira/Dax scene
really stood out as very powerful as well.]
The story itself was just involved enough to get us
interested in the guest
stars, but not so involved that it distracted from watching
them, which was
after all the point of this show in the first place. It
worked, though, for
many reasons. One very important one was that the albino was
*not*
particularly stupid: as soon as he found out weapons weren't
working, he
realized very fast what must be happening. He didn't lose
through stupidity,
he lost because everything happened a little too fast for
him to compensate.
That suggests good tactics on the part of Dax and company,
not idiocy to make
the plot work. Sound writing there.
Other than that, the story was fairly basic: Dax finds
out about the
Klingons' presence (done extremely nicely, I might add), Dax
fights to become
part of the team, then the vengeance mission itself.
Straightforward stuff,
but it's all in the execution -- and this execution was
magnificent.
One aspect that concerns me, however, turns on the
Dax/Sisko scene and the
final scene where Dax comes back under everyone's watchful
eye. While I
applaud both scenes as expertly done, I'm concerned that,
like the Odo/Kira
confrontation at the close of "Necessary Evil", any
ramifications of these
actions will vanish into the ether. Dax has now participated
in an action
that Starfleet strongly condemns (at least, they did back
when Worf killed
Duras three years ago); she needs some serious talking to
now. Sisko needs
to talk to her both as Starfleet and as old friend, and Kira
needs to talk to
her as one that's been there. We'd *better* see more of
this. If not, the
show loses its power.
That about covers it. "Blood Oath" isn't perfect, as I
said, but it's very
strong -- in fact, the strongest thing DS9 has done since
"Whispers", I'd
argue. Nice way to take us into a few weeks of reruns.
So, a few short points:
-- One slight annoyance: everyone keeps getting referred
to as a "Klingon
d'Har master" or something sounding like it. What the hell
IS a Klingon
d'Har master?
-- Odo and Quark worked beautifully, as usual. "But he'll
kill you." "No,
he said he'll kill *you*." Grin.
-- Based on the "eighty-one years ago" reference, that
suggests that Dax met
Kang somewhere between ST5 and ST6. That seems to mostly
make sense...
-- Where did the albino get the bat'leth he was using for
the final fight
with Kang? He couldn't have gotten it from either of the
wounded Klingons;
he'd have killed them with it in the bargain. I can't
imagine he just keeps
one around...
-- For cast-watchers, an interesting thing to spot.
Christopher Collins, who
played the albino's assistant, has shown up before several
times (usually on
TNG, both as a Klingon and a Pakled) -- but more
importantly, he's shown up
*in that makeup* before, as one of Quark's nefarious
associates back in "The
Passenger". If that's meant to be the same character, that
implies the
albino has at least some slight contact with information
about the station.
Interesting thought...
That's about it, then. If you're a Klingon fan, you'll
enjoy this. If
you're a TOS nostalgia fan, you'll enjoy this. You'll
probably enjoy this
even if neither applies. So, to sum up:
Plot: Not particularly involved, but more than adequate
for a piece this
character-driven. The involvement of those three particular
Klingons is a little much, though.
Plot Handling: Marvelous. Taut as a bowstring.
Characterization: Probably the best use of Dax *ever*, and
everybody else
wasn't half bad either.
OVERALL: Call it a 9.5. Very nice piece of work.
NEXT WEEK: As I said, reruns -- starting with "Melora".
Tim Lynch (Harvard-Westlake School, Science Dept.)
BITNET: tlynch@citjulie
INTERNET: tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
UUCP: ...!ucbvax!tlynch%juliet.caltech.edu@hamlet.caltech.edu
"Kang thinks too much; Koloth doesn't feel enough."
-- Kor
--
Copyright 1994, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but
feel free to ask...
This article is explicitly prohibited from being used in any
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compilation without due attribution and *express written
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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:
John Colicos as Kor
William Campbell as Koloth
Michael Ansara as Kang
Bill Bolender as The Albino
Christopher Collins as Assistant
Creative staff:
Director: Winrich Kolbe
Written By: Peter Allan Fields