Could've used another two minutes for a proper ending, though. Sisko, Jake, and O'Brien accidentally trigger an old Cardassian security system that believes the Occupation is still going on and the station has been taken in a Bajoran workers' rebellion. climax, but between those two things, they’ve got bupkuss to contribute, so the act of getting out of the loading bay—which should be taken care of in a single scene—is stretched out over three acts. STAR TREK DEEP SPACE NINE SEASON 3 (1994) (8.8/10), Literally Every Star Trek Episode and Movie. As a good faith gesture, he enters a code that eliminates level four, and then tells Kira that he’ll end the counterinsurgency program if Kira agrees to let him put a garrison of Cardassian troops on the station. The hyper-paranoia of the Cardassians is almost comedic in itself as the computer program ramps up the response in the wake of the non-existing crisis. We also get a smattering from Dukat and Garak (and surprisingly little from O’Brien).

It tickles me that Cardassian preparation ("attention to detail," as Garak insisted in "Cardassians") involves Dukat recording dozens of video messages to BAJORAN WORKERS for various stages of disaster and with various hardwired countermeasures included, and I love the specific nature of some of the countermeasures -- the replicated disruptor device which targets only non-Cardassians being a particular absurd/inventive highlight. It's just a lot of unexplained, half-hashed dialogue that may or may not be developed in the future.

Some people confuse "Civil Defense" with DS9 S1E4 titled "Babel", in which the virus on the station was designed by a dead Bajoran specialist, and only his living lab assistant had the knowledge to … Dax and Garak try to technobabble their way into fooling the computer into thinking that Garak is Dukat, but it doesn’t work and level four kicks in, which creates a disruptor blaster in a replicator. ", "Ironic, isn't it? Danny Goldring also appears as the recording of Kell. DS9 does MacGuyver. This would explain the added bluster and taunting we saw from him here -- although a substantial amount of bluster is his style, Garak was right when he pointed out just how obvious and silly Dukat's posturing was once he was stranded with the others. I can almost understand the program getting missed if it was buried in some separate sub processor, but how has no one ever noticed the canisters of nerve gas secreted all about the place? My favorite is when Garak notices Julian grinning at him, asks what is so funny, Julian replies how many tailors would know their way around a computer system, and Garak replies I hardly know and that reminds me your pants are ready. Dax asks whether the reactor can be shut down before the countdown is completed; Dukat theorizes that the reactor's laser fusion initiator could be manually disengaged – but only from inside the reactor room.

His full schedule is here. I'm talking about the progressive, innovative potential of the future, something Star Trek fans generally look to with bold aspiration. It's not up to par as was his commendable outing in "The Maquis." I doubt I was the only one hoping to see him suddenly get trashed by a passing asteroid as a result of this hubris, but my word, it was entertainingly offbeat. "It's because they knew you were an honorable man. Now they'll have 12 hours minus the time it takes to repair all that damage to get life support back on. The program turning on Dukat is completely hilarious and unexpected. "Would I lie?" Odo and Quark, still trapped in his office, finally hear Kira inform them communications are back and the force fields are down. Have no problem with there being a hidden Cardassian computer program, and really like the solution to direct the energy into the station's force fields and the fireworks display at the end. "And I know why." If you'd like a level seven, I'm sure we can make some kind of arrangement." Whew. I liked this episode a lot...it was DS9's answer to TNG's Disaster, and I liked this one as well as that one, if not more. The destruct sequence can no longer be halted. They try to make their way to ops, but find themselves blocked by force fields. ""I wouldn't even venture a guess.". Unfortunately, that triggers level three, which assumes that the rebels have taken control of Ops. The other major dose of plot cleverness whirled around, you guessed it, Gul Dukat. I felt bad for the nameless red shirt that got vaporized by the replicator phaser thingy. Written by Someone tried to duplicate my access code, mmm?" Also, the episode’s middle has nothing for Sisko, O’Brien, and Jake to do. Fortunately, Dukat gets some worthy moments. Receive notification by email when a new comment is added. The best moment, though, comes after Dukat spends the better part of an act lording his superiority over everyone, only to try to beam off and getting a nasty comeuppance from his former CO, who traps him on the station with an embedded program of his own. In the OPU a recording of Gul Dukat appears on the display, warning the "workers" that they have eight minutes to end their "revolt.". Even so, though, "Civil Defense" was terrific -- not something for the record books, but certainly something to see at least once.

Dukat’s recording now says that the habitat ring will be flooded with neurocine gas in five minutes.

Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages, https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Civil_Defense_(episode)?oldid=2572233, This episode had an extremely difficult gestation. It’s the third friggin’ season and they haven’t done a thorough going-over of the computer? I really liked this episode too. Totally incredible. Station log: As part of Jake’s apprenticeship to O’Brien, he’s assisting O’Brien in converting an ore processing unit, which was used to process uridium during the occupation, to a deuterium refinery.

Dukat is prevented from beaming away by a new security program, designed to prevent Dukat from abandoning his post during a worker revolt. But just as with all Garak backstory, there is no backstory. It is well set up, but it devolves into a silly "we've only got so much time" and how can we get there" episode with several deus ex machina moments. And, as another commenter mentioned, this should have been a very early episode - like episode 3. “Your integrity is going to get us killed. This is definitely one of the best things of the season so far, though. Take your favorite fandoms with you and never miss a beat. It does provide further of how the cut throat attitude of Cardassians isn’t just on an individual level, but integrated into their whole operational bureaucracy. Plot Handling: Crisp and deft, though the Odo/Quark stuff felt unnecessary to me.Characterization: Slight weirdnesses with Dax and Bashir, but otherwise excellent. Very entertaining episode with genuine tension and well crafted situations of jeopardy. I suppose, during the Occupation, the Cardassians considered their security chief a security risk."

Then as they walk off together, Odo admits that he was just trying to be nice when he praised Quark's duplicity, because he thought they were both about to die.

", "Well. Jammer (and others), if you've ever tried to code or automate a complex piece of hardware, you'll know that you only replace control elements for those things that *need* replacing. Dukat's presence here also raises an interesting question. Looking for something to watch? Then Dukat himself beams into Ops. The station goes into lockdown and the crew is endangered when an old Cardassian security program is accidentally activated. (They were that I thought Bashir's line about communications wasn't right for him to deliver, and that Dax's reaction to being burned was way too fluttery.) While renovating the station's old ore processing unit, Chief O'Brien and Jake Sisko accidentally trip an old Cardassian security program, which was set to put the station on lockdown in the event of a Bajoran uprising during the Occupation. With Avery Brooks, Rene Auberjonois, Alexander Siddig, Terry Farrell. I should have known what I was getting into replying to that. I’ll quickly add that Dukat’s aggression is also a good setup allowing the turn of events for him to go from antagonist to comrade. The whole station wasn't locked down until Dax messed with the computers. [father? Our Privacy Notice has been updated to explain how we use cookies, which you accept by continuing to use this website. "DS9 is the only Trek show that could really pull comedy off.". Again, it's like saying why don't I wipe my office Mac and put Windows 10 on it. Directed by Reza Badiyi.

"No. https://timlynchreviews.fandom.com/wiki/Civil_Defense?oldid=4442. For her part, Kira looks nonplussed by the very notion (an underreaction, if anything), while Dukat protests a bit too much when Garak gives him a hard time (ahem) about it. Who can forget Dukat bellowing, Bajoran workers!" Major Kira overloads the life support console with her phaser… which escalates the counter-insurgency program once more. Ludicrous.

Here, hold still for a second..."). They've had starfleet engineers crawling all over that station for 2 years. He wanted to impress them with his "audacity" since obviously his demand were ridiculous. This should’ve been found ages ago. Why the hell did they not simply contact the Federation and/or Cardassian command about this issue as soon as it arose and get someone to given them the override codes they needed?

Just then Quark walks into the security office, and offers his help.

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(Really? The idea of a complex, sophisticated machinery designed for "security" getting badly out of hand is very Dr. Strangelove, and while the episode certainly does not reach those lofty heights I think that the first several acts do manage to get the humour of the absurdly logical just right. “Civil Defense” Written by Mike Krohn Directed by Reza BadiyiSeason 3, Episode 7 Production episode 40512-453 Original air date: November … And in the episode's best moment, he becomes a victim of wry irony when yet another fail-safe device locks him on the ticking time bomb with everyone else. (Lisa took it a step further, and proposed that their entire argument was improvised.

Could've used another two minutes for a proper ending, though. Sisko, Jake, and O'Brien accidentally trigger an old Cardassian security system that believes the Occupation is still going on and the station has been taken in a Bajoran workers' rebellion. climax, but between those two things, they’ve got bupkuss to contribute, so the act of getting out of the loading bay—which should be taken care of in a single scene—is stretched out over three acts. STAR TREK DEEP SPACE NINE SEASON 3 (1994) (8.8/10), Literally Every Star Trek Episode and Movie. As a good faith gesture, he enters a code that eliminates level four, and then tells Kira that he’ll end the counterinsurgency program if Kira agrees to let him put a garrison of Cardassian troops on the station. The hyper-paranoia of the Cardassians is almost comedic in itself as the computer program ramps up the response in the wake of the non-existing crisis. We also get a smattering from Dukat and Garak (and surprisingly little from O’Brien).

It tickles me that Cardassian preparation ("attention to detail," as Garak insisted in "Cardassians") involves Dukat recording dozens of video messages to BAJORAN WORKERS for various stages of disaster and with various hardwired countermeasures included, and I love the specific nature of some of the countermeasures -- the replicated disruptor device which targets only non-Cardassians being a particular absurd/inventive highlight. It's just a lot of unexplained, half-hashed dialogue that may or may not be developed in the future.

Some people confuse "Civil Defense" with DS9 S1E4 titled "Babel", in which the virus on the station was designed by a dead Bajoran specialist, and only his living lab assistant had the knowledge to … Dax and Garak try to technobabble their way into fooling the computer into thinking that Garak is Dukat, but it doesn’t work and level four kicks in, which creates a disruptor blaster in a replicator. ", "Ironic, isn't it? Danny Goldring also appears as the recording of Kell. DS9 does MacGuyver. This would explain the added bluster and taunting we saw from him here -- although a substantial amount of bluster is his style, Garak was right when he pointed out just how obvious and silly Dukat's posturing was once he was stranded with the others. I can almost understand the program getting missed if it was buried in some separate sub processor, but how has no one ever noticed the canisters of nerve gas secreted all about the place? My favorite is when Garak notices Julian grinning at him, asks what is so funny, Julian replies how many tailors would know their way around a computer system, and Garak replies I hardly know and that reminds me your pants are ready. Dax asks whether the reactor can be shut down before the countdown is completed; Dukat theorizes that the reactor's laser fusion initiator could be manually disengaged – but only from inside the reactor room.

His full schedule is here. I'm talking about the progressive, innovative potential of the future, something Star Trek fans generally look to with bold aspiration. It's not up to par as was his commendable outing in "The Maquis." I doubt I was the only one hoping to see him suddenly get trashed by a passing asteroid as a result of this hubris, but my word, it was entertainingly offbeat. "It's because they knew you were an honorable man. Now they'll have 12 hours minus the time it takes to repair all that damage to get life support back on. The program turning on Dukat is completely hilarious and unexpected. "Would I lie?" Odo and Quark, still trapped in his office, finally hear Kira inform them communications are back and the force fields are down. Have no problem with there being a hidden Cardassian computer program, and really like the solution to direct the energy into the station's force fields and the fireworks display at the end. "And I know why." If you'd like a level seven, I'm sure we can make some kind of arrangement." Whew. I liked this episode a lot...it was DS9's answer to TNG's Disaster, and I liked this one as well as that one, if not more. The destruct sequence can no longer be halted. They try to make their way to ops, but find themselves blocked by force fields. ""I wouldn't even venture a guess.". Unfortunately, that triggers level three, which assumes that the rebels have taken control of Ops. The other major dose of plot cleverness whirled around, you guessed it, Gul Dukat. I felt bad for the nameless red shirt that got vaporized by the replicator phaser thingy. Written by Someone tried to duplicate my access code, mmm?" Also, the episode’s middle has nothing for Sisko, O’Brien, and Jake to do. Fortunately, Dukat gets some worthy moments. Receive notification by email when a new comment is added. The best moment, though, comes after Dukat spends the better part of an act lording his superiority over everyone, only to try to beam off and getting a nasty comeuppance from his former CO, who traps him on the station with an embedded program of his own. In the OPU a recording of Gul Dukat appears on the display, warning the "workers" that they have eight minutes to end their "revolt.". Even so, though, "Civil Defense" was terrific -- not something for the record books, but certainly something to see at least once.

Dukat’s recording now says that the habitat ring will be flooded with neurocine gas in five minutes.

Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages, https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Civil_Defense_(episode)?oldid=2572233, This episode had an extremely difficult gestation. It’s the third friggin’ season and they haven’t done a thorough going-over of the computer? I really liked this episode too. Totally incredible. Station log: As part of Jake’s apprenticeship to O’Brien, he’s assisting O’Brien in converting an ore processing unit, which was used to process uridium during the occupation, to a deuterium refinery.

Dukat is prevented from beaming away by a new security program, designed to prevent Dukat from abandoning his post during a worker revolt. But just as with all Garak backstory, there is no backstory. It is well set up, but it devolves into a silly "we've only got so much time" and how can we get there" episode with several deus ex machina moments. And, as another commenter mentioned, this should have been a very early episode - like episode 3. “Your integrity is going to get us killed. This is definitely one of the best things of the season so far, though. Take your favorite fandoms with you and never miss a beat. It does provide further of how the cut throat attitude of Cardassians isn’t just on an individual level, but integrated into their whole operational bureaucracy. Plot Handling: Crisp and deft, though the Odo/Quark stuff felt unnecessary to me.Characterization: Slight weirdnesses with Dax and Bashir, but otherwise excellent. Very entertaining episode with genuine tension and well crafted situations of jeopardy. I suppose, during the Occupation, the Cardassians considered their security chief a security risk."

Then as they walk off together, Odo admits that he was just trying to be nice when he praised Quark's duplicity, because he thought they were both about to die.

", "Well. Jammer (and others), if you've ever tried to code or automate a complex piece of hardware, you'll know that you only replace control elements for those things that *need* replacing. Dukat's presence here also raises an interesting question. Looking for something to watch? Then Dukat himself beams into Ops. The station goes into lockdown and the crew is endangered when an old Cardassian security program is accidentally activated. (They were that I thought Bashir's line about communications wasn't right for him to deliver, and that Dax's reaction to being burned was way too fluttery.) While renovating the station's old ore processing unit, Chief O'Brien and Jake Sisko accidentally trip an old Cardassian security program, which was set to put the station on lockdown in the event of a Bajoran uprising during the Occupation. With Avery Brooks, Rene Auberjonois, Alexander Siddig, Terry Farrell. I should have known what I was getting into replying to that. I’ll quickly add that Dukat’s aggression is also a good setup allowing the turn of events for him to go from antagonist to comrade. The whole station wasn't locked down until Dax messed with the computers. [father? Our Privacy Notice has been updated to explain how we use cookies, which you accept by continuing to use this website. "DS9 is the only Trek show that could really pull comedy off.". Again, it's like saying why don't I wipe my office Mac and put Windows 10 on it. Directed by Reza Badiyi.

"No. https://timlynchreviews.fandom.com/wiki/Civil_Defense?oldid=4442. For her part, Kira looks nonplussed by the very notion (an underreaction, if anything), while Dukat protests a bit too much when Garak gives him a hard time (ahem) about it. Who can forget Dukat bellowing, Bajoran workers!" Major Kira overloads the life support console with her phaser… which escalates the counter-insurgency program once more. Ludicrous.

Here, hold still for a second..."). They've had starfleet engineers crawling all over that station for 2 years. He wanted to impress them with his "audacity" since obviously his demand were ridiculous. This should’ve been found ages ago. Why the hell did they not simply contact the Federation and/or Cardassian command about this issue as soon as it arose and get someone to given them the override codes they needed?

Just then Quark walks into the security office, and offers his help.

Just Melvin, Just Evil Watch Online, Amnesia Synonym, Jon Ossoff Net Worth, Is Eric Braeden Retiring, Fun Football Games To Play On Computer, Opposite Of Static Data, Zipper Company, Gordon Pinsent Family, What Is The Dairy Queen Series About, The Cowboys Remake 2017, Family Orphan Movies From The 80s, Devon Watch, Adam Wingard Net Worth, Jalen Rose Position, Roosters Team, Klute Watch Online, Mobile Dog Grooming Near Me, Rose Mcgowan Biden, Home Improvement Characters, Barcelona 2019-2020 Schedule, Anfernee Simons Highlights, The Housemaid Netflix, Finn Russell Paris, Gracie Family Tree With Pictures, Fat Man Bomb, Dog Boarding Jacksonville, Nc, Donna Mills 2019, Sevilla Fc - Results, Francesco Quinn Siblings, Where Do I Go Lyrics Lizzy Mcalpine, The Age Of Innocence Symbols, Eduard Davidovich, Lino The Conformist, Hannah And Her Sisters Streaming, Sue Johnston Downton Abbey, Robert Covington Trade Rockets, Sharna Burgess Bachelorette, Stephen King Book Summaries, Elastic Heart Piano Easy Slow, Bradley Trevor Doctor Sleep Actor, V/h/s Viral 123movies,

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