Saturday, December 14, 2013

Worst of Star Trek: Deep Space 9---The Passenger

"The Passenger" is the 9th episode of the first season.

I've been watching the series on Netflix and it's like seeing it again for the first time. There isn't much to dislike thus far in the first season, contrast that to TNG, which had a vast array of stinkers.

This episode falls into that category.

SUMMATION

While in a shuttlecraft, Major Kira and Dr. Bashir respond to a distress call from a freighter transporting a prisoner. Despite the police officer's warning, a Kobliad named Kajada, Dr. Bashir goes to assist the prisoner in the burning wreckage and is nearly strangled by him. The four go back to the shuttlecraft en route to DS9 where the prisoner named Vantika is pronounced dead and laying on a slab in Bashir's OR.

Kajada is not convinced that Vantika is dead and tells the crew that he has developed a technology to keep himself alive. He was en route to DS9 to obtain a compound called deuridium which his species uses to maintain life and longevity.

When Kajada is pushed from a balcony in the promenade and almost killed, Quark is a witness and insists no one else was with Kajada at that moment. Now the crew must investigate whether or not Kajada is telling the truth about the so-called faked death of Vantika.

Vantika had tech manuals on the human brain and was able to transport a genetic code in a cell that allows consciousness to be transplanted. But who is the new host?

The new host, in the body of Dr. Bashir, meets the mercenaries hired to take him back with the deuridium in an escape route. The plan is thwarted when Dax bombards the cargo ship, manned by Vantika in Bashir's body, with a magnetic pulse through its shield, rendering Vantika helpless.

With Bashir returned to normal, the essence of Vantika, in a containment holder, is destroyed by Kajada.



Even this episode wasnt as bad as some of the first season episodes of TNG, but this one is ridiculous for a few reasons---when it's revealed that Vantika must have come in contact with a humanoid long enough to transport his consciousness through a small chip embedded in a fingernail, I was taken back in my memory of when he grabbed Bashir by the throat on the freighter. Oh, so he's now in the body of Bashir. Mystery solved.

Also, how was Bashir, while under the influence of Vantika, able to go undetected on the promenade and the other stations, such as the cargo hold? Don't they have 24th century cameras on the station?

And last, although I love El Fadill's portrayal of Dr. Bashir, as Vantika his performance is dreadful, with stiff head and neck movements and spoken words over enunciated.

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