menuBarBack
Beam Up News | Join | Your Account
Home
Advanced Search
boxBottom
News Tribblets
boxBottom
Stardates Calendar
Feature Story

Features

ENT Developing "Stratagem" for Creative Success as Deus Likes Second in a Row

Features

By O. Deus / 06:58, 6 February 2004 / ENTERPRISE Reviews

Reviews Ex Deus

Title: "Stratagem"

Overall: 8.5
Performances: 8.5
Writing: 8
Direction: 7.5
FX & Prod Value: 7


Synopsis: Enterprise captures the creator of the Xindi weapon and with time running out try to trick him into revealing the weapon's location.

Review: "Stratagem" is both a strong episode in and of itself and a worthy follow-up to "Proving Ground" as part of the Xindi arc. More intriguingly, "Stratagem" is an ENTERPRISE that plays out more like an episode ALIAS.

By committing to the premise of the third season in which Earth and humanity face the threat of imminent extermination, ENT created the problem of a threat that required extreme measures. "Anomaly" is about as far as a STAR TREK series is likely to take the idea of a Starfleet Captain using force to extract information. "Stratagem" does an ingenious end run around the problem by creating a logically worked out situation in which the solution is both ruthless and non-violent.

But at the same time, "Stratagem" also gives us one of the most human villains to date in terms of our ability to empathize with him. Randy Oglesby's 'Degra' is a fully realized character who is well aware of the moral consequences of his actions and manages to get across the character's emotions in a way that is shocking for a character who never seemed particularly significant or distinctive in earlier episodes. When Degra realizes what he has done in giving away the location on the bridge, his face falls and as perverse as it might be we can empathize with his pain at what he sees as his betrayal of his people.

It is ironic that "Stratagem" is essentially a holodeck episode minus the holodeck but that it manages to succeed far better than most holodeck episodes. Like Moriarty in "Ship in a Bottle," the premise involves a ship within a ship and an illusion within an illusion. But unlike that TNG episode, the goal is not to untangle all the layers of illusion but the interaction between Archer and Degra. Two characters both utterly determined and driven by the fear of a terrible future and the moral compromises they have had to make. And both lying to each other and suppressing their feelings to make themselves as cold and hard as they have to be to do what they believe needs to be done.

Visually the debris of the proving ground serve as both a plausible tool for Enterprise's malfunction without resorting to technobabble, and a credible source of tension whjile the incoming Xindi ship serves as a reminder for the destructive force Degra has unleashed.

Michael Sussman's teleplay and veteran STAR TREK director Mike Vejar bring together their talents to create an episode that flows seamlessly and smoothly without any noticeable gaps to its conclusion. Like "Proving Ground" before it, "Stratagem" has a momentum that the Xindi arc has lacked until now. It's another triumph of efficency in storytelling for ENTERPRISE, overcoming many of the obstacles that have traditionally held the series back.



More Top StoriesComments
Nov 21Faran Tahir on His 10 Minutes as Captain Robau in J.J. Abrams Star Trek Movie1
Nov 21J.J. Abrams, Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman on Shatner and Nimoy6
Nov 21Roberto Orci on the Status of the Star Trek XII Script and the Possibility of Producing a New Star Trek TV Series13
Nov 205-Page Preview of Final Issue of Nero Comic Book Mini Series 4
Nov 20J.J. Abrams Says the Success of the DVD May Bring More People to Star Trek XII1
Story Archives...Browse:   

Talkback

56 comments Post New | Help
View:

RE: Did you see, Mayweather had 2 lines! | Report this post to moderator
By: O. Deus (Odo's file, contact) @ 00:12:34 on Feb 10, 2004

I've had a problem before with the lack of human colonies, something that clearly clashes with Trek canon, but Mayweather should have been the equivalent of someone from another culture, instead he really hasn't amounted to much.

Of course this is a pattern in which the fresh faced young officer who's supposed to stand in for the viewer, never amounts to much on Star Trek. Chekov at least had the russian gag, Wesley was massively hated, Bashir was uneven, Kim was a waste and Mayweather...even more so.

Reply
Reply
Quote
Quote
Parent
Parent
Talkback Top
Top
Promenade










TrekWeb Merchants
Amazon.com
Amazon.co.uk
Amazon.ca
Amazon.de
Barnes & Noble

Get Firefox!
Privacy Policy | About Us | Legal Notice | Contact Us | | Get Firefox!
© 1996-2009 TrekWeb.com and Steve Krutzler. All rights reserved.