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John Billingsley's 'Phlox' Needs New "Doctor's Orders", Says Deus of "Average" Episode

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By O. Deus / 06:59, 19 February 2004 / ENTERPRISE Reviews

Reviews Ex Deus

Title: "Doctor's Orders"

Overall: 7
Performances: 7.5
Writing: 5
Direction: 7
FX & Prod Value: 6


Synopsis: While the crew is asleep, Doctor Phlox is left in charge of Enterprise.

Review: Doctor Phlox has been the most consistently underused ENTERPRISE crewmember with the exceptions of poor forgotten Mayweather. But unlike him, Phlox actually has an incredible amount of potential that tends to get wasted by just utilizing him to occasionally move the plot along or as a minor supporting character. A situation that has only grown worse in the third season as a recent interview by the actor testifies.

Nevertheless, Phlox has managed to steal the show in even the smallest parts in other episodes. His appearances in "A Night in Sickbay" that catalogued his routine were the highlight of an awful episode. "Doctor's Orders" is strongest at the start when as in "Sickbay," Phlox is simply and calmly going about his routine. But it's when the episode tries to fit him into a remake of VOYAGER's "One" that the material begins to unravel.

"One" was a very strong episode and a great concept in no small part because it was a way of creating character development for Seven of Nine by demonstrating to her that she needs other people. But there is no similar development necessary for Phlox and "Doctor's Orders" doesn't provide that development. As Billingsley has himself pointed out in the interview, Phlox is at heart an unflappable character. Odd as it might be, a scene of Phlox making his rounds with Porthos is somehow more interesting than one with Phlox stalking imaginary Xindi. "Doctor's Orders"'s plot would have made sense for T'Pol, incredibly derivative of VOYAGER as that may have been. But aside from training him to run parts of the ship it fails to do much in the way of developing Phlox.

While Roxann Dawson's direction is smooth and effective, visually "Doctor's Order" simply never comes close to "One" in evoking a hallucinatory, paranoid atmosphere in which the unreal merges with the real. Instead, the episode quickly demarcates the line of reality with the only exception being the SIXTH SENSE-style twist involving T'Pol.

Billingsley and Blalock do get the chance to do some comedy and Blalock is surprisingly funny but Phlox is funniest when he's relaxed and reacting normally, not in forced scenes when he's running around like a chicken with his head cut off. The problem is that the producers have not grasped that Billingsley's Phlox is naturally funny and that they don't need to put him through awkward routines for that humor to shine.

All in all, "Doctor's Orders" is a somewhat average and uninspired episode about ENTERPRISE's most underused character, whose best moments are not so much plot-derived as montages of Phlox wandering an empty ship. The narrative device of Phlox's letters to the same Doctor Lucas as in prior episodes are good but fails to serve as an adequate showcase for Phlox and Billingsley's talents.



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RE: Huh? | Report this post to moderator
By: Steve Krutzler (Odo's file, contact) @ 09:22:28 on Feb 20, 2004 | Edit History (1)

Incidentially, although I too found the story very derivative and many of the scare tactics just silly (insectoid's shadow approaching from around corner?, Phlox's line "Is this a starship or a haunted house?"), what "Doctor's Orders" at least did well was tell its story in the prequel context. That is, you can't just say "Computer, set a course for X and engage at warp 2." We got to see just how difficult it is to manage going to warp speed in this era and some of the best lines were in this final act, such as:

T'Pol: This is by far one of my worst days.

[...]

Phlox: You're telling me to read the manual?

Very prequel-ish sort of dialogue. I just wish they had found some better idea for getting Phlox alone on the ship than by retreading a story that has already been retread before.

Also, perhaps I missed something else (below someone mentioned that the anomaly was expanding, explaining my 10 weeks question), but here is another logic problem I just didn't understand: if Phlox put T'Pol out in the first place, why would he not be able to recognize immediately that she was a figment of his imagination? Did they say something about her waking up and finding that she was immune or something to convince him? The first time she appeared, Phlox was not all that impaired, so I find it hard to believe that he wouldn't just be like "Hey, what are you doing awake?" Unless I missed something else.

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It's a rip-off. / We're stepped on, and cheated! / We're flat, stone-cold lied to / But we're not defeated / No!

Halen. "The Dream is Over."

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RE: Huh? by O. Deus @ 18:53:51 on Feb 21
RE: Huh? by Captain Chris @ 15:26:28 on Feb 20

RE: Huh? | Report this post to moderator
By: Avatar (Odo's file, contact) @ 17:31:33 on Feb 19, 2004

I thought the phenomenon was expanding and that this expansion was expected. What wasn't expected, was how fast and how far it expanded in such a short time.

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Everyone deserves freedom and equality!

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