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Deus: "Storm Front, Part 2" Good But Forgettable Entertainment

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By O. Deus / 09:58, 18 October 2004 / ENTERPRISE Reviews

Reviews Ex Deus

Title: "Storm Front, Part 2"

Overall: Overall
Performances: Performances
Writing: Writing
Direction: Directing
FX & Prod Value: FX etc


Synopsis: Good guys win, bad guys lose. All things return to normal at the end.

Review: STAR TREK has traditionally suffered from two part episodes in which the second part fails to live up to the potential of the first. ST:TNG's "Best of Both Worlds" is the ultimate example of this kind of letdown. "Storm Front II", however is a distinctly stronger episode than its first part; it flows smoothly and though it may never become one of those genuinely memorable STAR TREK episodes, it's serviceable enough entertainment.

This may be because Part I was so distinctly weak that where it aimlessly wandered and dragged, Part II shoots through one scene sliding into another and all the parts of the episode click neatly into place. Had Part I been a stronger episode, had it gathered more suspense and set up a bigger challenge for the Enterprise crew, Part II might not have come off nearly so well. But instead all Part II has to do is discharge the accumulated material Part I puts into place so that where that episode was all work, Part II has more time to play: whether it's Silik's banter or the Enterprise engaging in a battle with WW2 planes over Manhattan.

Aside from Part II's disturbing newsreel opening with some clever combinations of archival footage and the shot of Hitler against the Statue of Liberty standing out as particularly effective, Part II does not manage to do anything to exploit the alternate history material any better than Part I and it's still somewhat sad that "Killing Game," which took place in the holodeck, could do much more with the Nazis than "Storm Front". Alicia and the resistance fighters by now have become minor side notes but the villains such as Silik and Vosk take center stage and are far more enjoyable to watch and do more to deepen the drama of the conflict anyway.

Their arrival also gives Archer something to react to where in Part I he mainly seemed to be floundering around trying to interact with the bizarre situation and coming up blank. By contrast, Archer's confrontation with Silik gives us some entertaining banter but also allows Silik to observe that Archer has gotten darker and for Archer to agree, suggesting that like the scars along Enterprise's hull, the scars on her captain have yet to heal. Meanwhile, in Archer's interactions with Silik he has come rather close to the Kirk ideal of deliberate judgement, cool command, and personal risk taking that is a long way from Archer in the first two seasons as naive, bumbling and arrogant.

But at the end of the day Part II is still popcorn entertainment. Silik and Vosk's conversations leak some more information about the Temporal Cold War but how much interest viewers will have in following them may vary, much like the effectiveness of over the counter sleep remedies. The episode has action and special effects scenes that stand out while we are watching them but nothing that moves the episode beyond the forgettable, intellectually or conceptually even. Viewers may remember the Enterprise's battle over Manhattan but outside the special effects it's doubtful that this episode will linger much. At the end of the episode we are gratified when the Enterprise returns home not so much because the Nazi\Vosk threat is over but because this awkward chapter of the story is finally over.

Next week: Amok Enterprise.



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RE: anyone else notice this? | Report this post to moderator
By: JediFonger (Odo's file, contact) @ 13:51:02 on Oct 20, 2004 | Edit History (1)

it's very hard for me to explain it. here is a transcript of Biogenesis episode from XF:

"SCENE 1
(Under SCULLY's voiceover, we see some stock footage of scenes of the Earth as viewed from space, the ocean, single celled organisms squirming around, then a dry desert landscape. Then plants, insects, a crocodile, picture of dinosaur, birds, more plants, early man, footage from the movie of the cavemen running over the snow, cave paintings, modern man, Apollo launch, lots of cars, DNA helix, interspersed here and there with deserts every time she mentions extinction.)

SCULLY: (voiceover) From Space, it seems an abstraction-- a magician's trick on a darkened stage. And from this distance one might never imagine that it is alive. It first appeared in the sea almost four billion years ago in the form of single-celled life. In an explosion of life spanning millions of years, nature's first multicellular organisms began to multiply... and then it stopped. 440 million years ago, a great mass extinction would kill off nearly every species on the planet leaving the vast oceans decimated and empty. Slowly, plants began to evolve, then insects, only to be wiped out in the second great mass extinction upon the Earth. The cycle repeated again and again. Reptiles emerging, independent of the sea only to be killed off. Then dinosaurs, struggling to life along with the first birds, fish, and flowering plants - their decimations Earth's fourth and fifth great extinctions. Only 100,000 years ago, Homo Sapiens appear-- man. From cave paintings to the bible to Columbus and Apollo 11, we have been a tireless force upon the earth and off cataloguing the natural world as it unfolds to us. Rising to a world population of over five billion people all descended from that original single cell, that first spark of life. But for all our knowledge, what no one can say for certain, is what or who ignited that original spark. Is there a plan, a purpose or a reason to our existence? Will we pass, as those before us, into oblivion, into the sixth extinction that scientists warn is already in progress?

(FADE TO: African coast. Men are shouting excitedly in Swahili. They kneel down at the water's edge and look at a broken metal fragment that is sticking up out of the sand. It has strange writing on it. Close up on fragment as the water washes over it.)

SCULLY: (voiceover) Or will the mystery be revealed through a sign, a symbol, a revelation?"

^now THAT'S the opening that i was talking about. it seems SF2's opening had very creative opening. i dunno why all of you aren't talking about it. it's not a "typical" teaser by any means at all. it's the first of its kind as far as i can tell. that shows you that this season is somn different. i hope i'm making some sense, no?

--------

LET THEM DIE!!!

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RE: anyone else notice this? by Jadzia-Dax @ 15:47:05 on Oct 20
    RE: anyone else notice this? by JediFonger @ 16:24:00 on Oct 20
       RE: anyone else notice this? by Jadzia-Dax @ 20:28:28 on Oct 20
          RE: anyone else notice this? by JediFonger @ 09:12:47 on Oct 21
             RE: anyone else notice this? by katefan @ 14:08:41 on Oct 21
                RE: anyone else notice this? by JediFonger @ 21:12:00 on Oct 21
                   RE: anyone else notice this? by katefan @ 08:30:03 on Oct 22
                      RE: anyone else notice this? by JediFonger @ 10:54:04 on Oct 22
                         RE: anyone else notice this? by katefan @ 11:11:54 on Oct 22
                            RE: anyone else notice this? by JediFonger @ 21:46:06 on Oct 22
                               RE: anyone else notice this? by Cap'n Calhoun @ 04:16:16 on Oct 23
                                  RE: anyone else notice this? by JediFonger @ 10:56:06 on Oct 26
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