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Sunday, 24 April 2022

Star Trek Picard Season 2 Episode 8 Mercy

CONTAINS SPOILERS

I can't quite believe I missed the single biggest plot development from last week's episode - namely that at the end of the episode, Picard and Guinan were arrested by the FBI after Picard's beam-in to Forward Street was picked up by a CCTV camera.  Well, it's time to correct that oversight, because this episode features the subsequent interrogation by an FBI agent who really doesn't seem to know what he's doing.

The pre-credits sequence at the start shows a young boy (I guessed Picard again, still running from some monsters or other) running through a forest night, chased by apparently imaginary but actually real monsters.  Neither the boy nor the pursuers are fully revealed at this point, but fortunately we don't have to wait too long to find out.

FBI Agent Martin Wells seems out of his depth and incoherent in his line of questioning; there are veiled threats, circumstantial evidence and bits and pieces (some photos from the gala; the video of Picard's transporter beam) and this would be trivial except that the Europa flight is now in jeopardy again, and Picard and Guinan are imprisoned in an unknown cellar somewhere in an FBI facility in LA.  I never watched The X Files and I have no desire to now, and this aspect of the episode frustrated me.  Still, it does get moving fairly quickly - there are no drawn-out conspiracy theories, just story development.  Agent Wells reveals that somebody transcribed Rios's outburst while he was in the immigration detention centre, and hearing Picard read out these words while in detention with the FBI makes the story seem very plausible, and neatly draws out that thread from the earlier episode.  

Guinan is taken from the interrogation room so that Wells can continue his interview with Picard one-to-one.  While Guinan is waiting in a separate room, Q enters - having been 'summoned' by Guinan in the previous episode.  Q, now wearing FBI garb, reveals that not only has he lost his powers, but he's actually dying.  This is indeed an opportunity for Picard to learn about Q, but it's not gone as Q intended (because he's still a poor judge of Picard's character).  Q hasn't trapped Picard in the past; Picard did that himself, and Q declares: "The trap is immaterial, it's the escape that counts."  Guinan projects herself back into Picard's interrogation room, with the message, "All humans are stuck in the past," which Picard repeats to Wells, as Wells explains his own back-story.


Agent Wells is the boy we saw in the pre-credits sequence, who had been out looking for his missing dog in a forest after dark.  The story is very reminiscent of Flight of the Navigator and E.T., but it's passable (both films are worth watching, if for some reason you've never seen them before).  While searching for his dog, he happens upon two Vulcans who are carrying out a study on Earth (we've seen Vulcans on Earth in First Contact, and in the quiet but very engaging Star Trek Enterprise episode, Carbon Creek. If you've not seen it, do - it's very, very clever).   The Vulcans realised they'd been discovered, and attempted to chase Agent Wells, in order to mind-meld with him and erase his memory.  The Vulcan was beamed out before he could carry out the mind-meld, and hence Agent Wells now has a fascination - obsession? - with extra-terrestrial life.  The conversation between Wells and Picard is well-written once they get past the veiled threats and conspiracy theories, although some might think it was resolved a bit quickly.  Picard demonstrates a Vulcan mind-meld (he's participated in them in his past), and explains: he needs help from Agent Wells, who subsequently agrees to let Picard and Guinan go free. It worked for me, but I do hope that Wells (or one of his descendants) turns up in the 25th century with a key role in history. 

Seven and Raffi have finally put some urgency into their search for the Borg Queen.  Too little, too late, however, as Agnes is now almost completely assimilated by the Borg, due to a diet of endorphins, lithium and other trace metals which Agnes is compulsively eating.  Seven and Raffi even manage to track down Agnes, using Seven's intuition, but it is, dare I say, futile.  Agnes is now almost entirely Borg, and consequently is very strong, incapacitating Seven with a single blow that sends her flying across a car park, and then preparing to strangle Raffi with a single hand (Darth Vader style).  Agnes, however, is able to assume control and release Raffi, but there's no way that the two of them alone would be able to provide sufficient resistance to stop her.

There's a surprising amount of bickering between Raffi and Seven - yes, Raffi is manipulative (and even persuaded Elnor to join Starfleet security, a decision which ultimately led to his death in this parallel universe) and yes, Seven is the epitome of cold and aloof, but their relationship has clearly left them both scarred.

Rios, meanwhile, is embarking one on of the most ridiculous relationships in Star Trek history since Kirk fell in love with Edith Keeler in The City on the Edge of Forever (a time-travel episode that's regarded as one of The Original Series' best).  There's no way his relationship with Teresa is going to work, for a whole host of reasons (the temporal prime directive being one of them), but here they are, eating replicated cake while Rios fixes the Sirena and removes the Borg subroutines from its main computer.  Is there much more to say here?  Not really, except he'd better get fixing those routines quickly.

Dr Adam Soong has been a busy man.  As his latest 'daughter' Kore is discovering, Soong has been attempting to manufacture a genetically pure human clone.  Attempting, and failing.  Kore discovers that she is the last in a depressingly long line of at least a dozen failed "experiments", and that she has outlived many of her predecessors by a significant amount.  I'm not sure if this was meant to be a great reveal, or a plot twist, but it seemed obvious to me that she was genetically manufactured, and was the latest in a line of clones.  I'll acknowledge, though, that I hadn't realised that Persphone (and the alternative name Kore) was the daughter of Zeus (even though I caught the name in the previous episode, I didn't work out its significance).  Soong is as proud as he is delusional.

Kore activates Soong's virtual reality device, and in doing so, triggers a subroutine that Q had implanted in it.  This subroutine is basically a plot device that enables Q to speak directly with Kore, and show her (a) that she is a clone, or at least genetically created instead of conceived, and (b) that Q can send a cure for her genetic disorder.  He sends the cure in a little vial with a label.  I was expecting it to say "Drink me" in Alice in Wonderland style, but instead it was labelled "Freedom".  

How does this all fit together?  The answer is 'exceptionally well'.  Kore confronts Soong about his work, questioning if he loves her at all, and if he does, then is it because she's a living person, or just the fulfilment of his lab work.  Tough question.  He can't answer convincingly, and she steps out into the previously-toxic sunlight.  She's taken Q's cure, which is completely effective, and she walks out of his house, his garden and his life.  This leaves Soong broken, frustrated, weak and very vulnerable.

Raffi and Seven, meanwhile, are using their tricorder-box-of-magic to tap into Agnes's companion's mobile phone  Agnes left the bar with him in the previous evening, attempted to find a connection with him (as Borg are wont to do), failed, killed him and then consumed the lithium from his mobile phone battery, in order to speed up Agnes's assimilation process.  Raffi and Seven connect his now-flat mobile phone to their tricorder in order to deduce Agnes's/Borg Queen's next step.  And deduce it, they do, by reviewing the internet search history on the phone.

The Borg Queen realises that she needs help to speed up the assimilation of Agnes, and to produce her own nanoprobes and begin assimilating the 21st century, and turns to an expert in biology and human genetics:  Dr Soong.  The sight of her arriving at Soong's house was one of those 'eureka' moments - suddenly all the convoluted and seemingly irrelevant plotting made sense.  

"I assume a lecture on the resistance of futility is not going to be necessary."
"Am I dreaming?  Or is this a nightmare?"
"Ultimately, that's up to you."

Nightmare, obviously.

She offers to make him immortal - figuratively - with a long legacy of being the father of the future of the human race.  This is exactly what he's searching for, and knowingly or otherwise, the Queen plays to his insecurities and desires, telling him how he'll be famous, but only if he can stop the Europa mission (otherwise it's alcoholism and obscurity).  In another case of stories coming together, the Borg Queen reveals that the Europa mission will uncover microbial life in one of Jupiter's moons that will render his genetic research obsolete (and presumably remove all funding from his work).  So that's why the Europa mission must succeed.  All the pieces that have been in play are now starting to come together and make sense.  Soong can provide the "raw ingredients" that the Queen requires to complete her nanoprobe assembly process (and further the assimilation of Agnes, presumably), and gain access to the security forces; the Queen can use them to prevent the Europa mission from happening... by storming the Sirena and preventing any further interference from Picard and his team.

The story wastes no time:  Soong and the Queen make their deal, and then we see the Queen start adding the security forces' biological and technological distinctiveness to her own... she's assimilating them into a very dangerous squad of Borg drones.  Rios, meanwhile is oblivious, making cake and trying to fix the transporters.  The condition of the transporters is now reaching joke level:  they only work when it's not urgent... Rios beamed himself and his girlfriend into the Sirena without any problem last time:  this time, when the crew need the transporters - they're offline.  Picard, Seven and Raffi meet up, and will use Tallinn's transporter to return to the Sirena... battle lines are drawn, and the next episode should be a good one!

Tuesday, 19 April 2022

Star Trek Picard Season 2 Episode 7 Monsters

CONTAINS SPOILERS

There are a few episodes of Star Trek where nothing much happens.  They aren't particularly memorable, and in fact, you'd be hard-pressed to think of them.  They aren't "bad" episodes, but they're often under-rated psychological thrillers where the activity is secondary to the motivations of the characters.  (One example I can think of is the one where Riker doesn't go crazy, Frame of Mind).  The latest episode of Star Trek Picard is mostly one of those episodes, and at a time when the main story should be gathering pace, it's a little frustrating to see it go on a lengthy detour while the secondary storylines get more time (that's my opinion, other opinions are available).  Still, I've got plenty to say about it.

In the previous episode, we saw Agnes/the Borg Queen heading towards downtown Los Angeles, full of intent and suspense.  Does this episode move her story forwards?  Only in one small scene, more than half-way through the episode.  She enters a jazz club, where Patrick Stewart's wife plays the lead singer, singing, "I know what people see; and I know what they say; no-one's stopping me, and no-one's leaving today."  That would be the jazz translation of "Resistance is futile," then.  The Borg Queen is attempting to push Agnes's endorphin levels up so that she can complete her assimilation more quickly, and to be honest she seems to be winning.  Seven and Raffi are about 8-10 hours behind, in a large city, and with very little clue of where she is heading next.

Seven and Raffi's contribution continues to be relegated to the comic subplot.  Upon learning that Agnes kissed Rios at the gala, they go off on their own little dialogue about their own relationship - this is largely uncharted territory for Star Trek, and it comes off well ("We're the main event, and Agnes and Rios are the side story...." with an unseen wink to the audience).  The humour turns serious as they realise that The Queen (via Agnes) has infiltrated the Sirena's computer and locked out all access - they can't track Agnes's com-badge or her location, and instead must rely on 21st century surveillance cameras and their tricorders (which seem to be little bundles of magic).

Well over half of the episode is spent inside Jean-Luc's coma.  Tallinn the Supervisor has a neural interface device that enables her to mind-meld with Jean-Luc and actively participate in his dream.  "They all woke up and it was all a dream" is a huge cliche to avoid here, and the story barely manages it.  We see Picard's nightmare from two perspectives - his first as a child in the labyrinth of the cellars of Chateau Picard, where Tallinn is able to intervene, and the second in his current position as a Starfleet Captain, in a psych evaluation with a therapist.  The episode starts here, and it was a moment of comedy to see that the therapist is played by James Callis, who was Doctor Gaius Baltar on Battlestar Galactica (I can recommend it, but it's a long story).  Baltar was an opportunistic fraudster who was always trying to covemr his own tracks, and he's perfect for this role.  Is he real?  Is this a dream?  A memory?  What's his motivation?  

To cut a long, long story short:  Picard's mother suffered fom depression, and these are manifest in Picard's dreams as monsters who were taking his mother away from him.  Picard's father locked the mother, Yvette, in one of the cellars, where she would bang on the door and plead to be released.  And in the key twist in this story, Picard's subconscious has placed his father in the role of the therapist.  As Picard pieces all this together, with his adult experience and the assistance of Tallinn in the nightmarish cellar scenes, he realises that there was nothing he could do to help his mother when he was merely a child.  

That's a very short version of a considerably more complex situation, but the takeaway that Picard gets is not only should he know himself (ancient Greek wisdom) but that he should also acknowledge that his greatest teacher is his enemy, and therefore he needs to learn more about Q.  It's a stretch, but it also points back to Q who has recently lost all his powers - something has happened to Q, and it's something he's not in control of.  Maybe the Q continuum has internal strife again (see the Voyager episode Death Wish for more on the Q continuum).  Tallinn sums it up when she ask if Q really set all this up so that Picard would learn about him? The implied answer is yes, but how would Q set things in motion, then lose his own powers, have to counsel Renee, then get found by Picard, who would in turn have to meet Tallinn, then Picard would have to push Renee out of the path of a volatile and unpredictable Soong in his car, and end up in a coma... no. Q did not plan all this out.

Apart from Picard, the character who sees the most plot development in this episode is Rios.  Raffi commented last week that he seemed to have a slightly goofy smile, as if he was in love; she also warned him not to get involved with anybody in this timeline.  Is he paying attention?  Nope.  He's falling alarmingly quickly for Teresa, who runs the clinic - and he has to break the temporal prime directive to save Picard while he's in his coma.  Rios shows Teresa some 24th century medical tech - he doesn't know how to use it (as if she would?) and she knows for certain that he's not exactly safe.  He's locking doors in her clinic; he shows her Tallinn and Picard in their crazy alien mind meld; and that's before he beams in a medical device.  Line of the episode goes to Rios:  "I'm not from outer space.  I'm from Chile; I only work in outer space."  Kirk said the same in Star Trek IV (in his case it was Iowa, but the principle is identical and very funny).  Yes, Kirk broke the temporal prime directive to get his hands on two whales and save humanity; I'm not sure what Rios's excuse is, but by the end of the episode he's beamed himself, and Theresa, and her son onto the Sirena.  

And yes, Kirk beamed Gillian onto the spaceship in Star Trek IV, but that was not entirely his fault (she jumped into his transporter beam while he was transporting).  This disregard for the temporal prime directive, butterflies and all that had better have some repercussions, or I will be annoyed.  The rest of the crew are busting a gut to keep time on track, and Rios just flaunts the rules to impress his would-be girlfriend:  not impressed.  And how come Raffi can beam the medical device directly into Rios's hands, when two days ago, they couldn't even beam Rios safely onto the ground, and they missed by about three metres - vertically?

Picard needs to find Q, and in order to do that, he revisits Guinan in her bar at 10 Forward.  There is an established uneasy relationship between Q's people and Guinan's (see Q Who) but it's not been unpacked in detail before - it was a nice touch to expand on this here.  Anyway: Guinan attempts to contact a Q (any Q will do), but fails:  our Q doesn't register as a Q because he's lost his powers.  Something is definitely wrong.

So, the crew have completed their primary mission - to get Renee Picard into pre-flight.  However, they've trampled on so many butterflies and released so many more that they've still got their hands full.

Agnes is now wandering around LA with a head full of Borg, which is both a blessing and a curse:  the Borg Queen is the only one who knows the way home.

Picard has a head full of 'must find Q'.  His 'mission' seems the weakest and less relevant at the moment.

Rios has a head full of hormones, and he needs it examining, pronto.

Seven and Raffi need to find Agnes before the whole timeline goes to pieces.  Their mission is the most critical, and surely must succeed: however, I can't see Agnes surviving - how do they save the ability to get home without fully saving Agnes?  The answer will be a sci-fi fix, and it had better be a good one, or I will be annoyed (again).

Overall, this episode didn't do as much as the previous ones - there was a lot of movement in the tangential side stories, and not much actual forward movement - hopefully we'll see more next time. 


Sunday, 10 April 2022

Star Trek Picard Season 2 Episode 6 Two of One

CONTAINS SPOILERS

 The Borg are infamous for one thing. Right back in "Q Who?" and at every meeting since then, it's always, "Resistance is futile."  And so it is with this episode: the end is so very inevitable that the episode starts with the conclusion and then cuts to "42 minutes earlier."  The only question is how much damage will be done to the Starfleet crew's plans, and what (and who) will survive?  Will Picard survive the critical injuries he's sustained?  I would imagine so; after all, this series isn't called Star Trek Agnes.

The episode is entitled Two of One, which accurately sums up Agnes's plight. After shooting the Borg Queen last time, she stood too close for too long and is now slowly being assimilated. She's resisting assimilation, but resistance is...   She makes a series of small concessions to the Borg Queen now inside her mind, in order to further the overall mission - to get Renee Picard safely through the gala evening and into pre-flight quarantine.

It all begins in the security office, where Agnes had deliberately allowed herself to be arrested, in order to access security and let the rest of the team in... except she needs the Queen's help to break the handcuffs she's wearing.  And so it begins.



Picard and Tallinn keep close tabs on Renee, who is texting her therapist - Q, no less - about her doubts over the upcoming mission.  Picard attempts to follow her as she heads off to find somewhere quieter to think... and he's intercepted by Adam Soong (the current incarnation of the Soong crackpot dynasty).  So this is what Q demanded from Soong as payment for the cure for his daughter's disease - an attempt to keep the Picards apart.  And this will require further intervention from Agnes and her alter ego.

Picard (Jean-Luc) is able to find Renee and give her a much-needed pep talk.  What does he know about travelling in space? Pushing the boundaries of human knowledge and experience? A little, even if he is a little old to be a security guard.  His talk is inspirational and supportive without being patronising, and Renee agrees to proceed with the flight, commenting that there is something very familiar about him (if this was Back to The Future, she might comment that talking to him feels a lot like she's talking to her brother).

Jean-Luc: "You're Renée Picard, astronaut of the Europa Mission. You must be capable of such great things to have come this far."


However, as Picard escorts Renee back to the gala, we see Dr Soong sitting in the driver's seat of his car, with murder in mind: "Prepare for ramming speed!"  (Worf, Star Trek First Contact).  Picard sees the car coming, pushes Renee aside and takes the impact...  this is very Back To The Future (although to be fair, Picard wasn't a peeping tom who'd just fallen into the path of the car).  The rest of the crew - minus Agnes - appear and take Picard to Teresa's clinic, which ties in nicely with Rios's arc and mini-adventure in the previous episodes.  

Now, Picard is a synthetic life form: how will he respond to 21st century medical treatments?  Good question.  

Teresa: "Does he have any conditions?"
Seven: "He's... had some transplants."
Teresa:  "Some? How many?"
Seven: "All of them."

Teresa hooks him up to a defibrillator, shouts 'clear' and zaps him.  The defibrillator explodes in an array of sparks.  Good answer.  

Nevertheless, Picard's vitals all settle down, but he remains in a coma.  Tallinn has some wondrous brain-scanning gadget which shows Picard reliving a childhood event, and suggests that she enters his brain and helps him live through it and escape from it.  It's all a bit circumstantial but it works.  Raffi thinks it's a crazy idea - I'm inclined to agree - but that's what the story calls for.

Dr Soong, meanwhile, heads home after his failed attempt to kill Renee, where he is quizzed by his daughter Kore.  She's entirely unconvinced, and then revisits his lab to find out more about what he's doing and what he's up to... and the answer is much bigger than she suspected.  We know from previous Star Trek stories (in particular Space Seed from The Original Series, Star Trek II and the Star Trek Enterprise episodes Cold Station 12 and The Augments) that the Soong family have been involved in genetics and eugenics (deliberately making genetic enhancements with dangerous results) for years.  


However, Kore is learning all this for the first time, and - by the looks of it - she herself is the product of genetic manipulation, and the last in a long line of failed experiments (there are various names for the previous children, including Persephone, the goddess of the underworld, but no other names that seem especially significant or important).  Not sure how this will play into this wider series, but it will be interesting to see.

So, with the crew all gathered around Picard in a 21st century clinic, and Tallinn preparing to enter his mind, that just leaves Agnes.  Agnes, all alone once again, and despite her resistance, finding herself succumbing to the Borg Queen's slow and inexorable advance.

Borg: "Oh, I am proud of you, Agnes. Thank you for the flood of endorphins, by the way. Those nasty little stress hormones were getting in my way."
Agnes: "What's happening?"
Borg:  "This was my plan all along. Finally, the endorphins I needed. I think I'll steer this ship for a while."
Agnes:  "No, wait. I-I'm in control."
Borg: "Not any more."

And with a very clever wry smile, and a subtle flick of black in Agnes's irises, we know that the Borg Queen has taken over; the episode concludes with the Borg Agnes heading towards the skyscrapers of LA, preparing to take on (or take over) the entire city.  

And since the Borg Queen no longer needs the Starfleet crew, or their ship, they no longer have a way back home.  Things are looking decidedly dark, and I genuinely fear for Agnes's long-term survival - will she become a new Borg Queen (it's happened before, and I can recommend two Star Trek Voyager novels, Homecoming and The Farther Shore for more details).  I'll let Raffi wrap it up in her own style:

Raffi:  "What could go wrong?  I mean tons, obviously.  But statistically, odds-wise, given everything that's happened to us since we crashed into this planet, how much worse could it possibly get?"


Sunday, 3 April 2022

Star Trek Picard Season 2 Episode 5 Fly Me to the Moon

 CONTAINS SPOILERS

Mark Twain once said, "There is no such thing as a new idea. It is impossible. We simply take a lot of old ideas and put them into a sort of mental kaleidoscope."  And so it is with this episode of Star Trek Picard - there are a large number of recycled story elements here, which fit together but somehow feel as if they've been cut and pasted together rather clumsily.

We catch up with Picard, who's met the Watcher, or The Supervisor.  She isn't Laris, although she looks like Laris - and we'll see more of this "Character A who looks like Character B" in this episde.  Here, her name is Tallinn, and she's a supervisor in the same way as Gary Seven.  Gary Seven was a character in the Original Series episode "Assignment: Earth", where he was Supervisor 194, responsible for watching, or overseeing, the human race and ensuring that it didn't wipe itself out with nuclear weapons.  Tallinn, however, is responsible for watching over one of Jean-Luc Picard's ancestors, the astronaut Renee Picard.  This is classic Back to the Future content - there's nothing quite like a family connection to make time travel personal.  

Renee Picard is the character we saw at the end of the previous episode, whom Q was intending to influence into backing out of flying on an upcoming space mission - his finger-click didn't work, and now he is resorting to more mundane methods to persuade her to drop out.  We meet her in this episode in a rocket simulator, practising dangerous scenarios and, by all accounts, failing.  It's quite possible that Q has set these up - he will stop at nothing to keep her out of the mission. 

Why aren't Q's powers working?  Plot device?

Meanwhile, the Borg Queen (who reminds me of one of the Hybrids out of Battlestar Galactica with her ongoing babbling) has assimilated communications on board the Sirena.  Obviously, she doesn't need ship-to-ship comms, but she is able to tap into the local mobile phone network and place a call to the local police department.  A sole, unfortunate police officer attends the call, and is lured to the Borg Queen.  Is she going to assimilate him and turn him into her first Borg drone here?  That was my first thought, but for some strange reason, she doesn't.  I'm confused - I know that these are unusual times and that she's missing some key components (a collective and a pair of legs, for example), but her change is tactics surprised me.  She takes the police officer hostage.

Seven and Raffi continue their Thelma and Louise routine - with ongoing undercurrents of their recently-ended relationship - and find a way to stop the bus that Rios is being deported on.  Seven uses a tricorder to generate an EMP blast and stop the bus - no butterflies, no phasers.  The men on the bus immediately work out what's happening - even before the guards - and the rest of the escape/rescue is largely without incident (except Raffi is still suffering trauma following Elnor's death).  It seems that the away team's mission has largely been a wild goose chase and a commentary on 21st century life...  police car chases, immigration control in the USA and bureaucracy.  They're all beamed back to the Sirena without any further incident.

Picard and Tallinn, meanwhile, swap notes on the life and history of Renee Picard.  Tallinn is maintaining a constant surveillance of Renee, and is able to monitor her conversations with her pyschotherapist - all astronauts and astronaut candidates must have a psych evaluation.  Tallinn identifies a key conversation between Renee and her therapist:  I recognised the therapist's voice before Picard did, by the looks of it.  Q is manipulating Renee by posing as her therapist to talk her out of the flight.  

Q, meanwhile, is also pursuing a parallel plan involving one Dr Adam Soong.  Dr Soong looks like Data from The Next Generation, and all the other various Dr Soongs we've seen since (including the Dr Soong who created him; the Dr Soong who was fiddling about with genetics and eugenics in the Enterprise series, and the Dr Soong we met in the first series of Picard who solved the puzzle of AI in flesh-and-bone bodies).

This incarnation of Dr Soong is the earliest (in chronological order), and he's working on genetics.  His descendants will go on to create a race of super-humans through genetic modification/engineering, and we see how this starts.  Interestingly (or lazily), this will go on to cause the creation of the genetic superhuman, Khan.  In the recent Star Trek: Into Darkness film, Khan blackmails a Starfleet officer into setting off a bomb by providing a cure for his daughter's terminal incurable illness.  In this episode of Picard, it's Q who has the cure, and Soong who has the daughter with the rare incurable disease (which turns her blood into poison whenever she is exposed to direct sunlight).  Mark Twain was right, there are no new stories.

Dr Soong is cynical, weary and desperate.  He presents his arguments to an ethics committee - he wants to pursue human genetic modification, and they are having none of it.

I should say at this point (because I didn't last time), that the previous episode of Picard was directed by none other than Lea Thompson, who played Marty McFly's mother Lorraine in the Back to the Future film series.  Well, she definitely has experience of time-travel stories; and she features in this episode as the chair of the ethics committee.  She did a good job last week, and was great this week too.

Anwyays: Dr Soong (who looks a lot like Data) can't cure his daughter (who looks a lot like Soji), and is approached by Q (who looks and acts the same as usual: dangerously selfishly).  Q offers to help Dr Soong cure his daughter, but there will inevitably be a cost for this 'help,' and I suspect it will be something truly costly.  Why is Q meddling here? It seems a bit superfluous at this stage, so I hope it has a decent tie-in with the main story.

The crew of the La Sirena are reunited, in a scene which shows what a wild-goose chase Raffi, Seven and Rios went on - Picard found the Watcher/Supervisor by himself.  

Now that the crew know what they must do - get Renee Picard to fly her space mission - they send Agnes as an advance party to the astronauts' gala, to watch over Renee in her last few hours before pre-flight quarantine. Agnes has the prerequisite skills in 21st century computing; the character to pull it off, and a growing case of Borg assimilation virus.  After shooting the Borg Queen to free the French police officer, Agnes spent too long, too close, talking to her and the Queen was able to scratch Agnes's face and introduce the Borg virus into her bloodstream.  Agnes gets picked up by the gala security before she's even made a start on hacking the system... either because she was genuinely unlucky and the least suited to an espionage mission, or because the Borg Queen inside her head is sabotaging Agnes subconsciously. 

Either way, Agnes now has the Borg Queen in her head.  The crew has no way home (unless they can use the Borg know-how in Agnes's brain and then reverse the assimilation process... it's been done before, as Picard will confirm). Things are looking bleak, as Q continues to meddle infuriatingly with the timeline. 

This episode recycled so many previous stories I lost count; showed up the Raffi/Rios/Seven subplot as a waste of time (apparently) but put the Borg Queen in Agnes's head (so Agnes is alone and the victim... again). Good, but not great.



Saturday, 26 March 2022

Star Trek Picard Season 2 Episode 4 Watcher

CONTAINS SPOILERS

Finally, the tempo of Star Trek Picard has slowed down.  There's been transwarp; old adversaries; phaser fights; semi-controlled landings; bloodshed and fist-fights.  Episode 3 left us on a cliff-hanger as Rios was taken into custody by ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement), while the Borg Queen kept staring menacingly at Agnes.

We start at a slower pace:  Picard has indeed taken the Sirena 'home' - he's parked it in the grounds of the currently-abandoned Chateau Picard.  Nice touch; I'm sure this will become a significant plot point in the future (instead of just providing Picard with flashbacks).  However, his attempts to contact the rest of the team are futile.  In the meantime, however, Picard engages the cloaking device and makes sure he remembers where it's parked (Kirk did the same with a Klingon Bird of Prey in Star Trek IV).  He and Agnes visit Chateau Picard, and while he reminisces about the old times, Agnes's subconscious keeps throwing up the number 15.  Data's 'subconscious' did something similar in a time loop during an episode of TNG - Cause and Effect  - I won't spoilt it, it's a great episode.  This all seems a bit heavy-handed - the last thing Agnes said while she was connected to the Borg Queen was 'fifteen', but still, Agnes's subconscious is going to become a key part of this extended plot.  So, since the team landed on 12 April, they have until 15 April to find and fix the timeline problem.

It's all a bit arbitrary, but it makes sense.  A lot of the activity on the Sirena follows this pattern in this episode.

Raffi and Seven track down Rios's comm badge (I am slightly concerned that they didn't actually find it and collect it, but hey, that's only a minor detail that was hammered home repeatedly last episode).  There is a wonderful scene played out on the bus in Los Angeles, with a punk playing a song called "I Hate You" - it's a little-known tune recorded by Edge of Etiquette, their only song in fact, which featured in an almost-identical scene in Star Trek IV with Kirk and Spock.  I howled with laughter throughout the scene (which went in a very different direction than it did with Kirk).  They eventually get to the LA Police Department, where Raffi and Seven form a comedy double-act as they clash with the bureaucracy of 21st century law enforcement.  They aren't successful in their discussions with the LA PD, but they get directed to ICE.

Comms are offline, but the transporter is working... but only well enough to transport Picard.  With Picard gone, the Borg Queen wastes no time in starting on Agnes's mind.  That really isn't going to end well, and I fear Agnes is going to be the victim, again.

Agnes beams Picard to the location provided by the Borg Queen, and he finds himself transported to San Francisco, and to Number 10, Forward Avenue.  The bar lounge on Picard's Enterprise D was called Ten Forward.... nice touch.  The barkeeper was none other than Guinan, one of Picard's crew, and an El Aurian who can detect major shifts in the timeline (as seen in previous TNG episodes, notably Yesterday's Enterprise).  This is a younger Guinan, cynical, uneasy, edgy and unsettled - unsettled by time-travelling old men who appear out of nowhere.  Picard knows he has to convince Guinan to help him, but he also knows that he can't pollute the timeline by telling Guinan too much.  Guinan, for her part, is going through a particularly cynical time, and is preparing to leave (the planet, or LA, or whichever) and is mourning humanity's misuse of its planet: "They got one tiny ball in the entire galaxy, and all this species want to do is fight."  Picard tries to convince her to stay and help: "Distance offers no protection from time."

Rios, meanwhile, is also clashing with the rough end of the bureaucracy of 21st century law enforcement, having been arrested and now incarcerated (and tasered).  

Seven and Raffi (Thelma and Louise?) decide to step up their efforts to track down Rios, and Raffi has an interesting idea: as Seven describes it:  "You're proposing we steal a vehicle from the same people whose job it is to prosecute theft?"  Yes, they're going to steal a police car (with a phaser, no less) - in order to obtain the data from the computer inside it.  They access the car and the computer, and find that - interestingly - there are a very large number of tall, dark Hispanic men in the system.  They're able to contact Agnes (comms are back up, transporters are down) to get a location and start their pursuit of Rios.  We get more of the fish-out-of-water comedy that served so well in Star Trek IV, culminating in "Do you want to drive and I'll hold the map?"  Seven can indeed pilot a shuttlecraft... but there aren't other cars blocking the way in space.

So now, it's transporters down, comms up.  It's like there's a ghost in the machine or something... and there is; it's the Borg Queen, who is most definitely manipulating the ship's systems to her own ends, and thereby manipulate the entire plot.  It feels somewhat bit arbitrary, but I am sure that the Borg Queen is working everything to suits her ends.

Rios, after an unpleasant discussion with an ICE guard, and a lengthier discussion with Teresa, the senior doctor from the clinic, finds himself being transferred.  Rios is playing for time, hoping that the rest of his 'rag-tag' crew will find him eventually.  And they are tracking him down:  Raffi's access to LA PD laptop shows his updated status and location.  Although it seems like Rios is out of time, Agnes (after some tense and dangerous negotiation with the Borg Queen) is able to restore transporters, and beam Seven and Raffi to a position where they can intercept Rios's transport bus.  (Naturally, they have to bring their stolen police car to a screeching halt before they can beam). Except that now they've beamed, they're stationary pedestrians, about to face a 55 mph bus on a freeway.  I wonder if Raffi will have to use her phaser again?  We'll find out next time.

Picard continues his negotiations with Guinan, who sees nothing but despair and hatred among the human race.  "The hatred here doesn't go away, it just swaps clothes."  Eventually, Picard reveals his name and identity to Guinan.  Guinan still doesn't know him, but recognises his name (for some reason).  and agrees to take him to the Supervisor, otherwise known as a Watcher.  I sincerely hope that this doesn't turn into The Matrix, where there's the Architect, the Key Maker, the One, the this, the that... it was all overly complicated.  

Anyway, I digress:  Guinan (who is wonderfully acted and conveys all the character of the Whoopi Goldberg incarnation, in a youthful version) is not The Watcher.  She agrees to take Picard to a Watcher for a face-to-face (sort of) meeting.  It seems The Watcher will want to meet Picard (perhaps somebody's been forewarned).  The Watcher meets Guinan and Picard by possessing various passers-by who direct Picard to the Watcher.  This looks about as weird as you can imagine, as people with white eyeballs take turns to guide Picard through the local park.  

And who is The Watcher?  Well, she looks like Laris, who was Picard's Romulan assistant back in his present time.  Except she's human, and in the 20th century.  The two of them disappear in a box of smoke.


Meanwhile, Q, instead of making trouble, appears to be having trouble of his own.  It seems that he was intending to prevent a human spacecraft from launching by persuading one of its lead astronauts that she isn't capable of commanding the flight.  He commments to her, 'You can't do it.  People are going to die.'  Q's trademark click of the fingers has no effect - the astronaut laughs out loud - and he declares 'That's unexpected.  And most unfortunate'.  Was Q trying to save humanity?  Or back it into a corner?  He is so unpredictable and confusing that it's hard to say what his motivation was, and what his comments mean.


This episode has been full of confusing comments, intrigue, far more dialogue and less action than any of the previous episodes (apart from the police car chase, which was action comedy) and has benefited from the change of pace.  As I said, I hope the Watcher/Supervisor doesn't descend into existential twaddle, but otherwise I was very impressed with this episode.

So:  Seven and Raffi have to stop a coach (I strongly suspect the use of a phaser, because acting like hitch-hikers isn't going to work).

Picard has to get his instructions from Laris The Watcher.  Why is Laris being so secretive?  And, just out of interest, why did the Borg Queen direct Picard to Guinan instead of the Watcher?  Just curious.

Agnes has to keep the Borg Queen out of her mind.  I really don't rate her chances.  Sorry, but I don't.

And all Rios has to survive his rescue attempt!

Have we seen the last of Guinan in this series?  I doubt it.

And how has Q come to lose his powers?  Who's caused that?

All will be revealed... (I hope).



Saturday, 19 March 2022

Star Trek Picard Season 2 Episode 3 Assimilation

CONTAINS SPOILERS

So, Episode 3 of this series is called Assimilation.  I wonder what will happen in this episode?  Apart from the time travel to Calfiornia 2024, what else could possibly happen with a newly liberated Borg Queen?

Episode 3 picks up exactly where Episode 2 left off: Starfleet security (including Seven's husband) have boarded the La Sirena, and things are going badly.  Seven attempts to bluff her way through, and when that fails, the crew have no choice but to disintegrate all the security officers.  Elnor is still lying injured; Agnes is connecting the ship to the Borg Queen (or vice versa).  I wondered if the Borg Queen would assimilate him, to cure his wounds, but the story goes in a very different direction. 


Seven and Picard operate the bridge stations; Rios is in command.  The ship takes damage, as the Confederation engage in battle, knocking the Borg Queen over and out of her secured pod.  At this point I was convinced she's going to assimilate Agnes soon... surely.  However, the Borg Queen hooks herself into the ship, fully assimilates it, destroys the pursuing ships in blazes of green Borg flames, and takes the ship on a slingshot path around the Sun.  The way Rios yells out the warp speeds reminds me of Sulu doing the same during Star Trek IV, as they do indeed achieve time travel.

And that's just the pre-credits sequence.  Did I mention that Q turns up briefly to ask Picard how far his fear will take him?

In a mirroring of Star Trek IV, Picard asks 'did we succeed?'  And in Star Trek First Contact style, they look at the level of radioactivity in the atmosphere to date their arrival.  As always, there's no chance of making a smooth landing, so Picard makes a 'targeted crash' into a forest near 'home'... as Agnes points out, they can't go crashing into Los Angeles.  So where are they?  Somewhere on the outskirts of LA (the forests reminded me of  the site of First Contact, but that's in Montana; surely Picard's navigation is better than that?

First things first:  Elnor is still in critical condition, and with power failing, his biobed isn't working and he'll die.  However, the Borg Queen has control of the ship, and she's using the power to restore herself after the time travel jump.  Rios draws a phaser - Picard points out they still need her (to get home).  Consequently, Elnor dies in Raffi's arms.  This is not going well.  I strongly suspect that there'll be a time-travel twist where fixing the past brings him back to life - it's standard Trek lore, and it's called a Reset Button Plot.  Agnes and Raffi debate it... what do you think, Trek fans?  

And the worst of it is that they do need the Queen - not just to get home, but to understand what's broken in the timeline, where to go, and at what exact time, and how to fix it.  And it's all Picard's fault for not asking for Q's help; instead Picard is stubbornly going on with his mission without Q's offer of assistance.  Raffi nails it when she says that Q and Picard 'joust' and that they 'screw up people's lives'.  Let's not forget that each time Q and Picard meet, somebody dies.  In the case of "Q Who", when the Enterprise meets the Borg for the first time, there were 18 deaths.  This all comes down to Picard's stubbornness, drawn out by Q and exacerbated by the Borg (see Star Trek First Contact  - "The line must be drawn here!").

Raffi - emotionally charged - decides to set off for 'The Watcher' who is presumably some kind of alien life-form keeping track of the timeline.  Seven, Agnes and Rios debate about who will go after Raffi - I was concerned that she was going to go off without them. The crew discuss the potential effects of altering the timeline: for example, by leaving a phaser or other technology behind on a pre-warp planet:  Doctor McCoy did it once at the end of an episode.  As Agnes puts it, 'We have to look out for butterflies' (The butterfly effect - even tiny changes to a starting situation can have drastic consequences, and these get larger as time passes).

Seven and Rios will pursue Raffi and search for The Watcher; Agnes and Picard will take care of the Borg Queen - I didn't ever expect to write that, and even Seven is unconvinced. 

Agnes uses the smashed-up transporters to beam the away team - in appropriate 21st century clothing - into central LA.  Except it goes badly wrong; the team are beamed into separate locations, and Rios arrives 12 foot off the ground, falling badly (via a fire escape stairway) and landing heavily on the ground.  He gets transferred to an 0ff-the-radar clinic; after all, the last thing he needs is to get scanned, identified, arrested or anything else that might disturb the timeline.  He's separated from his communicator - just like Doctor McCoy - and it gets picked up by a young boy.

Seven and Raffi beam in and join up fairly easily; they acclimatise very quickly to 2024 and even manage some humour (Seven:  "2024 likes me."   Raffi: "You and 2024 should get a room".)   They are able to find a possible location for The Watcher, and also track Rios's communicator while the young boy plays with it.  Rios, suffering from concussion, does his level best to retrieve it, and yet it all seems to go wrong, as circumstances accelerate beyond his control.

On the subject of 'all going wrong'; Agnes attempts to convince Picard to let her communicate with the Borg Queen.  It's all so very inevitable: Picard can't do it as he's been assimilated before, so that only leaves Agnes.  How could this possibly go wrong?  Let me count the ways.  Even after Picard says, "No," you know that it's going to happen - it reminded me of Kirk's line in Star Trek III ("The word is no; I am therefore going anyway").

"It's only a partial assimilation," says Agnes.

Yeah, right.  About that...  please see Star Trek Voyager: Dark Frontier.

As predicted, the link between Agnes and the Queen works both ways, and while Agnes is poking around in the Queen's database, the Queen is probing Agnes's mind - part from Agnes's emotions, which are directed at Picard without filter (in humorous and touching ways).  Agnes makes contact with the Queen's central core, and Picard has to disconnect Agnes, just in time, before the Queen fully assimilates her.  Agnes seems to do okay, but we'll see how that works out for her... I mean them... or do I mean her?  Subroutine failing, intrusive presence detected; assimilate.  A great scene, acted scarily well as Agnes occupies the Queen's body, and the Queen speaks to Locutus through Agnes.

Yes, Agnes does get the co-ordinates for The Watcher, and apparently they no longer need the Borg Queen.  So why not disconnect her and switch her off?  I wonder.

Raffi and Seven, meanwhile are more successful.  They get to the top of the highest tower in LA, 
with very little difficulty and with some humour - and start scanning.  They identify one alien power source - probably the Watcher - and also locate Rios's comm badge.  Considering how much difficulty Kirk and crew had in the 1980s, it's remarkable how quickly everybody acclimatises into 2024.  

Rios makes multiple attempts to retrieve his comm badge, to no avail.  Circumstances consistently work against him - it would be funnier if it wasn't so critical - to the point where he does everything possible to stay out of history's way.  In the end, the unofficial clinic is stormed by immigration police, and Rios makes the heroic and flawed decision to help Theresa, the head of the clinic.  His plans continue to fall apart, despite all his ongoing efforts - including pretending to be a doctor (Kirk also did this in Star Trek IV) as he is arrested and taken away by the police, still without his comm badge.


Raffi and Seven - making steady progress.  Rios - going to prison, with no means of support.  The Borg Queen - minus her legs and also with no means of support - wants full control of the ship (and a pair of legs).  However, Picard and Agnes have been successful in extracting (in fact, removing) the Watcher's location from the Borg Queen, and surely they have no further use for her?  But no, she knows when the divergence in time takes place.  And is it just me, or is she looking more human - she's not the Borg's pale white colour, she's looking more flesh-coloured. 


Either way, the Borg Queen still looks dangerous.  This excellent episode (which has moved the series from action to psychological thriller) might have concluded, but this is NOT over.


Sunday, 13 March 2022

Star Trek Picard Season 2 Episode 2 Review Penance

CONTAINS SPOILERS

Star Trek has an even longer, wider and richer history than Star Wars - there's a wealth of characters, events and plot points that can be mined for ideas for new stories, and this is precisely where the current series of Picard is heading.


Way back, in the The Original Series episode, "
Mirror, Mirror," a transporter accident launched Kirk, Scotty, Uhura and McCoy into an alternative universe which became known as the Mirror Universe.  Here, the 'Federation' is an ultra-right-wing organisation bent on conquest and destruction and the supremacy of the Human Race.  Torturing is an acceptable interrogation technique, Nazi-style salutes are the norm, and assassinating your immediate superior is an approved way of achieving a promotion.  The episode is one of the best of the The Original Series, and is well worth a watch (although you'll smile at the costume designs - Spock in a goatee, for example).

Picard's first series, The Next Generation, never visited the Mirror Universe, but it featured repeatedly in Deep Space Nine episodes - Crossover (Season 2), Through the Looking Glass (Season 3), Shattered Mirror (Season 4), Resurrection (Season 6), and The Emperor’s New Cloak (Season 7).  The Terran Empire is battling against the combined forces of almost everybody else - the Klingons, Vulcans, Cardassians, Ferengi and so on.  It also featured in the Enterprise series (with two standalone episodes) and much of Star Trek Discovery.

And it is in this Mirror Universe that Picard finds himself, courtesy of Q.  It's not clear why Q is not his usual self - as Picard points out, he seems unwell and unstable, even by Q's own unhinged standards.  Q drops some key hints as to Picard's location:  his line, "This is no Yesterday's Enterprise." is directed to the audience more than to Picard:  Yesterday's Enterprise was an episode of The Next Generation, and possibly one of the best.  A previous version of the Enterprise, the Enterprise NCC-1701C is thrown forwards in time and out of a key battle between the Romulans and the Klingons.  In the correct order of history, the Enterprise C makes a valiant sacrificial stand to protect the Klingons, and this leads to a lasting peace with them.  When the Enterprise C ducks out of this battle, history takes a different turn and the Federation and Klingons are mortal enemies.  

Q makes another overt reference to their new location when he comments about 'mirrors and smoke' - this is definitely the Mirror Universe.

And what a bleak place it is for mankind.  Global warming has made it almost impossible to grow crops; the planet has a defence system of some kind surrounding it and worse of all, Picard is the key military leader who has made all this happen.  His chateau now sports trophies of all macabre types:  there are the usual weapons of war, portraits and military imagery, along with the skulls of some of mankind's greatest 'enemies':  Gul Dukat (the Cardassian antagonist in Deep Space Nine); the Vulcan Sarek (who was executed in front of a crowd that included his son - Spock); General Martok (in our universe, a key Klingon who supported peace with the Federation).  Things here are very, very wrong.  But Picard is sick and tired of Q's interference, and wants none of his help.  Ah, Picard, still as stubborn as ever.  However, Q has still arranged for support for Picard in this universe, as we discover.

Seven awakens in the Mirror Universe, and we eventually realise that she's not Borg.  Maybe the change in the timeline meant that her parents never flew off in search of the Borg; maybe humanity never encountered the Borg in this timeline.  Maybe I'm being optimistic: the truth is a lot worse.  This episode piles on the darkness and is relentless in making a bleak place even worse.

Seven very quickly runs some personal diagnostics, and concludes that she is still herself, in a strange environment: she is married, and no less than the President Of Earth (a role which the Emergency Medical Hologram once took on in the comical Voyager episode Bride of Chaotica!).  She handles the transition with apparent ease, and after acclimatising to being married, sends her husband off and makes contact with Rios.  Her husband suggests General Sisko (from Deep Space Nine, no less, but Seven knows exactly what she's doing.

This is a great scene; Rios is in the middle of a battle with the Vulcans (apparently near their homeworld) and accepts Seven's hail.  Is the Rios in this universe the same Rios we know from our universe?  Is Seven?  After a few guarded comments, Rios asks:  "Seven?"  to which she replies, "Chris!" and they know that they are indeed in the same situation.  He is given a presidential order to return to Earth - the team must reunite.

Raffi and Elnor meet in less than ideal circumstances.  In this xenophobic, fascist, supremacist environment, aliens such as the Romulan Elnor are less than nothing.  Elnor in particular is a terrorist, with a specialism in setting off bombs in high-rise buildings. He gets captured; his terrorist partner is shot dead.  Fortunately, Raffi is now the planetary head of security.  She's able to rescue Elnor; but who is able to rescue them?  There are security troops all around and Raffi has to hand Elnor over to them - but he is to be kept alive as he possesses key intelligence and is to be interrogated.

Today is Eradication Day; in a grand ceremony presented by President Hansen and General Jean-Luc Picard, the last member of humanity's greatest enemies is to be executed.  Vulcan?  Romulan?  Cardassian?  Again, this episode makes a dark situation as dark as possible:  as Doctor Agnes Jurati discovers, the species to be eradicated today is none less than the Borg.  Humanity have driven the Borg to extinction: we are in a very grim situation.  Agnes is still mentally unstable, and she makes a complete mess of acknowledging her transition to this new universe and of getting into character here. She's so clumsy that she almost blows the team's cover before she's even said a word.  Seven brings her into line, as the two of them (plus Seven's husband) meet the Borg Queen - the final Borg in this Mirror Universe.  Meeting a Borg Queen is always scary, and this is no exception - this one is alone, lost, slightly insane, but aware of the divergence in the timeline.  She also still recognises Seven.

Picard and Seven meet up - they in turn are reunited with Raffi and her 'prisoner' Elnor.  On whose authority is Raffi meant to keep hold of Elnor?  On General Picard's, no less.  Who else?  The four of them all catch up on their situation:  "I'm the human president of a xenophobic authoritarian regime."  Sums it all up, really.  This is an alternative reality, and the Borg Queen here can help the team understand the cause of the divergence.  Hence, time travel is going to be necessary, to go back in time and 'put right what once went wrong' (to quote Quantum Leap).  Time travel is very complex, but it can be done by sling-shotting a ship around a star at warp (Kirk did indeed do it on multiple occasions, in particular in Star Trek IV).  The calculations are extremely complicated, Kirk was able to do this, because 'He had Spock', and the team realise they can use the Borg Queen, who will surely want to help them in order to rejoin her collective in the Beta Quadrant.

President Hansen, General Picard, Security Chief Raffi and their prisoner

So that's the plan:  lower (or make a hole in) the planetary shields to enable communication and beaming, so that Rios can beam the crew up to the La Sirena, along with the Borg Queen, who is in cold storage in Agnes's lab.  What could possibly go wrong?  In this universe:  everything.  After all, today is Eradication Day, and security is tight.

President Hansen delivers a speech, reminding her bloodthirsty audience that a human galaxy is a safe galaxy, and that mankind shows its merciful power in mercilessly annihilating all the other, non-human, life forms in it.  Picard slowly takes his place on the stage, which is literally spotlight in the darkness.  This scene stands in sharp contrast to his presentation to Starfleet Academy's graduates in the last episode - the Human Empire flags stand in the darkness; Starfleet Academy has flags from multiple races, positioned in a bright sunlit window.


Picard plays for time; he plays to the crowd.  He's running out of time, and running out of ideas and options.  Agnes is trying to create maintain an open comm line with Rios, while Raffi and Elnor are trying to punch a hole in the Earth's shields so that they can all beam out - with the Borg Queen - at a time when security is tight and getting tighter.  Nobody is making any progress, and Picard's crowd are getting impatient.  In the end, he improvises and shoots the guards on the stage.  As ever, just at the last possible moment, Seven, Picard, Agnes, Jaffi, Elnor and the Borg Queen are beamed aboard the La Sirena.  Everybody runs to their stations: Seven takes the bridge and prepares the getaway, while Agnes starts preparing the La Sirena for a connection with the Borg Queen.

Does anybody else find the way that the Queen looks at Agnes disturbing?


It's all futile: Seven's husband beams aboard, followed by more armed security officers who seize the ship and place everyone under arrest as traitors.

Does anybody else think that the Queen will provide the escape route for the crew?

I thought the first episode was good, but this was even better.  It had a completely different tone - last week's was romantic, with whimsical 'what-ifs' and bright optimism (harvest and graduation are celebrations of a long, successful effort); this episode was dark:  Q isn't well; the celebrations are around death, extinction and eradication, and even the rebellion against the Confederation seems doomed to failure.  The only hope in this grim universe is the Borg Queen - the epitome of darkness - which shows how dark the situation really is.  Whatever happens, I shall be watching with great anticipation next week.