Star Trek 463: Parallax

463. Parallax

FORMULA: Time Squared + Hippocratic Oath's Klingon integration program

WHY WE LIKE IT: B'Elanna's story.

WHY WE DON'T: Technobabble of the worst kind.

REVIEW: The best thing about early Voyager is without a doubt seeing how the crew makes do with their situation. The worst thing about early Voyager is the nonsense plots framing those elements. Here, it's a totally nonsensical, technobabble-driven plot about a quantum singularity in which a ship is trapped and asks for help. Turns out, it's Voyager itself calling from moments in the future, luring itself to its doom. Yes, it's a paradox, and it doesn't really make sense when you examine it, nor is it particularly interesting to look at on screen. Worse still, instead of the usual babble about fictional particles and whatnot, it uses words like "event horizon" that have a definite meaning, broadcasting on all bandwidths that the writers have no clue what those words actually mean. At least there are real world allusions (like the icy pond) to help you follow along.

But admittedly, not a lot of the episode is spent on this. The real focus is on B'Elanna being considered for chief engineer at Chakotay's behest. He makes a good point in this that to properly integrate the Maquis into the crew, some need to be in officer positions. It's hard to side with Janeway on this point, especially since she's saddled the Maquis with different-looking pips. Does she actually consider them second-class crew members? And yet, B'Elanna's already broken someone's nose. Nonsense though it is, the plot at least provides B'Elanna with a proving ground, one that shows that she and Janeway are a lot alike. The scene where they complete each others' thoughts does this brilliantly. They're both quick and original thinkers. I've got to give props to my man Lt. Carey however. Not only does he lose the post, he loses it to an upstart who beat him up, and still he's a big enough man to sincerely congratulate her at the end. Now that's what Starfleet should be all about.

Someone else Janeway doesn't seem to respect much is the EMH (hey, he's not a person or anything), a character further humiliated by having him shrunk to midget sizes by a malfunction. Slightly amusing, though the effect doesn't work. It's like a funhouse mirror more than anything. One might also question the choice of Tom Paris for field medic. Is there no one aboard better suited, even if it's not a member of the senior staff?

Other bits include Kes setting up a hydroponics bay, Seska appearing in science blues rather than engineering gold, and Maquis telling Chakotay they're all up for a mutiny. They don't share his sense of honor, certainly, and this may set up later events as much as provide impetus for his crusade to get B'Elanna promoted. We also learn that the holodeck is on a separate, incompatible power system, which is just one big cheat to allow for holodeck episodes despite the ship's stated low power levels.

LESSON: Your ship is the ship that isn't the ship that it used to be, unless it's not the ship that it's going to be.

REWATCHABILITY - (to my surprise) Medium: B'Elanna's audition is compromised by that technobabble plot. More entertaining than I remembered, but I still zone out in spots.

Comments

Matthew Turnage said…
Janeway really rubbed me the wrong way in this episode during the briefing scene. After Paris recaps the confusing mess they're in, he asks if he's making any sense. Then she smiles at him like he's a four year old and tells him no. I hate to break it to you Janeway, but Paris was the only one in that whole scene who DID make sense! She really came off as condescending there.
billjac said…
It's Star Trek technobabble; it's not supposed to make sense. The main plot of the episode was, I think, supposed to showcase how Janeway's science background makes her a different sort of captain and allows her to approach problems in a different way. And if this was show with any real science in it, it might have worked. Instead, for me and the other astronomy graduate students I watched it with, there was much pain.

On the other hand, the interaction between Starfleet and Maqui was off to a good start setting up many potential plot threads to be squandered.
Siskoid said…
Bill, I understand your point, but so much of the plot was given over to technobabble that it drew attention to itself. If the problem is just incomprehensible gobbledygook, and so is the solution, then who cares?

And while I'm fine with "mad science", Parallax doesn't even respect its own rules. If you try to understand the final dilemma of which ship is which, it doesn't make sense with what's been said before.
billjac said…
I actually agree with you. The "science" of the show was incomprehensible incoherent gobbledygook. I just don't think that it was that way because the writers didn't care. I think that in their heads it all made perfect sense and was a showcase for Janeway's unique abilities. And the fact that they failed so badly is the first toll on the bell of doom for the series.
Whilst I too liked the B'Elanna plot for this episode, I personally thought that its weakest element was the bizarre EMH-subplot. However, that's because I actually saw this episode much later than many other Voyager episodes, and that particular storyline (especially the end with the crew all having a sitcom let's-all-gather-around-and-laugh moment at the EMH's expense) seems odd and embarassing considering the series' later focus on the EMH's attempts to be taken seriously as an individual.