3.10 — “Fascination”
Plot: It’s an anti-love episode, in which Jake gets dumped, Kira’s relationship with Vedek Bareil runs ashore, and Keiko returns from Bajor just to fight with O’Brien. On top of this, Lwaxana Troi visits DS9 and inappropriate characters start mooning over each other
Thoughts: The idea was to copy A Midsummer Night’s Dream, in which fairies make the wrong people fall in love with each other for sport, including Queen Tatiana’s enforced enamoration with a donkey. Armin Shimerman and René Auberjonois are both quoted as saying this episode is “embarrassing,” as actors are forced to act out of character, and pair up with other actors who are supposed to be their friends, not lovers. (Terry Ferrell thinks it is “wonderful.”)
This twee idea is similar to “Meridian” two episodes ago, in which the big idea is Brigadoon in space. Is inspiration so scarce this early in the season?
I’m not saying an episode similar to this can’t be done well. TAS 1.10, “Mudd’s Passion,” has a similar plot, in which an artifact makes characters fall in love with each other (including, it is suggested, Kirk and Spock! In 1973!), and it’s one of my favorite Trek episodes. “Mudd’s Passion” also features Majel Barrett in a central role, albeit that of Christine Chapel. Comedy is tricky in Star Trek. For every “The Trouble With Tribbles,” there’s a “Qpid” or “Move Along Home.”
What sinks “Fascination” the most? Is it the bad performances? I think it’s the misuse of Lwaxana. She’s back to being a foolish, tone deaf, man-crazy woman no one wants around, like she was used in the first through third seasons of TNG. Her chemistry with René Auberjonois, demonstrated in DS9 1.17, “The Forsaken,” comes to naught. I guess this is because they want to push Kira Nerys as a love interest for him now, played by an actor 25 years younger than Barrett, and 15 years younger than Auberjonois. So now the joke’s again on the woman who wants to sleep with everyone but no one wants her because she’s too old. Ha ha ha no.
Also not funny is the plight of Keiko and O’Brien. They seem to really be on the rocks, and it has nothing to do with the psychic love fever bullshit. I feel bad for them, but as it plays out I also don’t know what show I’m watching, or what dramatic purpose this story serves. And c’mon, O’Brien. You aren’t okay with Keiko being friends with a male colleague? In the 24th century? No wonder she appears to be sleeping with him. This strand, however, is the reason my rating is a half star above rock bottom.
Maybe also for the cool device Kira uses to light the brazier of burning scrolls.
1.5 of 5 psychic-somatic headaches.
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