Posts Tagged ‘Star Trek Deep Space Nine’
Guide to the recurring characters of Star Trek, Deep Space Nine – Part 1
In the 40 years of Star Trek there have been five TV series with that name. Star Trek Deep Space Nine was the third. The story was set on a space station near a planet called Bajor and the only stable wormhole in the Star Trek Universe.
There were less than ten regular characters as well as more than ninety recurring characters. The recurring characters appeared in anywhere from three episodes to 91 episodes, depending on the character. Some were major characters that had an impact on the show’s story and some were minor characters, usually in the form of relatives of the regular characters.
The recurring character that holds the record for most appearances was the alien named Morn. He was in 91 episodes, including the first and last episodes of the series. Unlike all of the other recurring characters, Morn just sat in Quark’s bar and never uttered a word.
The Humans
Keiko O’Brien was the wife of Chief O’Brien. She was a Starfleet botanist who was working on the USS Enterprise when she met and married Miles O’Brien. When the O’Briens began living on DS9, Keiko was concerned about her daughter’s education so she started a one-room school with herself as the teacher. When the threat of a Dominion attack forced her to close her school she took a job with an agro biology expedition of Bajor. Keiko and Miles had two children together, Molly and Kirayoshi. Keiko appeared in nineteen episodes and Molly appeared in eleven.
Kasidy Yates was a civilian freighter captain who began dating the station commander, Capt. Ben Sisko. As their relationship progressed, Kasidy took a job with the Bajoran Ministry of Commerce and began living on the station. As the series came to an end, Kasidy and Ben were married and expecting their first child together. Kasidy was in fifteen episodes.
Vic Fontaine was a character in one of Dr. Bashir’s holographic programs. He was a Las Vegas lounge singer from the 1960s and knew he was a hologram. Vic played an important role in Nog’s recovery after Nog lost his leg in battle. (see below)
The Ferengi
Rom is one of the Ferengi characters that lives on the station. He is Quark’s brother and Nog’s father. For the first few seasons of DS9, Rom worked for his brother at Quark’s bar. In season four, Rom became an engineer in the Bajoran militia. He worked for Chief O’Brien and quickly proved that he was not the idiot that his brother thought he was. Rom proved to be a vital part of the crew when his self-replicating mines
Guide to the characters of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine – Part 2
There are well over 300 characters in the series Star Trek Deep Space Nine (DS9) and that is well beyond the scope of this article. Many of the main characters appear in enough episodes that a very brief description will suffice to help someone who has never watched the show understand who they are, and yet there are many characters that reappear over and over in the course of the series that should probably be touched upon as well. These recurring characters are not as important to the series in an overall sense but are very important to the stories that they appear in.
Humans:
Captain Benjamin Sisko (Main Character): Commanding officer of DS9. Started the show as Commander and was promoted somewhere around the middle of the run. Also known as the Emissary of the Prophets by the Bajorans. Sisko hates being apart of Bajoran Religious life.

Jake Sisko(Supporting Character): Captain Sisko’s teenage son who practically grows up before our very eyes on the show and eventually becomes a journalist.
Doctor Julian Bashir(Main Character): Prodigal Genius that requested the asignment to DS9 so he could practice “Frontier Medicine”.
Mile O’Brian(Main Character) and Keiko(Supporting Character): Married on the Enterprise this couple is relocated to DS9 and Chief O’Brian is promoted to Chief of Operations from Transporter Chief.
Kassidy Yates(Supporting Character): Freighter Captain and Captain Sisko’s love interest
Klingons:
Lt. Commander Worf(Main Character): Tranfered from the Enterprise to be the liason officer with the Klingon’s.
Kurn (Supporting Character): Worfs brother former member of the Klingon High Council. Kurn is dishonored by Worf and the house of Mog is dissolved by the Klingon High Council.
Alexander Roshenko(Supporting Character): Worf’s Son Raised by Worfs adopted Human parents on Earth later joins Worf on DS9.
Gowron(Supporting Character): Leader of the Klingon High Council Killed by Worf in an honorable challenge.
General Martock(Supporting Character): After the dissolution of Worf’s House of Mog Martock adopts worf into his own house. Later is given the high council leadership by Worf.
Lursa And B’Etor (Supporting Characters): Klingon Sisters from the house of Duras.
Bajorans:
Major Kira(Main Character): Second in command of DS9 and Former resistance leader during the Cardasian occupation of Bajor.
Vedeck Bareil(Supporting Character): One of the Vedecks of Bajor (Religious leaders simillar to Catholic
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Guide to the characters of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine – Part 1
An interesting thing about the Star Trek programs that preceded Deep Space Nine is that they all had fairly black and white characters. You always knew where the characters stood on any issues. The Captains were tough as nails and would do anything to save their crew but, they always acted with honor. The engineers knew how to fix a ship with anything lying around and could always work miracles because they had the best technology in the Federation at their disposals. The first officers would always give good advice and were like brothers to their captains.
All of this changed with Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. The characters on this show are anything by ordinary:
Command
Commander (later Captain) Benjamin Sisko
Reluctantly takes on the job of star base commander a year after his wife is killed in a battle against the Borg. Forced to raise his son on his own he’s not taking too well to running the station. Shortly after arriving he discovers a stable wormhole near his station and unwittingly becomes an “emissary” to a race of creatures that inhabit it.
Major (later Colonel) Kira Naris
Former Bajoren freedom fighter. Spent years fighting against Cardasian occupation and was decided that she would be the perfect liaison to deal with the Federation when they take over DS9. She’s not a big fan of the Federation after spending most of her life fighting against one occupational force only to have to deal with another one.
(Interestingly enough this is the first time that neither the commander nor executive officers are white males)
Operations
Lieutenant (eventually promoted to Lieutenant Commander) Jadzia Dax
Essentially two individuals. Jadzia is a member of a race called the Trill. Dax is a member of the symbiotic race that bonds with Trill hosts. They offer their years of experience to the host and they become one being. Because the symbiotes live longer than their hosts they can many past lives. One of Dax’s past lives was working with a young Ben Sisko. As a result, Sisko is always referring to her as “Old Man”.
Doctor Julian Bashir
Young and adventurous doctor. Graduated second in his class from Starfleet Medical and immediately volunteered for a job on DS9 so that he could be around “Frontier Medicine”. Has an attraction to Dax, but this settles down in later seasons (but resurfaces in the final season when Dax gains a new host).
Master Chief Miles O’Brien
Chief O’Brien is in charge of keeping DS9 intact which is not an
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Star Trek: Voyager (DVD) Review
Nominated for 30 Emmys, including seven for Outstanding Special Visual Effects for a Series, Star Trek: Voyager continues the rich tradition of the original 1960s Star Trek franchise. Created by former L.A. police officer Gene Roddenberry, the Star Trek TV series morphed into a franchise famous for the unprecedented fanatical devotion of its fan base. Lasting only three seasons during its original network run, Star Trek struck gold with its syndicated reruns, launching a number of motion pictures featuring the original cast as well as novels, comic books, collectibles, and reams of Star Trek-related memorabilia. The third spin-off from the original Star Trek series, Star Trek: Voyager premiered in January 1995 to modest critical acclaim, but experienced great success with television viewers, slowly increasing its ratings as the series progressed. Following on the heels of Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987) and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993), the series precedes Star Trek: Enterprise (2001) while boasting an all-star cast that includes veteran actress Kate Mulgrew (whose past TV appearances include such shows as Dallas, Cheers, and Murphy Brown). Yet instead of pursuing the classic Star Trek mission to “boldly go where no one has gone before,” Star Trek: Voyager is more about going where the crew has been before…
Star Trek: Voyager follows the exploits of the crew aboard the starship USS Voyager. As the series begins, the Voyager is on a Federation mission to capture a rogue ship of Maquis rebels (a race first introduced in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine). While in pursuit of the Maquis, the Voyager enters a system known as the badlands, and both ships are instantaneously transported to the Delta Quadrant over seventy-thousand light years away on the outskirts of the galaxy. Soon, both the Maquis and the crew of Voyager learn they were brought to Delta Quadrant by the Caretaker, a mysterious force overseeing the safety of the Ocampan race who live in the shadow on an impending threat from the vicious Kazon. When the Kazon destroy the Maquis ship, the Voyager crew merges with the Maquis crew to defend themselves from the Kazon. Having destroyed the device which could bring them home, the crew of the Voyager – led by Capt. Kathryn Janeway (Kate Mulgrew), and the crew of the Maquis ship – led by Commander Chakotay (Robert Beltran), must work as a united front in order to meet their mutual goal of finding a way home…
The Star Trek: Voyager DVD features a number of exciting episodes including the series premiere “Caretaker” in which the Federation starship USS Voyager, led by Capt. Kathryn Janeway, is unexpectedly transported 70,000 light years away while pursuing a band of Maquis rebels through an area known as the badlands. The Voyager’s new destination is the Delta Quadrant, an uncharted region of the galaxy overseen by the Caretaker and threatened by the colonial aggression of the Kazon… Other notable episodes from Season 1 include “The Cloud” in which the Voyager accidentally injures an alien life form while searching for an ingredient to boost its energy supply, and “Learning Curve” in which members of Commander Chakotay’s ragtag Maquis crew are given a Starfleet Academy tutorial on how to act properly aboard the Voyager…
Below is a list of episodes included on the Star Trek: Voyager (Season 1) DVD:
Episode 1 (Caretaker: Part 1) Air Date: 01-15-1995
Episode 2 (Caretaker: Part 2) Air Date: 01-15-1995
Episode 3 (Parallax) Air Date: 01-23-1995
Episode 4 (Time and Again) Air Date: 01-30-1995
Episode 5 (Phage) Air Date: 02-03-1995
Episode 6 (The Cloud) Air Date: 02-10-1995
Episode 7 (Eye of the Needle) Air Date: 02-17-1995
Episode 8 (Ex Post Facto) Air Date: 02-24-1995
Episode 9 (Emanations) Air Date: 03-13-1995
Episode 10 (Prime Factors) Air Date: 03-20-1995
Episode 11 (State of Flux) Air Date: 04-10-1995
Episode 12 (Heroes and Demons) Air Date: 04-24-1995
Episode 13 (Cathexis) Air Date: 05-01-1995
Episode 14 (Faces) Air Date: 05-08-1995
Episode 15 (Jetrel) Air Date: 05-15-1995
Episode 16 (Learning Curve) Air Date: 05-22-1995
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Star Trek: The Next Generation (DVD) Review
Nominated for 58 Emmys, including one for Outstanding Drama Series, Star Trek: The Next Generation fulfilled all the potential and promise anticipated of a long-awaited successor to the original 1960s series – Star Trek. Created by a former L.A. police officer, Gene Roddenberry, the Star Trek TV series morphed into a franchise famous for the unprecedented fanatical devotion of its audience. Lasting only three seasons during its original network run, Star Trek struck gold with its syndicated reruns, launching a number of motion pictures featuring the original cast as well as novels, comic books, collectibles, and reams of Star Trek-related memorabilia. Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987) became the first TV series to follow on the heels of the original, and its success would spark the creation of three additional series – Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993), Star Trek: Voyager (1995), and Star Trek: Enterprise (2001). But The Next Generation remained the most popular spin-off. Despite new characters and new episodes, the mission remained the same as before – “to boldly go where no man has gone before…” And to continue the rich tradition of the Star Trek name – a mission Star Trek: The Next Generation accomplishes with relative ease…
Star Trek: The Next Generation takes place in the 24th Century, almost one-hundred years after Captain Kirk’s crew set out to explore strange new worlds. Capt. Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart – I Claudius) commands the USS Enterprise-D and its diverse crew of humans, cyborgs, and varying life forms. Accompanying him on his voyage is an entirely new cast of passengers and crew including Commander William T. Riker (Jonathan Frakes – North & South), Lt. Commander Data (Brent Spiner), Lt. Commander Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton), Lt. Tasha Yar (Denise Crosby), Lt. Worf (Michael Dorn), Dr. Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden), and her son Ensign Wesley Crusher (Wil Wheaton)… Together, they struggle against numerous obstacles to carry out the mission of the USS Enterprise: “To explore strange new worlds… To seek out new life; new civilizations… To boldly go where no one has gone before!” This pioneering attitude, coupled with imaginative and brilliantly-produced alien worlds, provides Star Trek with its unique allure and special place within American pop culture – especially those episodes from the original series, widely regarded as the most popular of the Star Trek franchise…
The Star Trek: The Next Generation DVD features a number of exciting episodes including the series premiere “Encounter at Farpoint” in which the newly built USS Enterprise-D, commanded by Capt. Jean Luc Picard, is tasked with its first mission – to explore the area in and around Farpoint Station. But while carrying out their mission, the crew and passengers encounter a powerful life form known only as “Q”. The being accuses the human race of high crimes against the galaxy, and he threatens to destroy all of humanity. Now, Capt. Picard and his crew must think fast, or else risk total annihilation… Other notable episodes from Season 1 include “The Battle” in which a mind-control device placed of a former ship of Capt. Picard forces him to re-live a battle from his past (with the USS Enterprise as the target!), and “Coming of Age” in which Wesley takes the Starfleet Academy entrance exam while Capt. Picard turns down a promotion in order to stay with the Enterprise…
Below is a list of episodes included on the Star Trek: The Next Generation (Season 1) DVD:
Episode 1 (Encounter at Farpoint: Part 1) Air Date: 09-28-1987
Episode 2 (Encounter at Farpoint: Part 2) Air Date: 09-28-1987
Episode 3 (The Naked Now) Air Date: 10-05-1987
Episode 4 (Code of Honor) Air Date: 10-12-1987
Episode 5 (The Last Outpost) Air Date: 10-19-1987
Episode 6 (Where No One Has Gone Before) Air Date: 10-26-1987
Episode 7 (Lonely Among Us) Air Date: 11-02-1987
Episode 8 (Justice) Air Date: 11-09-1987
Episode 9 (The Battle) Air Date: 11-16-1987
Episode 10 (Hide and Q) Air Date: 11-23-1987
Episode 11 (Haven) Air Date: 11-30-1987
Episode 12 (The Big Goodbye) Air Date: 01-11-1988
Episode 13 (Datalore) Air Date: 01-18-1988
Episode 14 (Angel One) Air Date: 01-25-1988
Episode 15 (11001001) Air Date: 02-01-1988
Episode 16 (Too Short a Season) Air Date: 02-08-1988
Episode 17 (When the Bough Breaks) Air Date: 02-15-1988
Episode 18 (Home Soil) Air Date: 02-22-1988
Episode 19 (Coming of Age) Air Date: 03-14-1988
Episode 20 (Heart of Glory) Air Date: 03-21-1988
Episode 21 (The Arsenal of Freedom) Air Date: 04-11-1988
Episode 22 (Symbiosis) Air Date: 04-18-1988
Episode 23 (Skin of Evil) Air Date: 04-25-1988
Episode 24 (We’ll Always Have Paris) Air Date: 05-02-1988
Episode 25 (Conspiracy) Air Date: 05-09-1988
Episode 26 (The Neutral Zone) Air Date: 05-16-1988
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Star Wars vs. Star Trek
In a Galaxy far, far away, a 10-year-old boy became a life-long Star Wars fan; captivated by the exploits of Luke Skywalker, Yoda, Darth Vader, Han Solo, Chewbacca, Obi-wan Kenobi, Princess Leia, R2-D2 and C-3PO.
Their world of epic galactic struggle was the ultimate escapist entertainment – for a 10-year old this was a magical land where real heroes lived. From the characters, the spaceships, weapons and locations, the Star Wars saga become the best thing he’d ever seen and likely to see. Now with the addition of a further three films – the new prequels chart the rise and fall of Anakin Skywalker and his transformation to Darth Vader – Stars Wars has cemented itself further into my psyche.

Star Wars has stayed with me into adulthood, any other Sci-fi watched has always been held up against the Star Wars benchmark of quality. That doesn’t mean that everything is disregarded because “Star Wars in better” – if a Sci-fi film/idea is genuinely good then you must give it credit where it’s due.
Star Trek can be considered on par with Star Wars; there is no need to say one is inherently better than the other when both can co-exist in the same universe! A Star Wars fan will always be a hardcore fan – given a choice then it wins every time – but the modern-era Trek shows and movies hold up extremely well.
It was a long time before this Star Wars fan gave much credit to “Star Trek: The Next Generation” TV show – it was only after the show had long since finished that exposure to the compelling stories, characters and emotional impact of the show was to take affect. The “Next Generation” Trek films are also quality pieces of entertainment by themselves.
Having now seen the “Star Trek: Voyager” and “Star Trek: Deep Space Nine” shows in their entireties – they have now found a new fan in me! The most enjoyment has been derived from “DS9″ – although all the shows have been top quality throughout.
There shouldn’t be any galactic conflict when these two entities meet; both are adept at bringing out the best in Sci-fi storytelling. They let our imaginations run free through the universe – while at the same time deal with real-world human issues along the way (Star Trek especially).
So when you read of fans bemoaning the lack of this or that in either Star Wars or Star Trek – credit needs to be shared equally (that’s coming from a devotee of Star Wars) – both can bring balance to the force or be one with the prophets.
Star Trek (DVD) Review
Nominated for four Emmys, including Outstanding Dramatic Series two times in its short three-year stint, Star Trek is a true legend of television history. The brainchild of former L.A. policeman Gene Roddenberry, the show premiered in Fall 1966 only to be cancelled after three seasons due to lackluster ratings. But it may well have been NBC’s network executives who were the cause of the low ratings as they allotted a less than desirable time slot for the show. When Star Trek moved into syndication, its reruns captured the science-fiction imagination of an entirely new audience, catapulting the Star Trek franchise to new heights. Its newfound popularity would, in the decades to come, spawn novels, comic books, six full-length feature films, and reams of merchandise as fans clamored for anything Star Trek-related. Beginning in the 1980’s, spin-offs of the show began to appear such as Star Trek: The Animated Series, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Star Trek: Voyager, and Star Trek: Enterprise…
Star Trek, the original TV series, follows the adventurous exploits of the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise as they “boldly go where no man has gone before…” The spaceship Enterprise is led by Captain James Tiberius Kirk (William Shatner), an Earth-born astronaut who often exhibits the charm, leadership, and creativity necessary for the mission’s survival. Kirk is joined by Lt. Commander Spock (Leonard Nimoy), a Vulcan-born retired commander and theoretical scientist. Chief medical officer Dr. Leonard McCoy (DeForest Kelley) rounds out the main cast of Star Trek which includes a plethora of supporting crew with multiple guest appearances and cameo roles. Together, the crew of U.S.S. Enterprise seeks to carry out its mission: “to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations…” It’s this pioneering attitude, coupled with imaginative sci-fi worlds, that provides Star Trek with its nostalgic allure – especially these episodes from the original TV series, widely regarded as the most popular of all the TV series…
The Star Trek DVD features a number of action-packed episodes including the series premiere “The Man Trap” in which the crew of the Enterprise visits the planet M-113 for an annual check on the residents of its colony. But during the initial landing phase, a crew member turns up dead. Kirk orders an investigation and the crew soon learns that a deadly predator that can assume the shape of any life-form is murdering humans, and the creature now has its sights set on the crew of the Enterprise… Other notable episodes from Season 1 include “Balance of Terror” in which a wedding between two crew members is interrupted when the Enterprise is forced to defend an Earth outpost from an attack by an unknown spacecraft, and “A Taste of Armageddon” in which the Enterprise encounters a pair of “war computers” that carry out an unorthodox form of warfare…
Below is a list of episodes included on the Star Trek (Season 1) DVD:
Episode 1 (The Man Trap) Air Date: 09-08-1966
Episode 2 (Charlie X) Air Date: 09-15-1966
Episode 3 (Where No Man Has Gone Before) Air Date: 09-22-1966
Episode 4 (The Naked Time) Air Date: 09-29-1966
Episode 5 (The Enemy Within) Air Date: 10-06-1966
Episode 6 (Mudd’s Women) Air Date: 10-13-1966
Episode 7 (What Are Little Girls Made Of?) Air Date: 10-20-1966
Episode 8 (Miri) Air Date: 10-27-1966
Episode 9 (Dagger of the Mind) Air Date: 11-03-1966
Episode 10 (The Corbomite Maneuver) Air Date: 11-10-1966
Episode 11 (The Menagerie: Part 1) Air Date: 11-17-1966
Episode 12 (The Menagerie: Part 2) Air Date: 11-24-1966
Episode 13 (The Conscience of the King) Air Date: 12-08-1966
Episode 14 (Balance of Terror) Air Date: 12-15-1966
Episode 15 (Shore Leave) Air Date: 12-22-1966
Episode 16 (The Galileo Seven) Air Date: 01-05-1967
Episode 17 (The Squire of Gothos) Air Date: 01-12-1967
Episode 18 (Arena) Air Date: 01-19-1967
Episode 19 (Tomorrow is Yesterday) Air Date: 01-26-1967
Episode 20 (Court Martial) Air Date: 02-02-1967
Episode 21 (The Return of Archons) Air Date: 02-09-1967
Episode 22 (Space Seed) Air Date: 02-16-1967
Episode 23 (A Taste of Armageddon) Air Date: 02-23-1967
Episode 24 (This Side of Paradise) Air Date: 03-02-1967
Episode 25 (The Devil in the Dark) Air Date: 03-09-1967
Episode 26 (Errand of Mercy) Air Date: 03-23-1967
Episode 27 (The Alternative Factor) Air Date: 03-30-1967
Episode 28 (The City on the Edge of Forever) Air Date: 04-06-1967
Episode 29 (Operation – Annihilate!) Air Date: 04-13-1967
Roddenberry: The only actor to star in every Star Trek show ever made – Part 1
There have been only one actor that has starred in every Star Trek show that has ever been made. This actress has starred in the original pilot, “The Cage” that was rejected, the original Star Trek series, she played the computer voice on almost all the series that aired, and she played a recurring character on Star Trek: TNG, and Deep Space Nine.
This actress was Majel Barrett Roddenberry and she was also the wife of Gene Roddenberry. Majel Barrett first starred in the original pilot for Star Trek, “The Cage” as the character, Number One. She was the second in command to Captain Christopher Pike on the starship Enterprise. When the pilot was rejected and the new pilot was reworked for the new show, her character became Nurse Christine Chapel and she played her for 33 of the episodes. She also starred in a few of the Original Star Trek movies. Her character, Christine Chapel, came onto the starship Enterprise, at first to search for her missing finance, Roger Corby. When it appeared that he was a lost cause, she decided to sign on as nurse to Doctor Leonard McCoy. Her character had a soft spot for the Vulcan character, Spock and fell in love, but he was unable to reciprocate her feelings.
The next role that she played was the voice of the computer, which she played throughout Star Trek: The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine and Voyager. Whenever one of the shows were on and in any given situation, her voice would be heard. As her role of the computer, her voice was heard 98 times in the Next Generation, 25 times on Deep Space Nine, 70 times in Voyager, and 2 times on Enterprise. She also played the computer voice on the Defiant, the Deep Space Nine starship.
The other role that she played was Laxwana Troi, the mother to Deanna Troi on Star Trek: The Next Generation. She was a recurring character on that show and on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. Her character was introduced in the first season episode, “Haven”, where she came on board to marry her daughter off. Her character was a full Betazed with full telepathic abilities. She would continue to recur on the show throughout the seven years that the show was on. She was mainly an annoyance to Captain Picard and to Commander William Riker. She tended to speak her thoughts just to get a rise out of her daughter. She had tender feelings for Picard, but he tended to feel annoyance more than anything for her. She would also recur on Deep Space Nine throughout the years that it was on. She annoyed the Deep Space Nine crew also, but she helped one crew member immensely when he needed it. She fell in love with Odo, the security chief on the station, but it was not a relationship that they could continue with. She did fall in love with an alien ambassador but it was cut short by the fact that he had to commit ritual suicide.
I am pretty sure that there have been actors who decided to play different alien species and they played them in all the series, but when it comes to the main characters of Star Trek, the only actor or actress to have ever starred in every series was Majel Barrett Roddenberry.
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Season 1
It’s 1992. Star Trek: The Next Generation is in its sixth season. The ratings are fine, but it’s been a long run and the show’s production team can see the photonic discharge at the end of the tunnel. However, Paramount’s big kahuna Brandon Tartikoff has already approached Trek’s executive producers Rick Berman and Michael Piller about a new addition to the franchise family. Almost thirty years before, Gene Roddenberry sold the original Kirk&Spock series to NBC by pitching it as “Wagon Train to the stars” (westerns being the thing in mid-sixties TV). Next Generation had carried on that tradition with its own starship Enterprise venturing to new life and new civilizations. But the novelty had worn off the “boldly going” angle. Therefore this new series was to showcase an interstellar Gunsmoke — a rough-and-tumble frontier town troubled by hostile natives and ne’er-do-wells, with a stout lawman keeping the peace as best he can in a place where even the local saloon keeper keeps his six-shooter (or phaser) under the bar. Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, its Dodge City an eponymous alien space station far from the Federation cavalry, premiered in January ‘93.
So up through Next Gen’s seventh season, two Star Trek series existed side by side. To avoid redundant “same old same old,” Deep Space Nine gave the familiar 24th century universe what it needed most — a setting less drycleaned than the Enterprise, some fresh texture added to Trekdom’s weekly dramas, and (most crucially) characters who were rougher around the edges, more three-dimensional, and who weren’t stuck in the creative straitjackets that had stunted Next Gen’s growth throughout its tenure. By the time it reached its own Seasons Three through Seven, Deep Space Nine had become the best written, best acted, most sophisticated and compelling Star Trek of them all. Perhaps it was because the writers seemed to be taking notes while watching Babylon 5, but there were times when Deep Space Nine was so good that it hardly looked like Star Trek at all.
However, it took a while to reach that level. Like its predecessor, DS9 didn’t spread its wings until its third season. Nonetheless, right from the get-go it delivered a Year One that stood head and shoulders (that’s one ridged, funny-colored head, mind you) above TNG’s abysmal first season. Its stories were more character-driven and set within a well-crafted political-cultural background, its new look was a welcome change, and the cast was uniformly strong, perhaps the strongest of any Trek series then or since. Among Season One’s 19 episodes, there are few wow! entries — the effortless Murder Mystery or Alien Criminal of the Week slot-fillers flatten the baseline — though several do stand tall and none are outright embarrassing.
Kicking things off to a robust start is the 90-minute pilot, “The Emissary,” which introduces Starfleet Commander Benjamin Sisko (marvelous Avery Brooks) plus his sometimes grudging staff and associates. Odo (played by Broadway stalwart Rene Auberjonois) is the gelatinous shape-shifting “constable.” At Sisko’s right hand is Major Kira (Nana Visitor), an ex-freedom-fighter from Bajor, the nearby world devastated under the military occupation by the series’ initial baddies, the Cardassians. Also on board are ex-Next Gen crewman Miles O’Brien (Colm Meaney), Science Officer Jadzia Dax (Terry Farrell), young gung-ho horn-dog Dr. Julian Bashir (Siddig El Fadil), and scheming Ferengi bartender Quark (Armin Shimerman). “The Emissary” does a fine job revving up the series’ engine and establishing its centerpiece in a mysterious, alien-made “wormhole” — a unique hyperdimensional subway tunnel from one side of the galaxy to another — that makes space station Deep Space Nine a flashpoint of interstellar travel, commerce, and of course conflict.
The main characters each receive focused episodes to flesh themselves out, and these are among the best. “Dax” is a taut police procedural exploring the multi-lived nature of Sisko’s “old man” mentor who’s now his sexy female science officer. In “Vortex,” Odo encounters a fugitive who may hold the key to his unknown past and people. The Kira-centric “Duet” is an all-time high point. Not only is it a top-flight script that touches on blind nationalism, prejudice, wartime brutality, and obsessive revenge, it’s also a potent character turn (refreshingly, events in DS9 matter later on) and is heightened by guest star Harris Yulin’s tour de force performance.
One of DS9’s strengths was its acknowledgement that even in this technofuture people can possess important spiritual and (not necessarily synonymous) religious beliefs. That artery is placed at the heart of the show right from the beginning, and the season capper, “In the Hands of the Prophets,” takes a powerful look at religious fundamentalism in an age of scientific progress.
In between are episodes offering up the expected stinkers (fairy tales come alive in “If Wishes Were Horses”), the obligatory crossovers (Next Gen faves Q and Vash return in “Q-Less,” as does, ugh, Lwaxana Troi in “The Forsaken”), some worthy comedy (“The Nagus”), and the typical plain-Jane eps that go well enough with a bowl of chips and a liter of Diet Coke.
* * *
Paramount’s Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Season 1 DVD boxed set presents all 19 episodes on five discs plus a sixth disc devoted to extras, all totaling more than 15 hours. The episodes look very good, matching the quality of the later Next Gen discs. The full-frame imagery is clean and vibrant. Audio options are the original stereo DD 2.0 and a new DD 5.1 mix. The 5.1 isn’t showy, but it’s effective especially when the musical scores spread out around us.
Unfortunately, as with the Next Gen sets, there’s still no printed episode guide, so our annoyance is underscored by the thought that it’s a ploy to make us go to the official franchise promo site, www.startrek.com, for that seemingly obvious include.
The extras are good, if unsurprisingly no deeper than fanzine material, and are made up of new and archived video material. Deep Space Nine: A Bold Beginning (18 minutes) serves up the production staff’s first-hand accounts of the show’s conception, gestation, and birth. In Crew Dossier: Kira Nerys (15 mins.), actor’s actor Nana Visitor considers her character’s development over the seven seasons, including the impact of playing Kira’s “evil universe” self and her experiences as a pregnant woman whose condition was cleverly woven into the show. Michael Westmore’s Aliens (10 mins.) looks at the makeup work that populated the station with assorted imaginative facial appliances. Senior illustrator Rick Sternbach hosts The Deep Space Nine Sketchbook (5 mins.), a video gallery of production design concept art.
A stills gallery holds 40 images. Two throwaway quickies are Secrets of Quark’s Bar (5 mins.), which points a camera at candle holders and other found objects that became galactic Fiestaware, and Alien Artifacts’s three minutes with a propmaster who’d rather be elsewhere. Be forewarned that the two Features menu screens deliberately hide their contents, forcing an irksome click-hunt for each title. Ten brief cast video interviews are barely Easter Egg’d as “Section 31: Hidden Files” (thanks to the lack of a convenional menu, woe unto you if later on you want to revisit any particular Hidden File).
The packaging is more compact and practical than the Next Generation cinder blocks. An all-plastic digipak holds the discs in rugged book-hinged trays, and the whole thing is enclosed within a semi-transparent plastic slipcase. It might just outlast us well into the 24th century.
Deep Space Nine
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Deep Space Nine DVD has far exceeded all expectations and this is a fantastic movie to be seen on screen. It has been a spin off of the Star Trek series. However the Deep Space Nine DVD series is different from the other Star Trek series in several ways.
It is about a space station that is far from earth. It is darker because of the constant threats from attacks by aliens and this show has more non humans that any of the other shows. Some of these include a shapeshifter, a Bajoran, a Ferengi and a Trill. Generally the trials and tribulations of this crew remain similar to something like The Next Generation.
Personally I believe the technology used in this show is quite impressive. It was nominated for 28 Emmys, including several for its outstanding visual effects.
The Deep Space Nine DVD series featured an array of fantastic episodes including the series “Emissary” where the recently abandoned Cardassian space station Terok Norm, is taken over at the request of the Bajorians, by the Federation.
The previously reviewed Star Trek: The Next Generation Season Three, is inferior to Deep Space Nine DVD Season One. The colors that have been used are a vast improvement on previous movies, which enhances the overall viewing and enjoyment experience. It seems that Paramount now have the quality under control.
Below is a list of episodes included on the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Season 1) DVD:
Episode 1 Emissary: Part 1
Episode 2 Emissary: Part 2
Episode 3 A Man Alone
Episode 4 Past Prologue
Episode 5 Babel
Episode 6 Captive Pursuit
Episode 7 Q-Less
Episode 8 Dax
Episode 9 The Passenger
Episode 10 Move Along Home
Episode 11 The Nagus
Episode 12 Vortex
Episode 13 Battle Lines
Episode 14 The Story Teller
Episode 15 Progress
Episode 16 If Wishes Were Horses
Episode 17 The Forsaken
Episode 18 Dramatis Personae
Episode 19 Duet
Episode 20 In the Hands of the Prophets