Not in the Machine

I’ve fallen prey to this myself: Postmodern Christianity and The Matrix — it’s not what you get out of it so much as what you put into it.

On the other hand, that’s not so different from some people’s treatment of Scripture. The Iglesia ni Cristo interpretation of Isaiah 43:5, for example. But then, that’s outright misinterpretation, rather than the subtle projection of belief which The Matrix induces.

(RFH via DYL.)

Update: Sparticus lists ways To Abuse The Plot Of Matrix Revolutions To Turn It Into A Christian Allegory.

Smokefree

SmokefreeDC sticker graces the front of China Cafe on Connecticut Ave, home of DC’s best Hunan Tofu.

Photo taken with a Palm Zire 71.

Enterprise Episode Review Roundup

Twilight: When it comes to Star Trek, I’m normally very much against the use of memory-killing interdimensional neural parasites and time-travel-like events used as plot elements to cancel out a whole episode. (Ron Pacheco cites Poe in denouncing “dream within a dream” storylines, though I understood the final scene as being a “reset” of the space-time continuum rather than merely Archer’s awakening from a coma.) However, I’ll go out on a science fiction limb and say that “Twilight” was actually pretty good as far as Enterprise episodes go. This was a clear echo from the TNG episode finale “All Good Things” and the Stargate SG-1 episode 2010; both shows providing unique glimpses into character development by projecting into the not-so-far future. If these glimpses prove to be reasonably insightful, then a good story has been told, even if the whole continuum gets reset, and “Twilight” achieved that, with some great acting from Scott Bakula and some dramatic rumination on T’Pol’s role as his devoted caretaker.

(“Twilight” also earns some geeky fan-boy points for mentioning Ceti Alpha 5 — ironic twist, as that’s where Khan was marooned in Space Seed — and the Mutara Sector; though I think that a good episode should be able to stand on its own without having to namedrop Wrath of Khan references.)

North Star: Though it was largely derivative of “Spectre of the Gun”, I thoroughly enjoyed this superbly written, paced, and executed Enterprise episode. The gunfight between the Enterprise crew and the vigilante gunmen made a fitting metaphor for the internal conflict of a literally-alienated Wild West humanity versus the sudden onslaught of the 22nd Century. Seeing phase pistols versus lead bullets was an added bonus, and Archer’s line in the saloon, “I’ll be damned,” is a classic example of the captain’s innate shrewdness in the face of adversity.

Similitude: Awful. Awful, awful, awful. This episode weakly addresses cloning issues via the casual use of a disposable character: a Tucker clone, introduced to the story by Phlox through a “secret” — more like deus ex machina — medical process. The clone then ages at an accelerated pace, gets into discussions, kisses T’pol, gives his neurons to Tucker, dies, and is finally conveniently pushed out of the storyline through a torpedo tube. There are so many things wrong with this plot that I don’t know where to start.

I thought T’pol “loved” Archer, since she seems so devoted to him in “Twilight”; are the neuropressure sessions giving her second thoughts, or is this just a brief relapse due to her experience from “Impulse?” Archer’s “Enterprise needs Trip!” outburst is an unconvincing reason to so flippantly clone the engineer, despite the script’s insistence that the decision is not lightly considered. The script itself stumbles awkwardly in a few places, though Manny Coto deserves the benefit of the doubt, being a newcomer to writing Enterprise screenplay. I give him kudos for the intense treatment of Archer’s character in the argument with Sim, where Archer angrily expresses his willingness to kill the clone if it keeps Tucker alive. It’s not a pretty scene; Archer steps over the line in a way we should not expect of our hero the captain, but it shows the conflict that he goes through in dealing with the pressures of the Xindi mission. A daring bit of writing — unfortunately the only daring bit of writing in this whole, messed-up episode.

All in all, Enterprise seems to be getting a bit better, but I’d say we can do without episodes like “Similitude.” Issues like cloning are better tackled without disposable characters like Sim.

One very good thing going on, I must say: watching Enterprise lately, I haven’t once thought of Quantum Leap — though I would like to see Dean Stockwell guest star in at least one episode.

Autumn Leaves

The tree outside the office blazes red in the middle of the Fall. A week after I took this, it was almost bare.

Photo taken with a Palm Zire 71.

Scramboiled

Have you ever tried vigorously shaking an egg before hard-boiling it to see if it comes out hard-scramble-boiled?

It doesn’t work.

When Coworkers IM

[17:26] sf1: is it sunny?

[17:28] pau: The sun has set.

[17:28] sf1: on your days of youth and care-free living

[17:29] pau: I’m blogging that.

(Names altered to protect innocent virgin buddy lists.)

When the Soviets Attack

Town of Lawrence, after a nuclear war. As it did with Reagan, The Day After left a significant impression on me. I was eight years old, and knew nothing about the Soviet Union, nuclear weapons, or John Lithgow. (Although I recognized him later as the bad guy in Santa Claus: The Movie.) Watching it with my parents, however (with running commentary from my mom about atom bombs, radiation, fallout, and hair falling out) signaled the start of my fascination with things like nuclear explosion photos and hydrogen bombs. With those images in my head, I joined the rest of the world in morbid awareness of just how close we were to utter destruction in the days of the Cold War.

(Aside: So The Day After was directed by Nicholas “Wrath of Khan” Meyer! I did not know that.)