CaptainWacky
I want to smell dark matter
The Most Toys - The Enterprise sees a shuttle with Data in it blow up, but really he's been abducted by a trader named Kivas Fajo. He collects rare items and has added Data to his collection. He even has an old baseball card smelling of bubblegum and an extinct alien pet that looks like something from Flight of the Navigator. Data attempts to escape but Fajo seems to have thought of everything and has a personal forcefield. Geordi and Wesley are really sad about Data being dead and go through his stuff (including the famous Tasha hologram.) But Geordi is still wondering how it could have possibly happened. Fajo's assistant Varria tries to get Data to cooperate. Data questions if she has morals. Geordi goes to Picard and Riker wanting to investigate further, as Data couldn't possibly have made a piloting error. Picard picks Worf to replace Data at Ops. Data tries non violent resistance with Fajo, who wants to know if he's ever killed anyone. Data says he hasn't but can if necessary. Fajo melts Data's uniform so that he has to put the clothes he picked for him on. Troi talks to Worf, who has been promoted after the death of a friend for the second time.
Geordi finds out that Data didn't follow protocol and that can't possibly be right. Fajo tries to show off Data to one of his slimey friends but Data resists this time by refusing to talk or move. It's pretty clever! Fajo isn't happy. Picard accidentally calls Worf "Data" in a good brutally sad moment. Data tries to copy the Mona Lisa's smile. Fajo wants Data to sit on his chair and shows him the rare and banned varon-t disruptor, which kills people in a horrible way. He threatens Varria with it to get Data to sit in the chair. Worf does some investigating as part of his new job and finds out that Fajo faked the crisis which he had to trade with the Enterprise to solve. They try to hunt down Fajo. Varria goes to Data wanting to escape (which makes sense given that Fajo just threatened to murder her) and they beat up some of Fajo's goons. Fajo shoots Varria with the disruptor and she dies in agony. Data gets the disruptor but Fajo isn't worried because he doesn't think Data would hurt him. Data says he can't allow Fajo to go on killing people and appears to be about to shoot him, when O'Brien beams him out. He deactivates the weapon. Riker tells Data it was in a state of discharge and Data says perhaps something happened during transport, neither confirming or denying that he fired the weapon. Data goes to see Fajo and tells him he's lost his collection now. Fajo says it must give him great pleasure but Data says he's only an android. OR IS HE?
This episode seems pretty straightforward: crazy collector guy adds Data to his collection. It's a pretty standard story but it's really well done. One of the main reasons it's so good is that Saul Rubinek gives an excellent guest performance as Fajo. He's one of the best one off villains to appear in Trek at this point (and still to this day, probably!) Brent Spiner is great as usual and they work perfectly together. We also get some very good stuff witht he Enterprise crew reactiong to Data's apparent death. The thing that's always stuck with me about the episode is the scene where Data apparently attempts to kill him. Did Data really pull the trigger or did "something occur during transport"? Did Data lie or was his wording ambiguous enough that it wasn't a lie? We don't really know! I think in context of the episode it has to be that Data fired the weapon. But if that's the case, surely the closing scene should have had Fajo question him about that? I don't, but it's still a great episode!
SCORE: 9/10
Geordi finds out that Data didn't follow protocol and that can't possibly be right. Fajo tries to show off Data to one of his slimey friends but Data resists this time by refusing to talk or move. It's pretty clever! Fajo isn't happy. Picard accidentally calls Worf "Data" in a good brutally sad moment. Data tries to copy the Mona Lisa's smile. Fajo wants Data to sit on his chair and shows him the rare and banned varon-t disruptor, which kills people in a horrible way. He threatens Varria with it to get Data to sit in the chair. Worf does some investigating as part of his new job and finds out that Fajo faked the crisis which he had to trade with the Enterprise to solve. They try to hunt down Fajo. Varria goes to Data wanting to escape (which makes sense given that Fajo just threatened to murder her) and they beat up some of Fajo's goons. Fajo shoots Varria with the disruptor and she dies in agony. Data gets the disruptor but Fajo isn't worried because he doesn't think Data would hurt him. Data says he can't allow Fajo to go on killing people and appears to be about to shoot him, when O'Brien beams him out. He deactivates the weapon. Riker tells Data it was in a state of discharge and Data says perhaps something happened during transport, neither confirming or denying that he fired the weapon. Data goes to see Fajo and tells him he's lost his collection now. Fajo says it must give him great pleasure but Data says he's only an android. OR IS HE?
This episode seems pretty straightforward: crazy collector guy adds Data to his collection. It's a pretty standard story but it's really well done. One of the main reasons it's so good is that Saul Rubinek gives an excellent guest performance as Fajo. He's one of the best one off villains to appear in Trek at this point (and still to this day, probably!) Brent Spiner is great as usual and they work perfectly together. We also get some very good stuff witht he Enterprise crew reactiong to Data's apparent death. The thing that's always stuck with me about the episode is the scene where Data apparently attempts to kill him. Did Data really pull the trigger or did "something occur during transport"? Did Data lie or was his wording ambiguous enough that it wasn't a lie? We don't really know! I think in context of the episode it has to be that Data fired the weapon. But if that's the case, surely the closing scene should have had Fajo question him about that? I don't, but it's still a great episode!
SCORE: 9/10