Apocalypse Rising - That's quite the episode title. Sisko and Dax are late to return to the station in their runabout as space is now full of hostile Klingons. Worf wants to take the Defiant to find them and briefly clashes with Kira but they arrive right then anyway. The war with the Klingons isn't going well and Starfleet is sending an infiltration team to the Klingon homeworld to prove that Gowron is a changeling. Of course Starfleet apparently doesn't have any infiltration specialists so Sisko is leading the team. Odo is still depressed about being a humanoid and hanging out in Quark's looking at the bubbles in alcohol (he's too depressed to even get drunk.) Sisko wants to take him on the mission but Odo thinks he won't be any help without his shapeshifting abilities. Sisko orders him to come anyway. Gowron has relocated the Klingon headquarters to a planet in an asteroid field surrounded by battleships and Gowron also has super elite bodyguards. Worf suggests killing Gowron so he'll turn into liquid but Sisko has special golden balls that will force any changeling to lose its shape. Dukat (wearing Klingon sashes) comes to the station and is surprised to find Kira pregnant with O'Brien's child and that Sisko, O'Brien and Odo have been surgically altered to appear Klingon. Worf is going on the mission too despite surely being the most famous Klingon in the universe (The only Klingon in Starfleet! Twice exiled! Discovered Emperor Kahless!) Dax, the expert in Klingon matters, isn't going on he mssion though. It's weird. Damar gets some lines on Dukat's ship (he wants to kill all the Klingons.) There's a scene between Kira and Bashir where she says the baby is his fault, which seems like an injoke about Siddig being the one who knocked up Visitor. Worf tries to teach Sisko, O'Brien and Odo how to be Klingons. Odo has another crisis of confidence and Sisko tells him to humanoid up. Dukat destroys a Klingon Bird of Prey when his holo-emitter doesn't work, disgusting the Starfleet crew (Dukat's still evil, remember!)
They arrive at the Klingon secret base and Dukat reveals that he's going to beam them down and leave: if they succeed they won't need him anyway and if they fail they'll be dead. There's a big Klingon party going on where medals of honour will be handed out (our four heroes have been put on the list.) O'Brien gets headbutted. Back on the station(!?) Jake(!?!?!) is worried about the Klingons and Bashir tries to make him feel better. I guess Cirroc Lofton was just contractually obligated to appear in this episode. Sisko beats up a Klingon he hears boasting about killing an old friend of Sisko's. Hours pass before General Martok shows up. Luckily he doesn't seem to recognise them, despite a tense moment with O'Brien. They set up their golden balls but Odo drops his and Worf has to cover for him. Gowron finally shows up with his crazy eyes. He begins handing out awards (a GIRL KLINGON gets one so there's no reason Dax couldn't have come.) Martok attacks Sisko when he goes up to get his medal, finally remembering his face. Martok locks them up, but soon admits that Gowron has been acting weird lately and he suspects they might be right about him being a changeling. Worf suggests Martok challenge Gowron to honourable combat, but instead he released them so they can kill Gowron. There's a cool bit where he walks by two saluting Klingons and just stabs them both at the same time. Worf and Gowron fight, with Gowron stopping one of his mates from interfering because he wants a fair fight (hmmm.) Odo realises that Martok is the real changeling due to his lack of Klingon honour. Worf is about to kill Gowron when the Martok changeling starts choking Odo and everyone shoots him and he blows up. Wow that changeling was pretty dumb to reveal himself in front of hundreds of Klingons. Anyway Gowron is happy that the truth has been revealed but tells Sisko and Worf that he can't just end the war without the Federation making comprimises. He tells Worf he should have killed him when he had the chance, which is pretty ungrateful. Bashir turns everyone back to humans.
It's a fun Klingon romp! Not as strong a start to the season as 'The Way Of The Warrior' but still a a very fun episode. There's lots of comedy with O'Brien and Odo pretending to be Klingons and lots of fighting and an exploding changeling. What more do you want
SCORE: 8.5/10
The Ship - Sisko and most of the main characters are conducting a mineral survey on a GQ planet. An enlisted crewman named Muniz (who actually made a couple of minor appearances last season) is obviously fond of O'Brien and exchanges banter with him. A Jem'Hadar warship crashes on the planet. Sisko and crew explore he ship, finding all the Jem'Hadar dead. It'll be hard to get the ship up and running because it's so different from what they're used to. Back on the station, Odo brings Quark and Bashir to Kira for some comedy reason but Kira is leaving in the Defiant to go tow the Jem'Hadar ship home. Another Jem'Hadar ship shows up and instantly destroys the (manned) runabout orbiting the planet. The Jem'Hadar beam down and kill some more redshirts (and injure Munzi) so Sisko and the others hide inside the crashed ship. Muniz is hurt worse than he initally let on. The Jem'Hadar won't follow them inside for some reason. Their Vorta commander Kilana asks to speak to Sisko face to face. She wants Sisko to give up the ship but he won't. A Jem'Hadar beams onboard. Muniz kills the Jem'Hadar to save O'Brien's life (strangely the Jem'Hadar only had a knife.) Muniz's condition continues to worsen but O'Brien promises he'll make it.
O'Brien works on getting the ship up and running, but he's still worried about Muniz. Worf tells him that Muniz won't see tomorrow and should be allowed to prepare to death. Sisko goes to talk to Kilana again and says his "if you have something to say, say it!" catchphrase. She's a pretty weird Vorta? She just doesn't sound like she knows what she's doing. She wants Sisko to let her take something fro the ship but he has no reason to trust her now. The Jem'Hadar start shaking the ship to rattle our heroes, who are already sweaty and snapping at each other and getting kind of sick of Muniz's really slow death. Dax sill can't find anything special about the ship which would mean the Jem'Hadar wouldn't just destroy it. Worf suggests to O'Brien that he put Muniz out of his misery. They nearly get into a fight and Sisko tells Dax to stop making sarcastic remarks. Things are serious! Muniz dies a couple of minutes later. Sisko and Dax fnally find a sick changeling hiding on the ship: that's why the Jem'Hadar won't destroy it. The founder dies and the Jem'Hadar kill themselves out of shame. Kilana says Sisko should have trusted her. Sisko says no one had to die and they'd all still be alive if they'd trusted each other WHICH IS BULLSHIT. The Jem'Hadar destroyed the runabout, killed the redshirts and mortally injured Muniz before Kilana ever made her offer to Sisko. Yet the episode wants us to think that Sisko was JUST AS BAD AS KILANA for not trusting her and is partially responsible for all those deaths, when really the Dominion murdered all those people without Sisko having a chance to stop them. Bullfuckingshit. Back at the station Sisko keeps looking at the names of the death and feeling guilty, even though yet again there was literally nothing he could have done to prevent those deaths. Worf joins O'Brien in sitting by Muniz's coffin.
It's an episode that pisses me off. It wants to tell a story where Sisko and Kilana are both in the wrong and all the deaths could have been prevented if they'd trusted each other. But the writing is completely incompetent at actually created that scenario. For the third time I'll point out that the Jem'Hadar killed everyone BEFORE Kilana made her offer to Sisko. Plus the episode drags a lot in the middle. Colm Meaney is great but the scenes of Muniz taking ages to die get repetitive and more should have been done to establish closeness between them before his injury. And the actress playing the Vorta isn't very good. It's not a terrible episode but it's a huge missed opportunity.
SCORE: 6/10