Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Seventh Season buy bestselling dvd movies, videos find reviews, ratings, prices
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Features
• Box set
• Closed-captioned
• Color
• Dolby
• DVD-Video
• Full Screen
• NTSC
In Theaters : 04 January, 1993
DVD Release : 02 December, 2003 |
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Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Seventh Season description
Deep Space Nine's seventh and final season came down to loose ends, tying some existing ones together while allowing others to unravel. Symptomatic of the unwillingness to let DS9 go was the immediate arrival of a replacement Dax, though poor Nichole deBoer as Ezri Dax had to have known she'd already missed the boat. Her appearance encouraged last-minute romances to blossom, with Bashir finally getting some action, Odo finally getting together with Kira, and Sisko finally proposing to Kassidy. Another contributing cute factor were numerous trips to the holosuite wherein the all-knowing Vic Fontaine dished out philosophical advice. That was when the crew wasn't in there to play baseball against the Vulcans, or when Nog wasn't commiserating about the loss of a leg. Oh yes, and don't forget the War! There was an early announcement that the show would attempt a 10-part resolution to the Dominion War, but viewers could be forgiven for forgetting all about it with so much sentimental distraction. When the horrors of war did resurface, they at least injected a few surprises into the mix. Odo and his ambiguously "evil" Founders were hit with a melting disease, prompting a backstabbing race for the power of developing and owning a cure. The original baddie Cardassians finally settled on the Federation's side. Contrary to these interesting twists, however, were the unexpected turns taken by matters relating to Sisko's spiritual destiny. Suddenly the mystery of the wormhole and an entire religious belief system was reduced to the problem of correctly translating the words of a sacred book. The struggle to join with some evil aliens significantly diluted the attempt at resolving what had begun seven years before in the show's pilot episode. Ultimately, Sisko's destiny, as with all those who'd followed him to the open-ended climax, was to be decided elsewhere. In a move that was either bold and daring--or possibly born of desperation for not having thought things through properly--the show's storylines were to be continued in a series of spin-off books. --Paul Tonks |
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Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Seventh Season Customer Reviews
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There's Just No Excuse
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OK. I'm a huge StarTrek nerd, and DS9 is my favorite StarTrek series. That said, this final season is such a huge disappointment. The ingrates, that's right ingrates, running the Trek franchise just completely nose-dived this series into the ground.
Why ingrates? Well, the producers took the expansive loyalty and enthusiastic good-will of StarTrek fans and exploited it in an attempt to gratify their own outsized egos. Where to begin? How about Ezri Dax for starters. one question. WTF were you guys thinking? I realize losing Terry Farrell was a major blow, but come on! They wasted half of the FINAL season introducing and enlarging a character that was little more than a band-aid. Yes, she's a cutie, but there's an inter-stellar war on! They should have just buried Dax and let it be.
Next, Vic Fontaine. Need I say more? Well I will anyway. What in the name of all that is holy? Who's idea was this? Got to be Ira Behr's doing. I mean, come on Ira, who is this singer/actor/cheese sandwich, your boyfriend or something? Seriously, there's no other explanation for his presence on this show. Maybe if Behr would take off his Wayfarers when he went to work, he could see when he was making a gigantic mistep. OK, maybe, MAYBE, a one-off episode. But They made him a major character. Were they just bored with writing Sci-Fi? Look, if you'd rather be writing insipid rat-pack rip offs, then please, for all our sakes, just quit Trek. Leave the show with some dignity.
And finally, the resolving of the Dominion war is just lame. It doesn't make sense any way you look at it. It comes off like a undergrad creative writing assignment where the student realizes he's already reached the minimum required length, and decides to lazily tie up the story in one final paragraph. Why do you think the DS9 books are so popular? Because fans NEED them just to give some kind of believable closure to characters we'd all grown to love so much.
Bad job, Guys. You really dropped the ball here... as well as in other Trek series (Enterprise anyone?). Lets hope the new Trek movie will breathe some life back into Gene Roddenberry's much-loved Universe. |
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