Search
Cookie Usage Statistics Colour Key Sudden Death Monthly Poll Caption Comp eMail Author Shops
Ships Fleets Weaponry Species People Timelines Calculators Photo Galleries
Stations Design Lineage Size Charts Battles Science / Tech Temporal Styling Maps / Politics
Articles Reviews Lists Recreation Search Site Guide What's New Forum
Introduction A Matter of Time All Good Things All Our Yesterdays Assignment : Earth Captain's Holiday Carpenter Street Cause and Effect Children of Time E Squared Endgame Eye of the Needle First Contact Fury Future Tense Future's End Generations Little Green Men Parallax Past Tense Relativity Shockwave Storm Front The Edge of Forever The Visitor The Voyage Home Time And Again Time Squared Time's Orphan Timeless Times Arrow Tomorrow is Yesterday Trials and Tribble-ations Twilight Visionary We'll Always Have Paris Year of Hell Yesterday's Enterprise

Extreme Measures

ReviewImagesDatapointsQuotesMorals
TimelinePreviousNextYour View
Series :
Season Ep :
7 x 23
Title :
Extreme Measures
Rating :
3
Overall Ep :
172
First Aired :
19 May 1999
Stardate :
52645.7
Director :
Year :
Writers :
Your Rating :
4.0000 for 2 reviews
Reviewer : hi Rating : 4
Review : I realize that "Extreme Measures" isn't a very popular episode, but I thought it was a fairly good episode. The premise was good: Odo's on the brink of death, Bashir can't find the cure, he knows Section 31 has it, so he lures someone to the station. (Sloan) When he tries to interrogate Sloan to find out the cure, Sloan tries to kill himself. Bashir saves him, but he's just about brain-dead. So him and O'Brien literally "enter" his mind to find the cure for themselves. However, I didn't like that they made Sloan's mind Deep Space Nine. I think it should've been more mystical, and less easy to find the cure. This would be a three-star episode, if Sloan had not tried to lure Bashir into death with him. That was a wonderful scene. An episode with a lot of potential, but didn't quite live up to it.
Reviewer : =NoPoet= Rating : 4
Review : And so a major element of the DS9 mythos winds down. Section 31 is defeated, only appearing again in Enterprise and mentioned briefly in Star Trek Into Darkness. I've got to say I loved the idea of S31 and am glad they waited so late to eliminate it. Bashir and O'Brien are excellent together, especially when Bashir is trying to get O'Brien to admit he likes him. There's a playful innocence to this scene which indicates a true, comfortable bond between friends and this kind of scene could only be written for male characters. This episode reminds me very much of Voyager's "Worst Case Scenario". My only criticism would be that S31's imaginary headquarters look like the interior of the Defiant. Seeing Sloan's character the way he perceives himself was interesting. Really like this episode, there's a sense that things are coming to an end, appropriate for an episode this deep into DS9's final season and not leaving any loose ends (unlike Lost's useless finale).
Add your own review

© Graham & Ian Kennedy Page views : 8,373 Last updated : 23 May 2024