Showing posts with label Complete. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Complete. Show all posts

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - Complete Series

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - Complete Series Review


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Star Trek Deep Space Nine - Complete Series Feature

  • Region 1 NTSC
  • Over one hour of brand-new featurettes for each season
  • Individually Boxed Sets
  • English 5.1 Surround
  • English Dolby Surround
This is a complete collection of all episodes for seasons 1-7 spanning 47 DVD's an Official Authorized Chinese release version. Closed Captioning for the hearing impaired. The set includes the full English Dolby Digital 5.1 Soundtrack. The chinese subtitles will only display if you choose to see them from the menu screen of each DVD. SERIES DESCRIPTION The third Star Trek series concerns Benjamin Sisko (Avery Brooks), commander of the starship Deep Space Nine, who discovers the first known stable wormhole--a virtual shortcut through space that leads from the Alpha Quadrant to the Gamma Quadrant on the other side of the galaxy. The Gamma Quadrant is governed by the Dominion, a group led by the Changelings--a race of shapeshifters which counts DS9 crew member Odo (Rene Auberjonois) among its numbers. The Dominion has become a violent force in the galaxy, and the Deep Space Nine and its crew has become the only hope in upholding the way of life established by the Federation.


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Some episodes are actually cut off... - D. Petek -
I bought this same set several years back for around 0. Whether they're technically "bootlegged" or not...

1. Packaging is atrocious... cardboard boxes with disc sleeves that aren't actually attached to the case inside the box.
2. Clearly heavily compressed due to a move from dual-layer to single-layer discs... pixelation due to compression is often evident.
3. Fourth episode of each disc *always* cuts off early. Now, this is usually right after the episode has ended and the credits have started to roll, but I can tell you episode 12 of season 4 and episode 4 of season 6 literally have about 3 minutes chopped off the end of them.

I can't even recommend this set as a low-cost alternative anymore, since I got it much cheaper than 0 many years ago, and the price of the official set has been slashed from around 0 to 0.

It's a great, great, great show. I've watched it more than 3 times over. Believe it or not, I'm actually buying the official set today off Amazon for 0. I recommend everyone else do the same and spend that extra to get a set with decent packaging, decent quality, and episodes that don't cut off before they're done.

I love China, Chinese people, and Chinese food, but not worthless junk - W. Gardner - U.S.A.
I love China, Chinese people, and Chinese food, but not worthless junk. I actually bought Star Trek Voyager 1-7 from a seller and it turned out to be a Chinese bootleg set. I was so disappointed but the seller disappeared and I was stuck with a, not 2nd rate, but 5th rate quailty set. I should saved my money until Paramount dropped the price.


Jul 12, 2010 23:47:13

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Seasons 1-7 [DVD] (2004)

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Seasons 1-7 [DVD] (2004) Review


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Why precisely was DS9 the finest of the STAR TREK series? It had a very good cast, though not clearly the best of the various series in the franchise. Deep Space 9, the space station, was not especially compelling nor were the sets much different than other shows. I think the reason it easily surpassed the other shows in quality was the political premise of the show and the way they stuck with that from beginning to end. While Cardassians, Romulans, and Klingons appeared on other series, only DS9 fully exploited the potential of their struggles with one another. The introduction of the Bajorans, the Jem'Hadar, the Dominion, and the Breen gave the series a complexity that none of the other series even remotely approached. Long story arcs always give series more depth and focus, and this was one of the great limiting factors in the other series, all of which relied on standalone formats without any real overarching story, even VOYAGER, which had a long story arc built into its very structure, that it failed to embrace.

While the main cast was not clearly better than other STAR TREK series, the cast of recurring characters were far and away to best. Garak, Gul Dukat, Rom, Nog, Martak, Keiko, Leeta, Zek the Grand Nagus, Weyoun and Brunt (both played by Jeffrey Combs), Damar, Vic Fontaine, and many others gave the show a marvelous depth and diversity. Oh, and we can't forget Morn, perhaps the most famous TV character never to have uttered a single word of dialogue. The show also does the best job of the various TREKs of fully exploiting the contrasting cultures of the various races. I never really came to like the Klingons in any of the series and DS9 shows it as a rather foolish culture, with hints that they were on the verge of collapse and change. I was slow to like the Ferengi, but I came to enjoy the absurd light they are used to place hyper free market capitalists in our own society (sort of Milton Friedman taken to his logical extreme).

Although DS9 depended upon a mythology developed in the original series and refined in THE NEXT GENERATION, the series actually resembles BABYLON 5 more than those shows. Both were set in space stations built beside wormholes. Both dealt with ongoing political conflicts. Both had commanders with a prophetic destiny. Both began at roughly the same time (DS9 began in January 1993 while BABYLON 5's Season One began in 1994, but the made for TV movie that served as a back door pilot was released in Feberuary of 1993). B5 has a substantial number of passionate fans. I am not among them. I have a number of problems with it, from what I believe is weaknesses in the writing deriving from a lack of a strong writing staff (J. Michael Stracyznski, though unquestionably a very good writer, simply tried to shoulder too much of he writing, despite not being very good with humor and writing somewhat stilted dialogue -- I think the show would have been stronger if he had allowed other writers to take on much of the burden, allowing him to work more on redaction) and rather extreme over acting and rather bizarre character design (I am thinking of Peter Jurasik's ridiculous hair and absurd accent). I understand completely what aspects of B5 some find appealing, but they generally are not bothered as I am by the weaknesses of the show, or at least are able to overlook them. DS9's overall story arc doesn't contain quite the degree of pathos of B5, what with the tragic story of Londo and the complex fate of G'Kar, but I find it overall a more consistently successful series, with fewer of the missteps that marred B5.

I have found in discussions that a surprising number of people who have watched the original series and THE NEXT GENERATION, or even VOYAGER, have not seen DEEP SPACE NINE. Of the four major series in the franchise (I see ENTERPRISE as a rather minor offshoot of the other series), this was the least watched series despite being by far the best. I think part of the explanation for that lies in the more involved story. With the other three series, you could easily miss a dozen or two episodes and completely enjoy an episode, understanding every aspect of the episode. But if you missed a dozen episodes of DS9, you would find things completely changed since the previous episode. This reflects the ongoing evolution of the story.

Although I've seen all of the STAR TREK series at least twice all the way through, this is the one series that I would be most interested in rewatching once again. I have to admit that all in all I'm not a huge STAR TREK fan, but I am very definitely a DS9 fan. In my own ranking of the best SF series of all time, this is the one STAR TREK series that I would rank up with BATTLESTAR GALACTICA (which was headed by DS9 alum Ronald D. Moore), FIREFLY, and FARSCAPE. Any serious fan of TV SF has probably seen this a couple of times already, but I think something that Nana Visitor said in the extras for the Season Seven box set is true, that people might have liked this when they first watched it, but upon rewatching it they are going to be genuinely surprised at how good it is. And the mark of a good series is definitely that it is better the second time through. Includes STAR TREK: DEEP SPACE NINE Seasons 1-7


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Customer Reviews

Beware of Chinese Bootlegs - Valar1 - Kalifornia, USA
Don't be fooled by the people offering a "brand new factory sealed" DS9 set for ridiculously cheap prices [mine was 100 bucks cheaper than the official Amazon price]- they are bootlegs from China, they are new, do look similar to the US official sets but are defective in quality- you can tell the difference because of the cheapness of the plastic used for the cover, cheap paint used to paint the logo on the discs, and the fact that the discs have bubbles in them. They may or may not freeze when played depending on the quality of your player. You are getting ripped off, they cost 1/5th to 1/10th in China, these guys claim they are from the US, they do claim to have addresses here but they have the sets shipped directly from China to your home [takes about 3 weeks to arrive] and you wind up paying for shoddy stuff. I know this because it happened to me, I wound up filing a claim with Amazon, and thank god those guys are honest and helped me recover my money. So- 5 stars for the show, 5 stars for Amazon, and negative 5 for the bootleg selling scum

I love DS9, but some of the discs was coded right - Keith O. Judon -


I LOVE DEEP SPACE NINE. This show never got credit it deserves or the respect. However with the particular discs I bought, some of them was not coded or programmed right. Instead of getting the selection menu to navigate through each episode, I got the coded information behind it, and while I was able to play all the episodes I was still limited in being able to easily navigate through seasons 5-7.

keith


Jul 11, 2010 19:35:14

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Seventh Season

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Seventh Season Review


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About the only complaint that one could make about Season Seven is that they perhaps had too much story for the number of episodes. There were a few standalone episodes, but the majority of episodes in Season Seven were, in the terminology of THE X-FILE, "mythology." The events of the last few episodes felt a tad compressed, but the show did an adequate job of wrapping up the major story arcs. All in all, I consider it one of the more satisfying wrap ups of a series in the past decade or so. From first to last the show was done the way a show should be done.

The season reached a crescendo with all of the varied plotlines that had dominated the show for the previous six years reaching resolution. With the Dominion pushing deeper and deeper into Federation space and bringing in the Breen as allies (and thereby eventually alienating the Cardassians), they did a great job bringing everything to a clash.

One of the more controversial changes in Season Seven was the replacement of Terry Ferrel (Jadzia Dax) with Nicole de Boer (Ezri Dax). You hear various versions of precisely what happened to end Terry Ferrell's involvement with the series, but there is little debate that it involved money. She had signed a six-year contract and upon discussion of renewal my guess is that when the powers that be tried to low ball her, her agent put out feelers for new gigs, which led to her moving to the show BECKER. I did not want to see Ferrell leave the show, but I loved the changes that Ezri Dax brought to the show. In contrast with the supremely confident and assertive Jadzia, Ezri is more introspective, less self-confident, and far less prepared to be a symbiote host. She quickly became one of my favorite characters on the show. Now, this is what gets me. You hear that Nicole de Boer's joining the show was unpopular, but everyone I have talked to loved her. Obviously there must be Ezri Dax haters, but I think it is OK to love both Daxes. I loved the complicated nature of her relations with people who had previously known her as Jadzia.

One of my favorite additions in Season Seven, although he was introduced briefly in Season Six, was James Darren's Vic Fontaine, a Rat Pack style casino singer. Darren was absolutely brilliant in the role and every episode in which he appears is a highpoint in the season. And in a way the series itself ended in Vic's lounge. Although there were scenes that came after it, the final shot involving all of the cast was in the lounge with Vic singing "Just the Way You Look Tonight," with all of the writers and producers sitting as patrons in the tables at the front. It was just a great way to say goodbye to all of the characters.

This was easily my favorite STAR TREK series, in fact the only one I can honestly say that I love. I regret that they didn't take it to Season Eight. I think that there was plenty of gas left in the tank and that they could easily have managed an additional year. But perhaps it is better to go out on top when you haven't run out of ideas, but that is more of a solace to me rather a real conviction. Luckily, this is the STAR TREK series that for me stands up best to reviewings. And the one STAR TREK series that I believe can be considered among the best TV SF series of all time.

Note: In watching the special features, make sure you are thorough in looking about for hidden features. There are lots and lots and lots of short features, so make sure you hit the right and left and up and down arrows on your remote. Just about every important recurring character on DS9 has a small feature, from Gul Dukat to Nog to Rom to Kai Winn Jeffrey Combs many characters, so if you feel like you have missed someone, keep looking. Episodes: Image in the Sand, Shadows and Symbols, Afterimage, Take Me Out to the Holosuite, Chrysalis, Treachery Faith and the Great River, Once More Unto the Breach, The Siege of AR-558, Covenant, It's Only a Paper Moon, Prodigal Daughter, The Emperor's New Cloak, Field of Fire, Chimera, Badda-Bing Badda-Bang, Inter Arma Enim Silent Leges, Penumbra, 'Til Death Do Us Part, Strange Bedfellows, The Changing Face of Evil, When It Rains..., Tacking Into the Wind, Extreme Measures, The Dogs of War, What You Leave Behind Parts I and II.


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Customer Reviews

The More Things Change The More Things Stay The Same - Andre S. Grindle - Brewer Maine
Yet again Deep Space Nine has dealt with an abrupt change as a key character Jadzia Dax dies at the conclusion of the previous season and again changed the dynamic of a series that was finally getting it's legs on straight. Well the good news is there is a new Dax in Ezri,played by Nicole DeBoer. Of course she has almost nothing in common with Jadzia. She's a very young woman with no training in Trill joining so is extremely insecure. This all comes to play after the mini story arc (a lot broader than the overlong one introducing the previous season by the way) these issues with the newly christened Ezri Dax take hold in an episode called "Afterimage" where Ezri,a councelor tries to assist a hostile Garak with his claustrophobia. Aside from that this always complex and intertwining series became.....even more complex and intertwining. Rather than take on the moody approch of the fifth season of the show to produce conflict this season could be called "the Dominion War season" because episode after episode of this season deals with armed conflict,conspiricies and character difficulties of all sorts. While this season has some excellent shows this season over all lacks a lot of the humor and wacky moments that the other seasons had to temper it's serious nature. Even the two episodes that did focus largely on humor,the baseball send up of "Take Me Out To The Holosuit" and the Vegas style hijinxs of "Badda-Bing-Badda-Bang" all find that light heartedness out of conflict. On the serious side two episodes emerge as highly significant with "Chimera" focusing on Odo encounter another changling who,while not a founder is philosophically closer to their paranoid way of thinking and almost forces Odo into rethinking his burgeoning romance with Kira Nerys. In "Covenant" Kira again confronts Dukat who has gathered many Bajorans into a corruptible suicide cult while she does what she can to avert his evil deeds even as one of misguided mentors has to die in the process. Causualties of war style episodes such as "It's Only A Paper Moon" and "Treachery,Faith & The Great River Aside" the season ends with a complex and long story arc,covering the entirety of the final three DVD's. Basically you can boil it down to this: Dukat disguises himself as a Bajoran to win favor with Kai Winn and turn her against the prophets,the Dominion's alliegence with the Caradassians begins to fall apart,the founders wind up with an illness infecting all of them passed onto them by an unsuspecting Odo after being implanted with the virus at Starfleet medical and it all comes to a head in the finale "What You Leave Behind" where the war ends at a terrible cost,Deep Space Nine's crew begin to move on and in the end.......the loss is Sisko to the wormhole alien/prophets where he's "completed his task" and must learn from them. He leaves behind a pregnant wife and a grown son in Jake seeking solace after the long war and spiritual tract he's endured the last few years. The series got resolved much in the way the 1990's decade itself did: with an event of exasperation (in real life Y2K) that put a new spin on things with no genuine closure but more a sense of perspective.

Deep Space Nine the Final 7th season. - William P. Carter -
I am on my third disk of seven and this baby is packed full of surprise. In one episode it's about a Vulcan Captain who Benjamin Sisco does not like and this Vulcan end up challenging the entire crew of Deep Space nine to of all things to a baseball game. Now there is a lot more to this episode that what I have stated above but remember there is a war going on with the Dominion as well so this provide a nice little break from the war. This is and example of the great writing that the Star Trek series Usually has. I am one happy customer. Peace


Jul 08, 2010 13:24:17

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Sixth Season

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Sixth Season Review


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As many have noted, Season Six of DS9 is clearly the most controversial. Most of this is centered on the confusion surrounding the departure of Terry Ferrell from the show. My belief is that studio was not willing to provide her with the kind of money she wanted in order to stay on the show rather than pursue the rather mediocre sitconm

The unquestioned highpoints of the season revolve around increasing developments in the war with the Dominion. These ongoing plotlines are what make DS9 so much more involving than the other shows in the STAR TREK series. There were a number of exceptionally good episodes and a number of outstanding Gul Dukat twists, as he continued to be one of the most interesting characters on the show. Several of the standalone episodes were superb, such as the outstanding "Far Beyond the Stars," in which Sisko has a vision of himself as a pulp SF writer in the 1950s, with all of the usual cast members appearing without make up. Just as good is "His Way," in which James Darren made his first appearance as holodeck lounge singer Vic Fontaine and helped Odo to loosen up and, as Sebastian the Crab would put it, to "kiss the girl" (coincidentally, in THE LITTLE MERMAID Rene Auberjonois did the voice of the chef who was intent upon making Sebastian part of the prince's dinner). This season featured as many truly great individual episodes as any.

On the downside, the romances on the show were all appalling. Both Dax and Worf on the one hand and Odo and Kira on the other were completely lacking in chemistry. I never believed any of them as couples. The brute fact is that STAR TREK had no memorable romances. The best of the bunch was probably VOYAGER and even then only Tom and B'Elanna. Most of the romances seem forced, like Worf and Deanna on TNG and the absurd pairing of Neelix and Kes on VOYAGER. Or the almost random pairing of Seven of Nine and Chakotay, who had developed absolutely no history or nothing that would lead one to anticipate their getting together at the end of the series. It is just not one something the show did very well.

I personally didn't mind the demise of Jadzia Dax. I didn't dislike Terry Ferrell, but I wasn't an especial fan either. I loved the concept of Dax, but that didn't go away in Season Seven with the appearance of Ezri Dax. In fact, I loved the whole idea of Ezra, who was completely untrained to become a host to the Dax symbiote. But this is all a matter of preference. I fully understand those who found the departure of Terry Ferrell to be a minor tragedy (even if I don't share their sense of bereavement).

One thing to point out about the show is what a superb creative team they had. Many of the producers and writers went on to bigger and better things. René Echevarria, for instance, went on to be one of the main people tasked with carrying out James Cameron's ideas for DARK ANGEL and later headed up THE 4400 (along with Ira Steven Behr), before moving on to be Executive Producer on MEDIUM and CASTLE. The writing team of Bradley Thompson and David Weddle wrote several very fine scripts for BATTLESTAR GALACTICA. Peter Lauritson stayed with STAR TREK for a while longer, working on ENTERPRISE, before going onto THE STARTER WIFE and now THE MENTALIST. Terri Potts after DS9 went on to work on two groundbreaking comedies, FREAKS AND GEEKS and UNDECLARED. And of course, no one did better than Ronald D. Moore, who became show runner on ROSWELL before moving over to be show runner of CARNIVALE, before going on to reinvent TV SF with BATTLESTAR GALACTICA.

Still, whatever the faults of Season Six, and I will be frank in saying that I found fewer (except in the romantic relationships department) than most, the series remained as satisfying as ever. Episodes: A Time to Stand, Rocks and Shoals, Sons and Daughters, Behind the Lines, Favor the Bold, Sacrifice of Angels, You Are Cordially Invited..., Resurrection, Statistical Probabilities, The Magnificent Ferengi, Waltz, Who Mourns for Morn?, Far Beyond the Stars, One Little Ship, Honor Among Thieves, Change of Heart, Wrongs Darker than Death or Night, Inquisition, In the Pale Moonlight, His Way, The Reckoning, Valiant, Profit and Lace, Time's Orphan, The Sound of Her Voice, Tears of the Prophets.


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Customer Reviews

Trekking To The War? - Andre S. Grindle - Brewer Maine
Despite a six episode long WWII melodrama-style story arc that in some parts is rather pompous and self important the sixth season of Deep Space Nine was a marked return to form for the series. Even though it all took place under the smoke of the always esculating Dominion war the content of the episodes of this season was more varied and the storylines broader in scope than anything the series had done for about a season and a half. First off,as promised in the finale of the previous season Jadzia Dax and Worf are wed in a tradition Klingon wedding after Jadzia must openly confront the differences between her free spirited nature and what's expected of her as a Klingon wife. Even though it is a dark episode "Waltz" is an absolutely eye catching study of Gul Dukat's intense dimentia,meglomania and evil as he confronts Sisko on his true opinions on the galaxy around him and reminds Sisko that there is an element of both great good and great evil around him. "Far Beyond The Stars" is one of the strongest and most unique DS9 episodes ever as Sisko has a religious experience with the Bajoran Prophets identifying him with a 1950's science fiction writer who is actually dreaming up Siski and the Deep Space Nine world and is driven to insanity by a world that refuses to except the concept of a story about a racially integrated crew of his space station. Given Avery Brooks.......unique approch on theatrical acting this episode gives him a chance to display his quircky sense of intensity. "Wrongs Darker Than Deaht Or Night" explores Kira interacting with her mother's questionable association with Dukat during the Cardassian occupation of Bajor. This season is home to my very least favorite DS9 episode "In The Pale Moonlight". It's a very morally questionable episode wherin Siski lies and cheats to get the Romulans involved in the war against the Dominion and there's no solid emotional resolution in the end. Of course aside from that digression there is a very funny episode in "Profit And Lace" where Quark ingages in a little Ferengi style transvestism in order to finish an important job his ailing mother is unable to complete. "Times Orphan" is a complex family episode for the O'Briens who,on a trip to Bajor lose their daughter Molly back in time,only to have her emmerge as a maladjusted 18 year old who winds up returning her younger self back to her parents. The season ends on an unpleasant note when Jadzia Dax,popular series character whose personality mingling fire and compassion defined the general character of the series is killed in one of the most senseless and meaningless deaths in all of Star Trek. Even though the series had one more season to go things would never quite be the same.

Best Star Trek Series Ever - M. E. Mitchell - California
This is a unique and wonderful side to Star Trek. Do not miss it. The action is great.


Jul 06, 2010 08:06:26

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Fifth Season

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Fifth Season Review


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DS9 is my favorite in the Star Trek universe. This is the pivotal season where many threads start their path to the series finale. Seeing it on the DVD is both clarifying and engrossing. The special features are entertaining and enlightening. I fully admit to being prejudiced in favor of anything Star Trek. Even so, this is a superior facet that engages and provokes thoughtful consideration. Episodes: Apocalypse Rising, The Ship, Looking for par'Mach in All the Wrong Places, ...Nor the Battle to the Strong, The Assignment, Trials and Tribble-ations, Let He Who Is Without Sin..., Things Past, The Ascent, Rapture, The Darkness and the Light, The Begotten, For the Uniform, In Purgatory's Shadow, By Inferno's Light, Doctor Bashir I Presume?, A Simple Investigation, Business as Usual, Ties of Blood and Water, Ferengi Love Songs, Soldiers of the Empire, Children of Time, Blaze of Glory, Empok Nor, In the Cards, Call to Arms.


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Highly Uneven Season But What's Good Is Good - Andre S. Grindle - Brewer Maine
To my eyes Deep Space Nine's late fourth season saw the show began to turn from dark and gritty to just plain solom and dreary. That spirit is what follows the series into it's fifth season. There are many people who believe that TNG's fifth season was among it's weakest but,despite some weaker episodes here and there that series never really had a "weak" season as a whole. One of main reasons during this season for all the gloom had to do with character atmospherics. The enthusiastic if occasionally mistrustful banter if these characters that added a humor to this often edgy series is replaced by this dry,resigned meloncaughly attitude when the characters are interacting collectively and such moments result in a lot of noticably low engery episodes. Also again DS9 is slowly morphing (much as Odo might *laugh*) into more and more of a war melodrama revolving around themes such as honor among soldiers and survival. Again personally it's just not my kind of Star Trek and again this doesn't take away from the strong moments in this season,most of which have a comedic bent. The most famous episode this season is "Trials And Tribble-Ations" in which the DS9 crew gain an opportunity to interact with their counterparts from TOS during the events of one of their classic episodes. Sisko even gets a chance to speak to the legendary James T Kirk before departing to his own time. During this season amongst all the conflict two things come out of this: the Cardassians joining with the Dominion against the Federation as well as the related subsequent inihilation of the Maquis,the rebel faction DS9 once spawned. In this season we also have an excellent character study in "Doctor Bashir,I Presume" where not only do we meet Julian Bashir's parents but learn his medical brilliance is the result of illegal genetic enhancement. It's a key moment in development for the long underutilized character and effects everything that happens to him through the remainder of the series. By the end of the series it finally happens: war officially breaks out between the Dominion and the Federation and culiminates in the wonderously evil Gul Dukat and his new Dominion hench men,including the repellent butt-kissing clone Weyoun take over the station forcing the Federation crew to abandon it leaving people like Kira,Odo and...even Jake Sisko to fend for themselves under Dominion occupation. What happens next....that's another story.



Jul 04, 2010 05:53:08

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Second Season

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Second Season Review


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In my mind I pair Seasons One and Two and then Seasons Three through Seven. I enjoyed both the first two seasons and both are thoroughly enjoyable. The series got a whole lot better after these two seasons, but that isn't at all to suggest that these are not good. They are and had the next five seasons been only as good as these first two it would have gone down as a very good series, but it was the final seasons that really put the series on the TV SF map and made it, in my opinion, the best of the STAR TREK franchise.

Although it did not develop yet the story arcs that would dominate the show in future seasons, the show nonetheless improved through a deepening of character development and a number of fascinating episodes. There are a lot of people who feel that the nineties was the finest decade ever for TV SF (and based on sheer numbers I think that may be true, if you include FARSCAPE, which started in 1999, and such non-space SF shows like THE X-FILES). Certainly among the top SF series of the nineties, DS9 is near the top. While this decade has seen some great SF -- in particular BATTLESTAR GALACTICA -- one can only hope that we will someday see the sheer quantity that we saw with DS9, FARSCAPE, BABYLON 5, ST:THE NEXT GENERATION, SPACE: ABOVE AND BEYOND, STAGATE SG-1, STAR TREK VOYAGER, THE X-FILES, EARTH 2, and ROSWELL. There has been a great deal of SF in this decade, but most of it has been of the non-outer space kind. Unfortunately, with the towering exception of BSG, too much of the outer space SF has either been merely a carry over of nineties shows, spin offs of those shows, tragically cancelled way too soon (FIREFLY), or of unbelievably low quality (how did ANDROMEDA last so long?). Wouldn't it be wonderful to see a new space opera on TV? I'm loving STARGATE UNIVERSE, but it is a spin off. I'd really love to see something something entirely original. AMC is exploring the possibility of a TV adaptation of Kim Stanley Robinson's great Mars Trilogy. As it stand right now, however, the only space opera is STARGATE UNIVERSE. CAPRICA looks like it will be a splendid BSG prequel, but it isn't clear that it isn't going to have any outer space elements at all.

After watching the first two seasons I've moved right into Season Three. As good as the first two seasons are, it really gets better once, as they say, the plot thickens. Frankly, I had forgotten how good this was. It is always great when you remember something as being good, but when you rewatch it, you discover that it is even better than you remembered. 26 episodes on 7 discs: The Homecoming, The Circle, The Siege, Invasive Procedures, Cardassians, Melora, Rules of Acquisition, Necessary Evil, Second Sight, Sanctuary, Rivals, The Alternate, Armageddon Game, Whispers, Paradise, Shadowplay, Playing God, Profit and Loss, Blood Oath, The Maquis Part I, The Maquis Part II, The Wire, Crossover, The Collaborator, Tribunal, The Jem'Hadar.


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one of the best "trek" permutations - Sarah Shaver - West Virginia
Our family, especially my husband, really enjoys Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. I know many in the fandom give it no love, and it died a sort of ignoble death the last season or so. The actors and their characters, especially Avery Brooks' Capt. Sisko, were so dynamic - perhaps the best Trek cast, imho. I'll admit the series had to grow on me, as I was angry at the cancellation of "ST:NG." In the second season the show really found it's legs and became more than "that show that replaced STNG." The great mythology deepened - what does it mean for Sisko to be the Emissary? Who are the Prophets? - and the relationships between the characters does as well. We get to know Quark and his Ferengi clan better, and Odo's mysterious life is addressed. The box and case the DVDs come in is very handsome and sturdy. Great to watch these after all these years!

DS9 is growing on me.. - Nom de Plume - St Johns, Fl
I guess you could call me a big fan. I have all episodes of TOS,TNG,VOY and all the movies on DVD. I never got into DS9 when I was younger, so I thought I'd give it another shot. I'm glad I did. DS9 is gritty and real. In TNG for example, everyone got along and there was no real conflict between the characters. DS9 offers a more realistic look at people. They get angry, fight, and even hate each other at times, but when you get down to brass tacks, they get the job at hand done regardless of how they feel about each other. I can't wait to buy seasons 3-7.


Jun 30, 2010 19:43:06

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete First Season

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete First Season Review


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A lot of people point out that Season One of STAR TREK DEEP SPACE 9 suffered from growing pains and that is certainly true. DS9 was, in my opinion, the best of all the STAR TREK series, and it while the storylines that drove the series and made it such an enormously enjoyable series were not there in the early seasons, it wasn't like the show was mud in the early seasons. In fact, while the show got incredibly good in later seasons, it was still, even in its first couple of seasons, absolutely first rate.

One of the ironies for me is that if I were to do a list of my all time favorite STAR TREK characters, few from DS9 would make the list. Odo is perhaps my favorite, but as a rule I find the cast to be more than the some of the parts. For instance, I think it is a better ensemble cast than VOYAGER, but I like The Doctor and Seven more than anyone on DS9. But this cast really fits together well in telling stories and even in Season One, before the big story arcs get under way, they feel like a great team.

DS9 is famously the darkest ST series, with more ongoing storylines than any other ST series. In a way, having the series set in a particular location helps lead to this. The original series, THE NEXT GENERATION, and VOYAGER were all focused on spaceships always in motion and always encountering new species and planets and phenomena. But DS9 would have gotten old quick with nothing but a visitor-of-the-week fomat. And given the initial premise of the Federation on DS9 acting as a buffer between the Bajorans and the Cardassians. With the later addition of the Maquis and the meeting of the Dominion, the show had a degree of political and narrative complexity utterly lacking in the other series. In many ways, DS9 is more reminiscent of BABYLON 5 than THE NEXT GENERATION. It is interesting, by the way, that those two shows, that resemble each other in many ways, ran almost concurrently.

What is most delightful in rewatching this is how well it has stood up over time. Part of it is that its aesthetic and tone anticipated what has become more pervasive in TV SF. This was true even before Ronald D. Moore moved over to DS9 from TNG at the start of Season Three. Moore, of course, was the creator of the reimagined BATTLESTAR GALACTICA. I've just finished rewatching Seasons One and Two and have begun Season Three. I don't want to say that Moore was the only reason the show got so good in Season Three, but he was clearly one of the reasons. But my point here is that even in Seasons One and Two, before it got completely into gear, it was a very good and enjoyable series. 20 episodes on 6 discs: Emissary Part I, Emissary Part II, Past Prologue, A Man Alone, Babel, Captive Pursuit, Q-Less, Dax, The Passenger, Move Along Home, The Nagus, Vortex, Battle Lines, The Storyteller, Progress, If Wishes Were Horses, The Forsaken, Dramatis Personae, Duet, In the Hands of the Prophets.


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Star Trek junky since thr 60's - Maria T. Maulorico - Bel Air, MD, US
When I was a kid back in the 60's my dad made us leave a neighbors dinner so that we could watch the first episode of "Star Trek". Since then I have been a "treky" (sp) & have watched it & every incarnation since the beginning. I haven't gotten into the newer Star Trek where it starts with a brand new James T. Kirk because it feels more like their just trying to ruin what I grew up with. Deep Space 9, Voyager & TNG are all spin-offs of the original & that makes them, in my book - it makes them that much better because the story lines & new graphics & special effects make them that much better. DS9 is a wonderful spin-off of Star Trek & being that it revolves around a space station rather than the constant going here & there in the universe makes it special in it's own way. I give the DS9 series a 10 thumbs up!!!

Maria Maulorico, daughter of Alfred Maulorico the first & best Star Trek junky I ever knew.

A problematic beginning - Christopher Culver -
This DVD makes for an uncomfortable review to write. I fondly remember the launch of STAR TREK: DEEP SPACE 9 in early 1993 which seemed to re-envigorate the Star Trek franchise and offer some new storytelling possibilities. Seeing these early episodes again nearly two decades later, the start of this series is so rocky as to be nearly unwatchable. While the long dramatic arc of later years was pretty decent, this first season is awkward to say the least. Basically, the writers had several aspects to focus on: Gamma Quadrant, Bajoran politics and continuity with the pre-existing Star Trek canon. But instead of a cohesive presentation of these, we jump from one to another with each episode, and we're often still in Gene Rodenberry's Star Trek vibe where everyone is so jolly and peaceful. Once one starts noticing little cracks in the facade, the whole thing seems even more lame: the meaningless technobabble, the chronological problems, the unrealistic aliens, the distances that change wildly depending on storytelling needs, etc.

The only saving grace is some of the acting. It's amazing how the presence of Rene René Auberjonois and Armin Shimerman can overcome the mediocre writing, as does Harris Yulin's masterful guest appearance as a soldier tormented by memories of the atrocities his side committed. The stories can be exceedingly stupid, but they're acted out so well that it does sometimes make for compelling television.

Because of my own disappointment, I'd really suggest that you purchase this DVD set only if you have seen these episodes recently and definitely know you want them. Don't just go by 17 year-old memories.


Jun 29, 2010 16:33:10

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Third Season

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Third Season Review


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Too many series start off well, only to drag a bit after the second or third season (e.g., SUPERNATURAL right now). Even BUFFY, as great as it was, was not as good after Season three as it had been before (with the exception of the glorious Season Five). But ST:DS9 was only getting started and peaked in its later half. (So too did ST:VOYAGER to a lesser degree.) The Dominion loomed more and more as a story in Season Three, beginning to drive many of the main story lines. And relations between several of the main characters began to take shape.

One of my complaints with all of the STAR TREK series is the generally weak development of character. If you contrast any STAR TREK series with other series that are noted for their character development like BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER or VERONICA MARS or -- staying within SF -- FARSCAPE or BATTLESTAR GALACTICA, the STAR TREK shows are remarkable for their lack of character development. There is definitely more development than in the STARGATE series (with the possible exception of the new STARGATE UNIVERSE, which looks like it is going to depart from the three earlier series -- and yes, there were three earlier series, one of which almost no one knows anything about). Although I've had debates with people about characters like Jean-Luc Picard and whether they truly develop or whether they merely add details to his character without actually altering him, I can find almost no real development among the vast majority of STAR TREK characters. (Though one has to add the caveat that there is some development in the movies, especially in someone like Spock and Data.) The one truly huge exception are the various characters who lie just outside the human. STAR TREK excels at characters that expand our understanding of what kind of entities can be considered persons. It began in the original series with Spock, who was nonetheless half human. But his half-Vulcan nature was a groundbreaking development on TV SF. It continued with Data on ST:TNG, easily the most important TV robot (and on a sidenote, since Data virtually all artificial people on TV since Data have been cyborgs -- Data has no serious competitor as TV's most important robot, a mechanical man with no biological parts). That series had many other characters that expanded the possibility of our understanding of personhood. ST:VOYAGER would later have two of my favorite STAR TREK characters along these lines, the Doctor and Seven of Nine, the latter actually a real human who was trying to reclaim her personhood after having been reduced to a nonperson by being a Borg drone. The two characters on ST:DS9 who work along these lines are Dax and Odo. Frankly, while I liked Dax, I was never able to accept the notion of a race of people who aspired to being the host of a symbiote. It was an interesting idea and they certainly gave it their best shot, but they never managed to make the sacrifice of one's individuality plausible. (The only convincing depiction that I have ever encountered in SF was in the superb pair of SF novels by Hal Clement, NEEDLE and EYE OF THE NEEDLE, in which a symbiote enters a human unaware of its presence. But there the blending was not a conscious act by the host.) Odo is one of my favorite STAR TREK characters, not least because of the marvelous performance by Rene Auberjonois. He, Data, and the Doctor (from ST:VOYAGER) are the three STAR TREK characters who push the boundary of the Person furthest. Odo is especially delightful in that he has no necessary shape, except for the one that he has decided to adapt, and even that one, not terribly well. Unlike the other Founders, he isn't able to form himself into a precise human form. And you have to love that every sixteen hours he has to refresh himself by going to rest in a bucket. Odo is also one of the saddest STAR TREK characters, early in the series yearning to discover others like him, only in Season Two to learn that he belongs to an imperialistic, merciless species. His refusal to join his kind renders him a permanent exile. And his absolute otherness means that he can find no love, even though he harbors a deep affection for Kira. Frankly, without characters like Odo and the Doctor and Seven of Nine and Data and Spock, I probably would find little to enjoy in the STAR TREK shows. The stories too often smack of the tales from the pulp era of SF. But the best nonhuman -- or only partly human -- characters are a source of endless delight.

As a BATTLESTAR GALACTICA fan, I would like to point out that this was the season when Ronald D. Moore, the creator of BSG, joined ST:DS9. From Seasons three through seven, he would be one of the three most important writers on the show. I think his documented unwillingness to tread over familiar ground helped push the series into new territory. Plus, I always had a soft spot in my heart for him, not just because we share a last name and first initial, but because he was the one who killed my least favorite STAR TREK universe character, James T. Kirk (a character I detest largely because of William Shatner's acting, which I personally consider among the worst in the history of TV -- his acting decisions beggar the imagination).

The best thing about Season Three is that although it was quite good, it would be quickly surpassed. The show was just beginning to find its stride. Episodes: The Search Parts I and II, The House of Quark, Equilibrium, Second Skin, The Abandoned, Civil Defense, Meridian, Defiant, Fascination, Past Tense Parts I and II, Life Support, Heart of Stone, Destiny, Prophet Motive, Visionary, Distant Voices, Through the Looking Glass, Improbable Cause, The Die Is Cast, Explorers, Family Business, Shakaar, Facets, The Adversary.


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Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Third Season - jondibrit - Florida
Excellent Sci-Fi series. Full of lovable characters and villains. Lots of action, inter-personal relationships and some humorous moments as well.



Jun 25, 2010 20:08:08

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Fourth Season

Star Trek Deep Space Nine - The Complete Fourth Season Review


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Season Four of DS9 was very much of the same quality of the previous three seasons. The larger story arcs involving the Cardassians, the Klingons, the Dominion, and the Federation were deepened and continued. What astonished me most about DS9 was how consistently good it was. This season was as strong as the previous ones and contained a host of great standalone episodes in addition to furthering the overall story.

One thing that I found especially interesting was the way that they handled Nana Visitor's real-life pregnancy. The basic decision in these situations is whether or not to hide the pregnancy or make it part of the plot. On THE X-FILES, they put lots of trench coats on Gillian Anderson to disguise her pregnancy and put her behind a lot of tall counters. Roxann Dawson's character B'Elanna Torres on STAR TREK: VOYAGER took to wearing her jacket unbuttoned, so that it would billow around her midsection. Other shows work the pregnancy into the story (interestingly, in one episode of VOYAGER B'Elanna Torres is shown in a fictitious sequence set in Nazi-occupied Europe pregnant, so her pregnancy did make it into the series after all, albeit briefly). Sydney Bristow's pregnancy became a major component in ALIAS. But Nana Visitor's pregnancy is probably unique in the history of TV. Initially the pregnancy was that of the O'Brien's and I have wondered whether that pregnancy was already on the books when Nana Visitor learned that she was pregnant, or whether the O'Brien's pregnancy was created in order to provide a cover for Visitor's real life pregnancy. But the notion of having Keiko's fetus moved to Kira's womb. Definitely one of the more innovative responses to a cast member's pregnancy in the history of TV.

So, who said consistent is bad. Sometimes consistent just means consistently good. Although DS9 was already my favorite STAR TREK series, I had never actually seen every single episode. So this time through is a lot of fun, seeing several new episodes that I had never previously seen. The result has been that DS9 is even more my favorite STAR TREK series than it was before. STAR TREK DEEP SPACE NINE is set on a space station orbiting the planet Bajor. Commander Benjamin Sisko (Brooks) is in charge of a diverse crew who must fight off rival alien species who want to control DS9 because of its strategic position close to a wormhole that allows speedy travel to the far reaches of space. Season 4 includes the episodes "Broken Link" and "The Visitor," which TV Guide included in its Top 35 Star Trek episodes ever story (Aapril 20-26, 2002). "The Visitor" was listed as the #4 favorite.


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Best Star Trek Series Ever. - M. E. Mitchell - California
Do not miss out on this series. Yes it is different from the normal wandering the universe, but it shows more character development. The stories are well thought out for the most part, and there is no lack of conflicy.



Jun 24, 2010 16:42:10

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: The Complete Series (Seasons 1-7)

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: The Complete Series (Seasons 1-7) Review


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Why precisely was DS9 the finest of the STAR TREK series? It had a very good cast, though not clearly the best of the various series in the franchise. Deep Space 9, the space station, was not especially compelling nor were the sets much different than other shows. I think the reason it easily surpassed the other shows in quality was the political premise of the show and the way they stuck with that from beginning to end. While Cardassians, Romulans, and Klingons appeared on other series, only DS9 fully exploited the potential of their struggles with one another. The introduction of the Bajorans, the Jem'Hadar, the Dominion, and the Breen gave the series a complexity that none of the other series even remotely approached. Long story arcs always give series more depth and focus, and this was one of the great limiting factors in the other series, all of which relied on standalone formats without any real overarching story, even VOYAGER, which had a long story arc built into its very structure, that it failed to embrace.

While the main cast was not clearly better than other STAR TREK series, the cast of recurring characters were far and away to best. Garak, Gul Dukat, Rom, Nog, Martak, Keiko, Leeta, Zek the Grand Nagus, Weyoun and Brunt (both played by Jeffrey Combs), Damar, Vic Fontaine, and many others gave the show a marvelous depth and diversity. Oh, and we can't forget Morn, perhaps the most famous TV character never to have uttered a single word of dialogue. The show also does the best job of the various TREKs of fully exploiting the contrasting cultures of the various races. I never really came to like the Klingons in any of the series and DS9 shows it as a rather foolish culture, with hints that they were on the verge of collapse and change. I was slow to like the Ferengi, but I came to enjoy the absurd light they are used to place hyper free market capitalists in our own society (sort of Milton Friedman taken to his logical extreme).

Although DS9 depended upon a mythology developed in the original series and refined in THE NEXT GENERATION, the series actually resembles BABYLON 5 more than those shows. Both were set in space stations built beside wormholes. Both dealt with ongoing political conflicts. Both had commanders with a prophetic destiny. Both began at roughly the same time (DS9 began in January 1993 while BABYLON 5's Season One began in 1994, but the made for TV movie that served as a back door pilot was released in Feberuary of 1993). B5 has a substantial number of passionate fans. I am not among them. I have a number of problems with it, from what I believe is weaknesses in the writing deriving from a lack of a strong writing staff (J. Michael Stracyznski, though unquestionably a very good writer, simply tried to shoulder too much of he writing, despite not being very good with humor and writing somewhat stilted dialogue -- I think the show would have been stronger if he had allowed other writers to take on much of the burden, allowing him to work more on redaction) and rather extreme over acting and rather bizarre character design (I am thinking of Peter Jurasik's ridiculous hair and absurd accent). I understand completely what aspects of B5 some find appealing, but they generally are not bothered as I am by the weaknesses of the show, or at least are able to overlook them. DS9's overall story arc doesn't contain quite the degree of pathos of B5, what with the tragic story of Londo and the complex fate of G'Kar, but I find it overall a more consistently successful series, with fewer of the missteps that marred B5.

I have found in discussions that a surprising number of people who have watched the original series and THE NEXT GENERATION, or even VOYAGER, have not seen DEEP SPACE NINE. Of the four major series in the franchise (I see ENTERPRISE as a rather minor offshoot of the other series), this was the least watched series despite being by far the best. I think part of the explanation for that lies in the more involved story. With the other three series, you could easily miss a dozen or two episodes and completely enjoy an episode, understanding every aspect of the episode. But if you missed a dozen episodes of DS9, you would find things completely changed since the previous episode. This reflects the ongoing evolution of the story.

Although I've seen all of the STAR TREK series at least twice all the way through, this is the one series that I would be most interested in rewatching once again. I have to admit that all in all I'm not a huge STAR TREK fan, but I am very definitely a DS9 fan. In my own ranking of the best SF series of all time, this is the one STAR TREK series that I would rank up with BATTLESTAR GALACTICA (which was headed by DS9 alum Ronald D. Moore), FIREFLY, and FARSCAPE. Any serious fan of TV SF has probably seen this a couple of times already, but I think something that Nana Visitor said in the extras for the Season Seven box set is true, that people might have liked this when they first watched it, but upon rewatching it they are going to be genuinely surprised at how good it is. And the mark of a good series is definitely that it is better the second time through. Studio: Paramount Home Video Release Date: 01/24/2006


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Beware of Chinese Bootlegs - Valar1 - Kalifornia, USA
Don't be fooled by the people offering a "brand new factory sealed" DS9 set for ridiculously cheap prices [mine was 100 bucks cheaper than the official Amazon price]- they are bootlegs from China, they are new, do look similar to the US official sets but are defective in quality- you can tell the difference because of the cheapness of the plastic used for the cover, cheap paint used to paint the logo on the discs, and the fact that the discs have bubbles in them. They may or may not freeze when played depending on the quality of your player. You are getting ripped off, they cost 1/5th to 1/10th in China, these guys claim they are from the US, they do claim to have addresses here but they have the sets shipped directly from China to your home [takes about 3 weeks to arrive] and you wind up paying for shoddy stuff. I know this because it happened to me, I wound up filing a claim with Amazon, and thank god those guys are honest and helped me recover my money. So- 5 stars for the show, 5 stars for Amazon, and negative 5 for the bootleg selling scum

I love DS9, but some of the discs was coded right - Keith O. Judon -


I LOVE DEEP SPACE NINE. This show never got credit it deserves or the respect. However with the particular discs I bought, some of them was not coded or programmed right. Instead of getting the selection menu to navigate through each episode, I got the coded information behind it, and while I was able to play all the episodes I was still limited in being able to easily navigate through seasons 5-7.

keith


Jun 13, 2010 17:56:06