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Faces
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Aug 29 - Retro Review: Hero Worship
A young boy who is the sole survivor of a disaster that killed his parents decides to emulate Data.

Aug 21 - Retro Review: New Ground
Worf's human mother brings his son Alexander on board, insisting that she can no longer raise the boy.

Aug 14 - Retro Review: A Matter of Time
When a visitor from a future era arrives on the ship, Picard asks for assistance about how to save a dying planet.

July 31 - Retro Review: Unification, Part Two
Picard learns the reason for Spock's visit to Romulus: an attempted reunification of the Vulcan and Romulan races.

July 17 - Retro Review: Unification, Part One
Shocked to learn that Spock may have defected to the Romulans, Picard and Data cross the Neutral Zone in to find him.

July 10 - Retro Review: The Game
When an interactive game becomes addictive to the crew, Wesley Crusher and his new girlfriend must save the day.

June 20 - Retro Review: Disaster
Troi must take command of the ship while Picard struggles to work with three children and Worf delivers Keiko's baby.

June 6 - Retro Review: Silicon Avatar
A scientist pursuing the Crystalline Entity discovers that Data's brain holds her son's memories.

May 30 - Retro Review: Ensign Ro
A court-martialed Starfleet officer from occupied Bajor is sent to help locate a terrorist leader.

May 23 - Retro Review: Darmok
Picard is exiled with the leader of an alien race who speaks in incomprehensible metaphors.

May 15 - Retro Review: Redemption, Part Two
Picard discovers that Tasha Yar's Romulan daughter is influencing the Klingon civil war.

May 9 - Retro Review: Redemption, Part One
When Picard is asked as Arbiter of Succession to oversee Gowron's installation, Worf resigns from Starfleet to fight against the Duras family.

May 2 - Retro Review: In Theory
Data creates a romantic subroutine to experiment with love.

Apr 24 - Retro Review: The Mind's Eye
LaForge is kidnapped and altered by Romulans to take part in an assassination plot against a Klingon governor.

 
By Michelle Erica Green
Posted at January 13, 2004 - 1:55 PM GMT

See Also: 'Faces' Episode Guide

Torres, Paris, and Durst are abducted by Vidiians, who send the two men to work for them and lock Torres in a laboratory, where they split her into her component Klingon and Human halves. Apparently they took readings of her body when they last had contact with Voyager, and determined that her Klingon DNA held potential for curing the phage. While the Human B'Elanna is sent to slave labor with Paris, the Klingon Torres is kept for experimentation by a sadistic doctor with a crush on her.

The Human Torres is relieved to be free from her violent, uncontrollable Klingon side, but she also feels very weak and insecure. Paris helps her deal with that, while the Klingon Torres flirts with the doctor in a bid for some freedom. The Vidiian scientist, believing her overtures, has Durst killed and grafts the man's face onto his own as a ploy to gain her affection, but Torres is disgusted and horrified.

Chakotay beams down disguised as a Vidiian and meets up with Paris to devise a rescue. Working together, the two B'Elanna's escape, but must hide together while they flee until they are rescued, and they argue bitterly about their differences. The Klingon Torres gives her life to save the Human Torres, and dies in her arms on the transporter pad. But the Doctor announces that Torres must be reinfused with Klingon DNA to survive, and the episode ends with her tearfully admitting to Chakotay that she'll never be free of that side of herself.

Analysis:

A more subtle and complex character schism than the Good and Bad Kirk from the original series, this episode made terrific use of the aliens introduced in "Phage" while giving us a gut-wrenching look at B'Elanna's inner war. Even if she herself has doubts in the end, it's clear that both her halves have integrity, wit, and strength. She managed to grow and learn in a situation that would have made many people fall apart - literally. She reminds me of Kira Nerys during the early days of DS9, when she was trying to reconcile her past as a terrorist with her future as an officer of peace.

Torres and Paris have similar pasts - betrayed and abandoned by their fathers, the one physically, the other psychologically, they were both hounded out of Starfleet and joined the Maquis. The interaction between Tom and the Human B'Elanna was lovely - who would have suspected that he was so sensitive? I liked her gamely trying to be strong for him, and the way he acted as a senior officer on this mission, demanding to be taken away to probable death in Durst's place. Apparently Janeway's faith in him is justified.

I wanted to slap Chakotay for leaving Torres alone at the end, awaiting integration with her other half, but in a way it was right that she should be alone, contemplating the things the Klingon said to her. I don't really understand why the Klingon B'Elanna would accept Klingon ideology about honor and strength just because she had the physiology; they BOTH didn't get along with mother, so one would think they would both resist the trappings of her culture. Still, the interaction was enlightening and moving. I hope we see the Klingon peeking through Torres on the series on occasion; she hasn't broken any noses in a fit of righteous anger in awhile.

Find more episode info in the Episode Guide.


Michelle Erica Green reviews 'Enterprise' episodes for the Trek Nation, for which she is also a news writer. An archive of her work can be found at The Little Review.

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