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Star Trek - The Next Generation, Episode 103: Ensign Ro
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List Price: $9.98
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Product Details
- Starring: LeVar Burton, Gates McFadden
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- Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
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- Binding: VHS Tape
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- Director: LeVar Burton, Gates McFadden, Gabrielle Beaumont, Robert Becker, Cliff Bole
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- EAN: 9786304179574
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- Format: Closed-captioned, Color, HiFi Sound, NTSC
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- ISBN: 630417957X
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- Label: Paramount Home Video
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- Manufacturer: Paramount Home Video
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- Number of Items: 1
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- Product Group: Video
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- Publisher: Paramount Home Video
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- Release Date: 1996-10-22
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- Studio: Paramount Home Video
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- Theatrical Release Date: 1987-09-26
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- Title: Star Trek - The Next Generation, Episode 103: Ensign Ro
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- UPC: 097360020335
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Avg Customer Rating: 
Product Description: Star Trek: The Next Generation presents its take on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict by introducing the dispute between Cardassians and the displaced Bajoran people, a dispute that would later become the basis of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. Ever since the Cardassians annexed the Bajoran home world four decades prior, there has been trouble with terrorism, but now the terrorism is starting to affect Federation ships. Captain Picard has been ordered to find the Arafat-like rebel leader Orta (Jeffrey Hayenga), the man who's been blamed for the latest terrorist attack. Assigned to assist him on this mission is Ensign Ro (the surly and talented Michelle Forbes), a Bajoran ex-Starfleet officer who is hated by everyone because of an incident that happened when she was serving on the Wellington, where she disregarded orders and got several crew members killed. Of course, she's just as reluctant to serve on the Enterprise, but does so because it's better than prison--barely. She ends up helping them find Orta, but they discover a larger conspiracy surrounding the terrorist attack. Along the way, the Federation (United States) is taken to task for its conveniently passive policy of noninterference back when the Cardassians (Israelis) were displacing the Bajorans (Palestinians), and are even blamed for a little behind-the-scenes dirty dealing. Admittedly, the politics don't always work here, but Forbes is terrific. --Andy Spletzer
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Customer Reviews
Everyone take cover, Ro Laren has just beamed aboard the Enterprise
Plot: A Federation colony is destroyed, and a Bajoran militant group claims responsibility. The Enterprise meets up with Adm. Kennelly, who orders them to track down Orta (the leader of the group) and stop him from doing it again. He also sends Ensign Ro Laren (who has a history of disobediance that cost the lives of some crewmembers from the USS Wellington), much to the discomfort of the entire crew. When they finally meet Orta, he claims that he never attacked the colony. This is rather interesting, but since Ro nearly jeopardized the mission by going alone to meet Orta without anyone's knowledge (and everyone having to follow her afterward), Capt. Picard confines her to quarters. Ro realizes that she is going to have to tell the captain something that she didn't originally.
An excellent episode and it's really interesting seeing how both the captain and Ro butt heads at times.
As far as the parallel thing that someone said that the Federation=USA, Cardassians=Israel, and Bajorans=Palestinians, I really don't think this was the point of the episode (another reviewer says that Rick Berman said that the Bajorans don't represent any group from today), so I recommend not reading into it and coming up with an interpretation.
Great episode with a solid 4 stars.
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Propaganda Alert
It is a shame that Andy Spitzer can't resist compromising his credibility by propagandizing his review. Star Trek producer Rick Berman, explained that the Bajorans were not modelled on any particular group: `The Kurds, the Palestinians, the Jews in the 1940s, the boat people from Haiti-unfortunately, the homeless and terrorism are problems in every age' (TNG Companion, p. 178).
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Ro, We Hardly Knew Ya.
It was funny about 'Star Trek -- The Next Generation,' I was against the idea of the show from the beginning. The very idea of a sequel to the original show with a different cast...God, No! For the first several seasons, STNG was...Okay, I guess. It never did anything to change my initial opinion, however. The first season seemed to be a collection of rewrites of older episodes, but, very gradually, STNG seemed to get its space legs. Then, something (or, more accurately someone) very extraordinary happened.Ro Laren happened. Bajor happened. (And from that a whole other series happened, but I shouldn't digress.) Episode 103, "Ro Laren" was the beginning and an introduction to that Bajoran world, spearheaded by a (then) fairly unknown actress named Michelle Forbes. (Funny, but even now I don't know why she isn't better known.) There is a sincerity, and an honesty to the way she created Ro. The way Forbes and Patrick Stewart play off one another is a true delight. Near the end of the episode they do a scene that, no matter how many times I see it, I simply can not turn away from. For an instant we see through Ro's eyes, we can see some of the gears that make this most complicated Star Trek character tick. I bought that scene utterly. I totally bought Ensign Ro Laren and, I suppose, fell in love with her. Forbes played Ro as a somewhat conflicted, mysterious character who didn't seem to be comfortable in her own skin. A female with a past, she became a breath of fresh air in what had become a too-perfect Star Trek world. But, more than that, she added a note of believability to this universe and began to make it live beyond the edges of the screen. During a way too short run of six episodes, Michelle Forbes as Ro created a "believability factor" for the whole series which lasted far beyond her tenure (even though she had evaporated for all but one, very well-acted but thematically ill-conceived "wrap-up" episode in STNG's last season). I would like to save this episode (and Ms. Forbes performance) in a bottle. There's magic in here, along with the seeds of something that the producers of the show never quite realized. I'm going to buy all the "Ro Laren" episodes, then hoard them like gold coins I found by accident. My wife is a little jealous of Ro Laren, even though she won't admit it. Michelle Forbes made Ro Laren live. I can't think of a better complement to any actor. Good for you, Michelle. Good for you.
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