Rocks and Shoals (episode)

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"Rocks and Shoals"
DS9, Episode 6x02
Production number: 40510-527
First aired: 6 October 1997
125th of 173 produced in DS9
124th of 173 released in DS9
  {{{nNthReleasedInSeries_Remastered}}}th of 173 released in DS9 Remastered  
482nd of 726 released in all
Written By
Ronald D. Moore

Directed By
Michael Vejar
51096.2 (2374)
Arc: Dominion invasion (3 of 7)
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Sisko's crew crash land their Jem'Hadar ship into the waters of an alien ocean on a world where a group of Jem'Hadar have also crashlanded with only one vial of ketracel white remaining. Meanwhile, on Terok Nor, Kira finds she cannot live with herself working side by side with the Dominion.

Contents

[edit] Summary

Benjamin Sisko and crew are stranded in Dominion space on a captured Jem'Hadar ship with a disabled warp drive. (DS9: "A Time to Stand") Chief Miles O'Brien needs three days to restore main power, but they don't have that much time. Two Jem'Hadar ships approach Sisko's ship and attack. Their only option is to make a run for an uncharted dark-matter nebula. Before they can get inside it, Jadzia Dax is injured when a Jem'Hadar volley rocks the ship. Doctor Julian Bashir thinks the symbiont has been injured too. All ships functions disabled, they crash on an unknown class M planet. The ship crashes into a sea just off a coast but everyone escapes with their lives.

Sisko's Jem'Hadar ship descends towards a deserted planet
Sisko's Jem'Hadar ship descends towards a deserted planet
A Vorta named Keevan and a group of Jem'Hadar had crashed onto the planet two days earlier. The Jem'Hadar First and Second are dead, Keevan is badly wounded, they are running out of ketracel-white, and they cannot establish communications with any Dominion forces off-planet.

Crawling onto shore with a what few items from the ship they could take with them, Sisko and the others have a much-needed laugh when O'Brien frets, absurdly, over his torn pant leg.

Back on Dominion-controlled Deep Space 9, now called Terok Nor, Major Kira Nerys wakes up for another day of duty working with the Dominion and their Cardassian allies. She boards the lift, already filled with Jem'Hadar and Cardassians. Arriving at her station in ops, she thanks Mavek, a Cardassian, for her raktajino.

In a cave on the planet Keevan discusses their dire situation with Third Remata'Klan. It will be ten days before they can even attempt to establish communications. Keevan distributes white to the Jem'Hadar soldiers. Meanwhile Sisko and the crew set up camp in another cave where Bashir can stabilize Dax's condition.

Nog and Elim Garak go on a survey mission to find water and food, but are soon taken prisoner. Garak tells Keevan that his name is Kamar and that he was serving the Founders when he was captured by the USS Centaur. Keevan asks, if that is true, then why was Garak wearing a Starfleet combadge. Keevan asks if there's a doctor in Garak's unit. Garak says yes, which Keevan says just saved Garak and Nog's lives. Keevan sends Third Remata'Klan to assess the Federation group's strength, but not to engage.

Sisko fires back
Sisko fires back

On Terok Nor Jake Sisko is interviewing Odo and Kira about the Dominion's plans to send 400 Vorta "facilitators" to Bajor. Jake also informs them that Vedek Yassim is planning a demonstration on the Promenade the next day. Jake's pointed questions quickly get under Kira's skin and she ends the interview.

Back on the planet, Sisko and a few others are searching for Nog and Garak. Despite the order from Keevan not to engage, the Jem'Hadar open fire. Running out of ketracel-white, the Jem'Hadar are becoming anxious and none of them can shroud themselves any longer.

Kira tries to convince Vedek Yassim not to hold her protests. Yassim asks Kira what Kira's doing to fight the Dominion. Kira says that this is different from the Cardassian occupation- fighting isn't the answer here. Yassim accuses Kira of becoming an apologist for the Dominion, "a defender of evil".

Kira and Jake are shocked at Vedek Yassim's protest
Kira and Jake are shocked at Vedek Yassim's protest
While Sisko is planning an assault on the Jem'Hadar position, Third Remata'Klan visits the cave to make a deal: exchanging Sisko and Bashir for Nog and Garak. Sisko surprises him by quoting a Jem'Hadar proverb ("Obedience brings victory"). He tries to sow suspicion and resentment in Remata'Klan for his Vorta handler by referring to the joint Dominion-Starfleet operation after which a Vorta was killed by the Jem'Hadar First. But Remata'Klan will not have it, and states that he was only instructed to deliver the message. Sisko claims not to trust Vorta, and asks for Remata'Klan's word that the conditions of the exchange will be honored. Remata'Klan vows to carry out his orders, and Sisko accepts the deal.

On Terok Nor, Vedek Yassim proceeds with her protest. She yells "Evil must be opposed!" and steps off from the upper level of the Promenade. She doesn't make it to the deck; the noose around her neck snaps taut. The next morning, Kira wakes up for another day of duty on the Dominion-occupied station, boards the lift, and thanks Mavek for her coffee. She looks around and wonders what she's doing.

Arriving at the Jem'Hadar cave, Bashir performs surgery and saves Keevan's life. Keevan offers Sisko another deal. With only one vial of white left, Keevan fears that his soldiers will soon go on an uncontrollable rampage, killing everyone. He is planning to send the Jem'Hadar on a suicide attack and wants Sisko and his crew to kill them. Keevan would then surrender to Starfleet.

Keevan
Keevan

Back on the station, Kira is disgusted with herself, and tells Odo that during the Occupation of Bajor as far as she was concerned if you weren't fighting the enemy then you were helping them. While half the Alpha Quadrant are risking their lives fighting the Dominion, she was ready to arrest Vedek Yassim for protesting the station occupation... and that makes her a collaborator. But now enough is enough and Kira vows to start fighting back. She and Odo will put together a resistance cell to fight the Dominion and their Cardassian allies.

In an arid canyon on the planet, before the Jem'Hadar assault, Sisko tells Remata'Klan that the Jem'Hadar were betrayed by the Vorta, and offers to end the hostilities. But Remata'Klan remains loyal to his orders. He and his squad give their lives to those who gave it to them, thus preserving the "order of things." After the massacre, Keevan offers himself as a prisoner of war. Sisko appears to consider shooting the arrogant and treacherous Keevan for a moment, then orders him taken into custody.

[edit] Memorable Quotes

"Hooooold on!"

- Garak, just before the crash.


"We will hold this world for the Dominion until we are rescued."
"And if we are not rescued?"
"Then we will hold this world for the Dominion... until we die."

- Remata'Klan and Limara'Son


"Oh no!"
"What?"
"I don't believe it!"
"What?"
"I tore my pants!"
"You... You tore your pants?"
"Ya, I tore my pants. I guess... I guess I'm really in trouble now!"

- Miles O'Brien and Sisko


"You can walk in front of me or beside me, but I'll never turn my back to you again."
"Cadet, there may be hope for you yet."

- Nog and Garak


"Why are you doing this?"
"That... that's a communications system. It needs repair but I'm willing to bet that you've brought one of those famed Starfleet engineers who can turn rocks into replicators."

- Sisko and Keevan


"Despite what Keevan may think, the Jem'Hadar are often one step ahead of the Vorta."
"You can still stay one step ahead."
"Surrender."
"I have my orders."
"Keevan doesn't deserve the unwavering loyalty your giving him."
"He does not have to earn my loyalty, Captain."
"He has had it from the moment I was conceived."
"I am a Jem'Hadar."
"He is a Vorta."
"It is the order of things."
"Do you really want to give up your life for the 'order of things'?"
"It's not my life to give up, Captain– and it never was."

- Remata'Klan and Sisko


"Our death is glory to the Founders."

- Remata'Klan, to his men


"They're not here to protect me. They've just never seen what the inside of a Vorta looks like."

- Keevan


"What did he say?"
"All the wrong things."

- Miles O'Brien and Sisko, regarding Sisko's talk with Remata'Klan before battle.


"Evil must be opposed!"

- Vedek Yassim, seconds before committing suicide on the Promenade in protest against Dominion occupation of the station


"In case you've forgotten, we're in a war."
"There are rules, Garak, even in a war!"
"Correction. Humans have rules in war. Rules that make victory a little harder to achieve, in my opinion."

- Garak and Miles O'Brien, about ambushing the Jem'Hadar

[edit] Background Information

[edit] The Six-Episode Arc

  • Although following directly on from "A Time to Stand", this episode was filmed after part three of the arc, "Sons and Daughters", to accommodate the location shooting. Obviously, this made an already complicated situation worse. As Ronald D. Moore explains, "The station storyline on "Sons and Daughters" changed while they were doing it, which meant that my station-based storyline had to reflect that change...We couldn't keep it straight in our heads and we kept stepping on each other. Had something already happened, or was it happening the following week? It became very difficult to get the whole thing under control." (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)

[edit] "Rocks and Shoals"

  • The original idea for this episode came from the 1965 Frank Sinatra film, None But the Brave; a film about the interactions of the crew of a downed American plane and the Japanese army patrol who find them. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)
  • "Rocks and Shoals" was the informal name of the Articles for the Government of the United States Navy. These articles were known for triggering swift and harsh punishment, and were replaced by the Uniform Code of Military Justice in 1951.
  • Commenting on the episode's title, Ronald D. Moore said: "The title seemed thematically right to me, since the episode deals with some characters running up on the "rocks" and others entering "shoal water". I think that the phrase itself actually referred to the Royal Navy's judicial system, but I could be wrong. In any case, the title just came to me as I was working on the script and although later I remembered the judicial connection, it wasn't the initial reason for the title. There are also themes of justice and military order in the script, so I think it's still appropriate." [1]
  • The beginning of this episode is a clear reference to the beginning of the 1968 Franklin J. Schaffer film Planet of the Apes. The crash into the water in a desert region, the wounded ('dead') female, and even the overt laugh of Sisko (Taylor) are all evidence of this.
  • This episode was filmed at a rock quarry in Sun Valley, north of Los Angeles. This was basically the same location (Soledad Canyon) which had been used for Cardassia IV in "The Homecoming", for Dozaria in "Indiscretion" and for Torga IV in "The Ship". Although the quarry contained water, all of the shots with the ocean and the shoreline were digitally created. [2]
  • As with both "The Homecoming" and "The Ship", temperature during the shoot for this episode would reach unexpected highs and cause a great deal of discomfort for both cast and crew. During the filming of "The Ship", temperatures reached as high as 124°F/51°C. During the shoot for "Rocks and Shoals", they went even higher; 128°F/53°C. It was the hottest period in that part of the country in over ten years; so hot that the makeup was melting on-camera and the rubber soles on Steve Oster's hiking boots melted in the heat. The production team did a weather check on Friday as they were scheduled to start shooting on Monday, and it was 80°F/28°C, with a light breeze. They were told it would stay basically the same for a week. On Saturday, it went up to 95°F/35°C and one Sunday, it reached 105°F/40°C. It then peaked at 128°F/53°C on Monday. As Ira Steven Behr acknowledges, if you look at the episode closely, you can see the eyes of the Jem'Hadar are quite red, due to the makeup dripping into the actors' eyes as it ran off their foreheads. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)
  • Nana Visitor sees the 'station-story' in this episode as extremely important in the development of Kira Nerys; "Kira's maturity had to kick in, because she couldn't just react the way the younger Kira would. There was too much at stake. there was too much to lose. So even though it wasn't as much fun to play, I found it was an important growth point." Ronald D. Moore also saw this episode as important, saying he wanted her "to face that she was becoming a collaborator without realizing it, and how easily that can happen to somebody in that position. She's got Jake asking her very pointed, very legitimate questions about what they're doing, and her getting furious about it, but at the same time allowing things to happen on the station. I knew it would take a fairly dramatic moment to kind of wake her up about what she was doing" - hence the suicide of Vedek Yassim.(Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)
  • There are strong thematic links between the 'Starfleet-story' and the 'station-story', with Third Remata'Klan and Vedek Yassim taking parallel actions by pricking the consciences of Sisko and Kira. [3]
  • Of his portrayal of Remata'Klan, Phil Morris says, "I likened him to a samurai warrior who is loyal only to his feudal lord, and that's how I played him. His willingness to die, despite Sisko's offer of an alternative is his most honorable moment." (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion) Remata'Klan seems to follow in the footsteps of Goran'Agar ("Hippocratic Oath"), Omet'iklan ("To the Death") and Ikat'ika ("In Purgatory's Shadow") in being something of an 'honorable' Jem'Hadar.
  • The writers had Dax injured in this episode because Terry Farrell has a skin condition that prevents her exposure to direct sunlight. [4]
  • In the prisoner exchange scene, Nog anxiously hurried out in front of Garak, despite his (Nog's) earlier promise not to turn his back on Garak again, although this could be explained as simple enthusiasm on his part. The prior events to which he referred took place in "Empok Nor".
  • The stardate is given as "supplemental" in dialog, but is preserved from the script in closed captioning. [5]
  • The Starfleet crew is seen swimming in their uniforms. Captain Picard and Lieutenant Commander Data had to do the same thing in Star Trek: Insurrection.
  • In the scene when almost all are in underwear, the only ones are not are Garak and Nog (and Jadzia is covered by a blanket). The practical reason is to save time and money avoiding complete body makeup. In Nog's case however, it could be explained that Ferenginar is a very humid planet, and as such, he probably doesn't mind wearing wet clothes.
  • Sisko refers to the events of "To the Death", but the Jem'Hadar proverb he quotes ("Obedience brings victory") was not heard in that episode.
  • Michael Dorn (Worf) and Armin Shimerman (Quark) do not appear in this episode, although a scene in the script has Worf rescuing the Starfleet crew aboard the IKS Rotarran. The scene saw the crew burying Gordon and the Jem'Hadar. Worf and two Klingons beam down and Garak tells Worf "for once, Mister Worf it's good to see you." Worf looks at the graves and tells Sisko that "you were outnumbered. It must have been glorious." According to Steve Oster in the Companion that scene was not filmed due to the searing temperatures at the time and the lack of light. The writers then realized it was much better to end on a closeup of Sisko. There were only three days of shooting scheduled in the rock quarry, but by the end of the third day, they hadn't got the final scene (Worf's arrival). The writers and producers were extremely unhappy, but director Michael Vejar and editor Steve Tucker looked at the footage and told them that they no longer needed that scene. Instead, they cut the show to end on the close-up of Sisko as Keevan gives himself up. After seeing this new ending, the producers loved it and agreed that it made a perfect ending to the somber episode. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)
  • This is the only episode in the "Dominion Invasion" Arc in which Marc Alaimo (Gul Dukat) and Casey Biggs (Damar) do not appear.

[edit] Video and DVD releases

[edit] Links and References

[edit] Guest Stars

[edit] Co-Stars

[edit] References

Cardassian Intelligence Bureau; cellular microsutures; collaborator; collagen; Damar; Dukat; ketracel-white; medical stasis; prisoner of war; Seventh; Third; Vorta; Weyoun; Yak'Talon;

[edit] External links


Previous episode:
"A Time to Stand"
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
Season 6
Next episode:
"Sons and Daughters"
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