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Sunday, March 1, 2020

Ten great things in Picard's "Impossible Box"

"The Impossible Box" is an instant Star Trek favorite for me. It’s about people trying desperately to connect with each other because of, in spite of, and through pain; about finding truth inside lies and honesty inside secrets; about imperfect healing, the nobility of perseverance, and the way suffering makes us human. It advances characterization and plot without a whole lot of unnecessary verbiage (kudos to writer Nick Zayas), and it’s beautiful to watch (ditto director Maja Vrvilo).

I was inspired to rewatch – twice – and make a list of ten things I especially loved about "The Impossible Box":

1. Picard’s PTSD: The amazing thing about Patrick Stewart’s performance is that he makes you feel what it cost Picard to keep functioning all those years with all that locked inside, and how the frailty of age makes it so much harder to keep battling the demons.


2. Elnor’s searing honesty: He tells Jurati that Picard “can’t see you’re also haunted by something you’d like to forget.” Later, to Jurati and Rios: “The obvious tension between you makes me uneasy.” Everyone treats Elnor like a child who is too naïve to understand what the grown-ups are talking about. But his lack of artifice gives him insight everyone else lacks, because he is so authentically present. OK, that sounds like self-help psychobabble, but fuck it, it speaks to me. “Was I in-butting?” “That time, yes.” I <3 Elnor.

3. The Rios-Jurati hookup: It’s incredibly refreshing to see two adults be fairly honest about what they want, and then just do it. Also refreshing: Writers not falling back on the cliché of dragging out sexual tension for a zillion hours on the theory that delayed gratification is good writing. Yes, I realize that Jurati is hiding a lot (like a murder and its motive), and Rios isn’t exactly an open book, either, but this encounter feels remarkably genuine. Given all that baggage, kudos to Cabrera and Pill for pulling it off. (Bonus: Cabrera showing off his actual soccer skills. Be still my heart.)

4. The whole Narek-Narissa thing: Now that is a new twist on the old UST trope, and I love it. Playing the sexual tension inherent in sibling rivalry is bananas ballsy. “That’s mine. Give it back. You’ll break it.” The banality of that line, which could be from any family sitcom, but is instead spoken by an adult brother to the adult sister who keeps coming on to him – soooo creepy. And then there's the sensual way Narek shows her how to play with his Romulan Rubik’s Cube, like the sex toy/murder weapon it is. Delightfully perverse.

5. Raffi’s bluff: In the midst of a bender, Raffi holds herself together to pull off the perfect con. It’s a work of art, both on Raffi’s part and Michelle Hurd’s. It’s all the more painful to watch because we, the audience, know why she’s hurting so bad, but no one in the scene does. So painfully relatable. And then she falls apart; watching her face collapse the moment the call ends is a gut punch. Picard’s applause – how clueless can he be? It’s Rios who tenderly tucks her in, hears her pain, takes her hand, and delivers real empathy: “No one gets all of it right, Raff.”

6. Soji frantically dating her possessions: Such a simple and devastating way to discover that everything you believe about your life is a lie. This happens to be a sci fi trope I love, because it’s so terrifying: the sudden realization that your reality is not real.

7. Hugh, Hugh, Hugh: His sincere affection for Picard. His instant willingness to help. His tenderness toward the ex-Bs. The fact that, other than Elnor, he’s the warmest, most open character in the entire series so far – and he is ex-Borg.


8. Picard’s realization that the Borg are victims: This is his Kirk Undiscovered Country moment, and it’s freaking beautiful. As much as we owe Roddenberry for creating Star Trek, he couldn’t see that having your protagonists realize they were wrong is the most powerful way of making a moral argument. It’s probably because Picard was too perfect in his original run that his revelation is so moving here. And it’s a powerful message at this moment in history, when we’re all wondering how we’re ever going to forgive the brainwashed masses.

9. Narek as Judas: He betrays Soji (human, but not human) with a kiss, tells her she’s not real, and weeps as he leaves her to die. Does that make him any less of a monster? Did Judas throwing the silver into the Temple absolve him of his sin? Something to chew on.

10. The Picard-Elnor reconciliation: “Elnor, I will not leave you behind again!” “It fills me with joy to hear you say that. Now go.” SOB.

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