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| nAirdateYear = 1995
 
| nAirdateYear = 1995
 
| sAirdateMonth = June
 
| sAirdateMonth = June
| nAirdateDay = 25
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| nAirdateDay = 19
 
| sImage = Krajensky and Odo.jpg
 
| sImage = Krajensky and Odo.jpg
 
| wsWrittenBy = [[Ira Steven Behr]] & [[Robert Hewitt Wolfe]]
 
| wsWrittenBy = [[Ira Steven Behr]] & [[Robert Hewitt Wolfe]]
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| nArc0PartCount = 8
 
| nArc0PartCount = 8
 
}}
 
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A Federation ambassador brings newly-promoted Captain Sisko orders to take the ''Defiant'' on a patrol of the Tzenkethi border, where a destabilizing coup has just taken place, but everything is not as it seems. (Season finale)
+
A Federation ambassador brings newly-promoted Captain Sisko orders to take the ''Defiant'' on a patrol of the [[Tzenkethi]] border, where a destabilizing coup has just taken place, but everything is not as it seems. (Season finale)
   
 
==Summary==
 
==Summary==
  +
===Teaser===
  +
:"''Commanders log, stardate 48959.1. It is with mixed emotions that I record this, my final commanders log. The last three years have been the most demanding, and rewarding of my career. I can only hope that the future will hold even greater challenges.''"
 
[[File:Sisko captain promotion.jpg|thumb|left|Sisko receives his promotion]]
 
[[File:Sisko captain promotion.jpg|thumb|left|Sisko receives his promotion]]
In the wardroom, [[Commander]] [[Benjamin Sisko|Sisko]] is receiving his fourth [[rank insignia|pip]] from his son [[Jake Sisko|Jake]], finally becoming a [[captain]]. After being congratulated by his colleagues and as [[Quark]] serves the [[champagne]], [[Federation]] [[Ambassador]] [[Krajensky]] informs Sisko that a ''[[coup]]'' has taken place on the [[Tzenkethi]] homeworld. Sisko is to take the ambassador and the {{USS|Defiant|2370}} to that [[sector]] to remind the Tzenkethi of the Federation's presence on nearby [[colony]] worlds.
+
In the [[wardroom]], [[Benjamin Sisko]] is receiving his fourth [[rank insignia|pip]] from his son [[Jake Sisko|Jake]], finally becoming a [[captain]]. After being congratulated by his colleagues and as [[Quark]] serves the [[champagne]], [[Chateau Cleon]], [[2303]], [[Federation]] [[Ambassador]] [[Krajensky]] informs Sisko that a ''[[coup]]'' has taken place on the [[Tzenkethi]] homeworld. Sisko is to take the ambassador and the {{USS|Defiant|2370}} to that [[sector]] to remind the Tzenkethi of the Federation's presence on nearby [[colony]] worlds.
   
  +
In the ''Defiant{{'}}s'' [[engine room]], Sisko orders [[Senior chief petty officer|Chief]] [[Miles O'Brien]] to begin preparing the ship for combat in case the Tzenkethi start looking for trouble. As O'Brien begins his work, he hears a noise in the engine room, but sees no one.
[[Chief]] [[Miles O'Brien|O'Brien]] begins checking over the ship systems in case the ''Defiant'' ends up in battle, however he can't help but feel that he isn't alone. Later, he runs into [[Julian Bashir|Bashir]] who says that he is using his engineering extension course from the Academy to tie his new medical console into the main power grid. Not long after departing, the ''Defiant'' receives a [[distress signal]] from a colony on [[Barisa Prime]], stating they are under attack by the Tzenkethi. When contact is abruptly cut off, Sisko alters course and tries to contact [[Starfleet Command]] or the nearby {{USS|Ulysses}}. However, the ship's communication system malfunctions. Chief O'Brien and [[Lieutenant]] [[Jadzia Dax|Dax]] discover that strange alien devices have hooked themselves into the ship's systems; their placement is the work of a saboteur. Calling the [[senior staff]] and Ambassador Krajensky to the bridge, Dax explains that the person who is responsible for the sabotage would have been exposed to trace amounts of [[tetryon]] particles. O'Brien and Dax have already tested positive for the particles as they opened up the panel and Dax begins scanning each member of the crew with her [[tricorder]] for signs of the particles despite knowing that if no-one else tests positive she and Chief O'Brien will be the prime suspects. Both Sisko and Bashir test negative, and O'Brien tells the Doctor that he's glad of the fact due to him being in the [[Jefferies tube]] earlier, however Bashir denies ever having being there. Dax begins scanning Krajensky for the particles and to her shock he turns up positive. Krajensky smiles, realizing he's been caught and then suddenly turns into a gelatinous state and escapes through an access hatch to the shock and horror of the crew, as they realize the full extent of the situation. A [[Changeling]] is aboard the ''Defiant''.
 
   
  +
===Act One===
Suddenly the ''Defiant'' cloaks. Captain Sisko immediately orders a full stop, but the ship is no longer under the crew's control. Sisko orders security teams deployed to find the Changeling, as Dax reports that the helm is not responding. The ''Defiant'' arms its weapons ready for battle and continues on its course to Tzenkethi space. Meeting in the mess hall, the senior staff discuss the situation. It seems likely that the [[Dominion]] is hoping to start a war between the Tzenkethi and the Federation. [[Kira Nerys|Kira]] points out that the Tzenkethi are doing a good job of that on their own, but Sisko points out that the coup, the distress signal, in fact the ''whole'' mission could have been setup by the Dominion in the hopes of creating a war that would destabilize the [[Alpha Quadrant]] and make it easier for them to move in. Also, neither Krajensky or his remains have been found during a complete search of the ship, meaning that he was impersonated by a Changeling the whole time he was on board the ''Defiant'', and that he may also have never really come to the station in the first place. With the ''Defiant'' primed for battle and just a few short hours from the Tzenkethi border, it is imperative that they locate the Changeling.
 
  +
:"''My son, the writer, thinks that I should say something profound on this occasion. He even offered to write me a brief statement. I told him I'd take care of it myself, but as it turns out, the only thing I can think of is: Begin captain's log, stardate 48960.9.''"
  +
In the ''Defiant{{'}}s'' [[turbolift]], [[Lieutenant]] [[Jadzia Dax]] asks Sisko if he has told [[Kasidy Yates-Sisko|Kasidy Yates]] about his promotion. Sisko says he hasn't, and that he barely had time to tell his [[Joseph Sisko|father]] the news. Dax presses Sisko about his relationship with Kasidy, saying that the whole crew is curious. Sisko tells Dax that the next time he sees Kasidy, he's taking her to the seventh game of the 1964 [[World Series]]. Dax, amused by Sisko's response, concludes that he likes Kasidy.
   
  +
Arriving on the bridge, Sisko orders the ''Defiant'' to get underway. Not long after departing [[Deep Space 9]], O'Brien is working in a [[jefferies tube]]. He sees [[Doctor]] [[Julian Bashir]] tying in a new medical console into the main power grid, with knowledge gained from an engineering extension course he took at [[Starfleet Academy]].
They've barely begun their search when O'Brien finds Dax unconscious in the engine room, so he'll have to make the repairs himself. Bashir reports that Dax has neural injuries and that she will take some time to recover. Sisko decides that if O'Brien can't regain control of the ship before they get to the border, he'll have to order the [[self-destruct]] of the ''Defiant''.
 
   
  +
In the [[mess hall]], Sisko tells his [[security chief|Chief of Starfleet security]], [[Lieutenant Commander]] [[Michael Eddington]], to keep the ambassador out of harm's way in case the Tzenkethi decide to engage the ''Defiant''. Eddington again congratulates Sisko on his promotion, and mentions how he wanted to become a starship captain himself when he first joined [[Starfleet]].
Because the Changeling can look like anyone, Sisko orders all non-essential personnel confined to quarters with [[force field]]s, has his officers pair up – with instructions to keep their partner in sight at all times – anyone caught without a partner should be escorted to the [[brig]]. Everyone is armed with [[phaser rifle]]s and ordered to sweep the ship with phaser fire. However, in the course of hunting down the Changeling: Sisko, [[Odo]], [[Michael Eddington|Eddington]], Kira and a [[Bolian]] officer are each separated from their partner and suspicion and paranoia grow among the crew nearly leading to violence. Odo points out that Sisko is not the Changeling as he is bleeding from a minor wound: if any part of a Changeling (in this case "blood") is removed from the body, then it would revert to its natural gelatinous state.
 
   
  +
:"''Captains log, stardate 48962.5. We are twelve hours from the border. I haven't been in this area since the last [[Federation-Tzenkethi War]]. Being here brings back a lot of memories, most of them bad."''
[[File:Bashir and Bashir.jpg|thumb|Bashir is discovered locked in a spare set of quarters]]
 
  +
On the bridge, [[Constable]] [[Odo]] picks up a [[distress call]] from [[Barisa Prime]]. The colony reports that it is under attack before the ''Defiant'' suddenly loses contact.
Now armed with a way of unmasking the Changeling via simple blood tests, Sisko has [[Doctor|Dr.]] Bashir test everyone. When Eddington's blood morphs into orange goo, he is taken into custody despite pleading his innocence. He is proven correct moments later when they discover a second Bashir – the ''real'' Bashir – and realize they have been tricked by the Changeling, who substituted some of his mass for Eddington's blood sample. He escapes just as the ''Defiant'' enters Tzenkethi space.
 
   
  +
===Act Two===
Sisko has no other choice but to activate the auto-destruct sequence, giving O'Brien only ten minutes to find a way to regain control of the ship. Luckily O'Brien, with the help of some of Dax's research, has found a way to disable the force fields protecting the Changeling's modifications, meaning he should be able to regain control of the ship. Meanwhile, Bashir enters the bridge and informs Captain Sisko that Dax was merely tranquilized by the Changeling, although she would still be unconscious for a few hours.
 
  +
:"''Captains log, supplemental. We've been unable to re-establish contact with Barisa Prime. Therefore, I have no choice but to assume we are at war with the Tzenkethi.''"
  +
The ''Defiant'' sets course for Barisa Prime, and Sisko asks Odo to notify [[Starfleet Command]] of the situation. Dax tries to contact the {{USS|Ulysses}}, which is the closest starship, but to no avail. Odo reports that the communication system is malfunctioning. O'Brien and Dax are dispatched to make repairs.
   
  +
In the jefferies tube, Dax and O'Brien find several tendril-like devices working their way into the ''Defiant{{'}}s'' systems. They are protected by [[force field]]s, making them difficult to remove. O'Brien reports to Sisko that the devices are all over the ship, attached to almost every critical system. O'Brien states that these devices were not aboard when the ''Defiant'' left Deep Space 9, leading to the conclusion that someone on board is a saboteur. O'Brien reluctantly informs Sisko about his encounter with Bashir in the jefferies tube earlier. Sisko insists that he is not accusing Bashir of sabotage, but still would like to speak with him. However, Dax comes up with an idea to find out for sure who placed the devices.
As O'Brien works in [[engineering]], Odo shows up...followed by a second Odo. Unwilling to be side-tracked by playing "choose the Changeling" O'Brien manages to drop the force fields surrounding the sabotaged systems. However, this also means that all the force fields across the ship shut down – including the one protecting the [[warp core]]. The false Odo changes form and attacks O'Brien and Odo. The Changeling grabs Odo's chest and starts to link with him, telling him he has no place among the solids, and that the two of them can escape the ship together and return to the [[Great Link]]. Odo, however, has no intention of doing that and fights the Changeling off, and pushes him against the [[warp core]], fatally injuring him. Odo is horrified, not only is this the first time in all his years as a security officer he has ever taken a life but he has also just become the first Changeling to ever harm another. He tells the dying Changeling that he didn't want to hurt him, and the Changeling whispers something to Odo before he dies. O'Brien completes his repairs, returning control of the ship to Sisko, who deactivates the self-destruct and orders the ''Defiant'' turned around. Back at DS9, Sisko informs the senior staff that the Tzenkethi ''coup'' never really happened, and that the real Krajensky went missing while on route to [[Risa]] and has presumably been captured or killed by the Dominion. Odo enters the [[wardroom]], weighed down by recent events and relays some very disturbing news, the dying Changeling's last words...
 
   
  +
On the bridge, Sisko notifies his crew of the situation. Dax scans the crew for [[tetryon]] particles, since the saboteur would have been exposed to them when the devices were installed. The senior staff tests negative, including Bashir, much to O'Brien's relief. As Dax scans Ambassador Krajensky, O'Brien talks with Bashir about their encounter in the jefferies tube, to which Bashir has no memory. The scan completes, and Krajensky tests positive. Suddenly, the ambassador changes form and escapes the bridge, revealing himself to be a [[Changeling]].
"''You are too late. We are everywhere...''"
 
  +
  +
===Act Three===
  +
The ''Defiant'' [[cloak]]s and Sisko orders Dax to bring the ship out of [[warp]], but she cannot. O'Brien cannot uncloak the ship and [[Major]] [[Kira Nerys]] reports that the ship's weapons are armed. The crew has lost control of the ''Defiant''. Sisko orders Odo and Eddington to begin a search for the Changeling before he can do any more damage, but they are unable to locate him. Odo is confident that the Changeling is still on board, saying that he will not leave until his mission is completed. Sisko believes that the Changeling's goal is to start a war between the Federation and the Tzenkethi, speculating that the distress call from Barisa Prime was faked, and goes so far as to suggest that their entire mission was engineered by the [[Dominion]].
  +
  +
Knowing that the Changeling can impersonate anyone on board, Sisko orders all non-essential personnel to be confined to quarters and sealed in with force fields, and that no one be left alone. After issuing weapons and orders to the security officers, Odo tells Eddington how he has never found it necessary to fire a weapon or take a life throughout his career. In the middle of their conversation, O'Brien calls for a security team to be sent to the engine room. Odo and Eddington arrive to find Dax unconscious. Bashir reports that she has a severe [[concussion]] and takes her to [[sickbay]].
  +
  +
On the bridge, Bashir tells Sisko that Dax will be unconscious for the next couple of days, leaving O'Brien alone in his attempts to regain control of the ship. Sisko tells Kira that he cannot allow the Changeling to start a war with the Tzenkethi, and that if O'Brien can't regain control of the ship, he'll have to destroy the ''Defiant''.
  +
  +
===Act Four===
  +
Sisko briefs the crew on their mission: They will break into two-person teams, each one equipped with [[type 3 phaser|phaser rifles]], and systematically sweep the ship for the Changeling. A [[Unnamed Deep Space 9 personnel#Defiant Security Officer (Bolian)|Bolian security officer]] voices his suspicions that the Changeling could be anyone of them, and Sisko reminds everyone to keep their partner in sight at all times for that very reason, and orders that anyone spotted alone be escorted to the [[brig]].
  +
  +
The crew begins searching the ship. Eddington asks Odo where he thinks the Changeling might be, but Odo is unsure, unable to put himself in the Changeling's position since he does not know his own people that well. Meanwhile, while Sisko and another security officer are searching a jefferies tube, the Changeling suddenly attacks them. The security officer is knocked out, leaving Sisko to pursue alone. Having been alerted to the Changeling's position, the crew moves to intercept. Arriving in the [[transporter room|transporter bay]], the [[Bolian]] security officer fires in Sisko's direction, believing that he has spotted the Changeling. Kira arrives from the opposite direction and insists that she is who she says she is, despite the fact that she and her partner have been separated for several seconds. The Bolian continuously accuses Kira of being a Changeling, and is paranoid to the point of ignoring a direct order from Sisko to lower his weapon. Just then, Odo appears and knocks out the Bolian. Eddington appears a split second later from Kira's direction, leading Sisko to conclude that any one of them could be the Changeling. Odo notes however, that Sisko is bleeding and therefore could not be the Changeling. Sisko calls Bashir and orders him to meet them in the mess hall.
  +
  +
[[File:Bashir_and_Bashir.jpg|thumb|The real Bashir reveals himself]]
  +
In the mess hall, Bashir begins performing [[blood screening]]s of the crew. Kira and the Bolian security officer prove to be themselves, but when Bashir tests Eddington, his blood reverts to a gelatinous state. As he is escorted to [[crew quarters]], Eddington maintains that he is not the Changeling. As Eddington is about to be forced inside the room, the adjacent door suddenly bursts open to reveal the ''real'' Doctor Bashir yelling for help. The Changeling that took Bashir's place morphs into the ventilation system and Odo pursues. A call comes in from the bridge notifying Sisko that the ''Defiant'' has entered Tzenkethi space.
  +
  +
===Act Five===
  +
Kira reports that the ''Defiant'' is twelve minutes away from a Tzenkethi settlement on [[M'kemas III]]. With this news, Sisko and Kira activate the [[auto-destruct]] sequence and set the timer for ten minutes. Sisko calls O'Brien in engineering and asks if he has had any progress in regaining control of the ship. O'Brien thinks he may have a way to shut down the force fields and deactivate the devices. As O'Brien works, Odo and the Changeling - who is disguised as Odo - make their way into the engine room and each one tries to prove to the chief that the other is the saboteur. O'Brien refuses to play "choose the Changeling", and has the other officer in engineering keep his [[phaser]] on both of them while he deactivates the force fields. As the force fields deactivate, the Changeling drops his disguise and attacks O'Brien and the engineering officer, leaving Odo to face the Changeling alone. As the two struggle, the Changeling tries to convince Odo to return to the [[Great Link]], but Odo refuses and pushes the Changeling onto the [[warp core]], fatally wounding it. Before he dies, the Changeling whispers something to Odo, which startles him.
  +
  +
O'Brien regains control of the ship. After Sisko and Kira abort the auto-destruct sequence, the ''Defiant'' leaves Tzenkethi space and heads back to Deep Space 9.
  +
  +
:"''Captains log, supplemental. We've returned to the station without further incident. However, I'm concerned about my chief of security, who hasn't said a word since we left Tzenkethi space.''"
  +
  +
In the wardroom, Sisko tells the [[senior staff]] that the real Ambassador Krajensky disappeared on his way to [[Risa]]. [[Starfleet Security]] believes that he has been kidnapped, or possibly killed. Bashir asks about the ''coup'' on the Tzenkethi homeworld, to which Sisko responds that it never happened. Odo joins the meeting and informs Sisko of the Changeling's dying words: "''You're too late. We're everywhere''."
   
 
==Memorable quotes==
 
==Memorable quotes==
 
"''You'd be surprised. People don't enter Starfleet to become commanders. Or admirals, for that matter. It's the captain's chair everyone has their eye on. That's what I wanted when I joined up.''"
 
"''You'd be surprised. People don't enter Starfleet to become commanders. Or admirals, for that matter. It's the captain's chair everyone has their eye on. That's what I wanted when I joined up.''"
: - '''Lieutenant Commander Eddington'''
+
: - '''Michael Eddington'''
   
   
Line 79: Line 109:
 
"''Dad, there's something I've been wanting to say to you for a long time and now that I finally have the chance, I'm going to make it short and simple. Congratulations, ''Captain'' Sisko!''"
 
"''Dad, there's something I've been wanting to say to you for a long time and now that I finally have the chance, I'm going to make it short and simple. Congratulations, ''Captain'' Sisko!''"
 
: - '''Jake Sisko''', at his father's promotion
 
: - '''Jake Sisko''', at his father's promotion
  +
  +
  +
"''Now that you have another pip on your collar, does that mean I can't disagree with you anymore?"'' <br />
  +
"''No, it just means I'm never wrong."''
  +
: - '''Kira''' and '''Sisko'''
  +
  +
  +
"''This calls for a toast!" <br />
  +
"''That better not be from a replicator, Quark.."''<br />
  +
"''Chateau Cleon, 2303 — I already put it on your account.."''
  +
: - '''Quark''' and '''Bashir'''
   
   
Line 85: Line 126:
 
"''I know ''exactly'' how you feel.''"
 
"''I know ''exactly'' how you feel.''"
 
: - '''Kira''' and a '''Bolian Security Officer'''
 
: - '''Kira''' and a '''Bolian Security Officer'''
  +
  +
  +
[O'Brien is faced with two Odos]<br />
  +
"''Look. I've got more important things to do than play 'Choose the Changeling'. Keep the phaser on both of them.''"
  +
: - '''O'Brien''', when faced with deciding which shape shifter is the ''real'' Odo.
   
   
 
"''Captain, there's something you need to know. The Changeling, before he died, he whispered something to me.''"<br />
 
"''Captain, there's something you need to know. The Changeling, before he died, he whispered something to me.''"<br />
 
"''Go on.''"<br />
 
"''Go on.''"<br />
"''He said, "You're too late. We're everywhere.".''"
+
"''He said, 'You're too late. We're everywhere.'.''"
 
: - '''Odo''' and '''Sisko'''
 
: - '''Odo''' and '''Sisko'''
   
 
==Background Information==
 
==Background Information==
  +
===Story and script===
 
*The working title of this episode was "Flashpoint". In the ''[[Deep Space Nine Chronicles]]'' intro, it is stated that the episode was untitled until a contest was held and "The Adversary" was selected.
 
*The working title of this episode was "Flashpoint". In the ''[[Deep Space Nine Chronicles]]'' intro, it is stated that the episode was untitled until a contest was held and "The Adversary" was selected.
 
*The producers had initially planned to do a show that had a cliff-hanger ending involving [[Changeling|Changelings]] on [[Earth]]. The story was set to introduce [[Joseph Sisko]] and would take place in [[Starfleet Headquarters]], with the end to revolve around [[Benjamin Sisko]] saying that the [[Founder]]s had infiltrated the very heart of...and that was the end of the show. However, for reasons still unknown, Paramount nixed the idea, saying they didn't want a cliff-hanger ending, and so the writers came up with a story about a Changeling wreaking havoc on the ''Defiant'' instead. As [[Robert Hewitt Wolfe]] puts it, "''That's when the idea of the ''Defiant'' heading inexplicably toward destruction, like the death machine that she really is, being all locked down and going like a runaway train, became the basic hook that everyone really liked''." However, the Changelings-on-Earth story later served as the basis for the episodes {{e|Homefront}} and {{e|Paradise Lost}} [[DS9 Season 4|the following season]]. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
 
*The producers had initially planned to do a show that had a cliff-hanger ending involving [[Changeling|Changelings]] on [[Earth]]. The story was set to introduce [[Joseph Sisko]] and would take place in [[Starfleet Headquarters]], with the end to revolve around [[Benjamin Sisko]] saying that the [[Founder]]s had infiltrated the very heart of...and that was the end of the show. However, for reasons still unknown, Paramount nixed the idea, saying they didn't want a cliff-hanger ending, and so the writers came up with a story about a Changeling wreaking havoc on the ''Defiant'' instead. As [[Robert Hewitt Wolfe]] puts it, "''That's when the idea of the ''Defiant'' heading inexplicably toward destruction, like the death machine that she really is, being all locked down and going like a runaway train, became the basic hook that everyone really liked''." However, the Changelings-on-Earth story later served as the basis for the episodes {{e|Homefront}} and {{e|Paradise Lost}} [[DS9 Season 4|the following season]]. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
*The scene in the ''Defiant''{{'}}s mess hall where the senior officers are taking blood samples of each other to determine which one of them is the Changeling is very reminiscent of the [[1982]] {{w|John Carpenter}} film ''{{w|The Thing (film)|The Thing}}''. This film is based on the [[1938]] {{w|John W. Campbell, Jr.}} (writing under the pseudonym of Don A. Stuart) short story "{{w|Who Goes There|Who Goes There?}}", which contains a very similar scene. Strangely however, the writers cite neither the original story nor the Carpenter film as their primary inspiration for this episode, but rather the [[1951]] {{w|Christian Nyby}} film adaptation, called ''{{w|The Thing From Another World}}''. That film emphasizes the theme of paranoia much more so than either the story or the later film adaptation, and paranoia was something the writers were interested in exploring, as it was something rarely seen in the ''Star Trek'' universe. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
+
*The scene in the ''Defiant''{{'}}s mess hall where the senior officers are taking blood samples of each other to determine which one of them is the Changeling is very reminiscent of the [[1982]] {{w|John Carpenter}} film ''{{w|The Thing (film)|The Thing}}''. This film is based on the [[1938]] {{w|John W. Campbell, Jr.}} (writing under the pseudonym of Don A. Stuart) short story "{{w|Who Goes There|Who Goes There?}}", which contains a very similar scene. However, the writers cite neither the original story nor the Carpenter film as their primary inspiration for this episode, but rather the [[1951]] {{w|Christian Nyby}} film adaptation, called ''{{w|The Thing From Another World}}''. That film did not feature the theme of paranoia or shapeshifters as the story or the later film adaptation did. Paranoia was something the writers were interested in exploring, as it was something rarely seen in the ''Star Trek'' universe. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
 
*The writers decided to use the line "No changeling has ever harmed another" as an important element in this episode. This line had been heard a few times already (in {{e|The Search, Part II}}, {{e|Heart of Stone}} and {{e|The Die is Cast}}), and its importance would return in the [[DS9 Season 4|fourth season]] finale, {{e|Broken Link}}, where [[Odo]] receives his punishment for killing a fellow Changeling.
 
*The writers decided to use the line "No changeling has ever harmed another" as an important element in this episode. This line had been heard a few times already (in {{e|The Search, Part II}}, {{e|Heart of Stone}} and {{e|The Die is Cast}}), and its importance would return in the [[DS9 Season 4|fourth season]] finale, {{e|Broken Link}}, where [[Odo]] receives his punishment for killing a fellow Changeling.
 
*The character of [[Michael Eddington]] was deliberately set up as a red herring in this episode. The writers felt that the way actor [[Kenneth Marshall]] had portrayed the character in {{e|The Search, Part I}}, {{e|The Search, Part II}} and {{e|The Die is Cast}} had always implied some kind of underlying threat, so they decided to use that to their advantage in this episode. Indeed, after the episode aired, the word around the internet was that Eddington ''was'' a Changeling infiltrator, and that this was obviously going to have a bearing on the upcoming season. Upon hearing this, the writers decided that they would ''never'' make Eddington a Changeling.(''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'') Later on, it would be revealed that Eddington was a threat, but not in the manner people expected: he was a member of the [[Maquis]] who would eventually betray Starfleet.
 
*The character of [[Michael Eddington]] was deliberately set up as a red herring in this episode. The writers felt that the way actor [[Kenneth Marshall]] had portrayed the character in {{e|The Search, Part I}}, {{e|The Search, Part II}} and {{e|The Die is Cast}} had always implied some kind of underlying threat, so they decided to use that to their advantage in this episode. Indeed, after the episode aired, the word around the internet was that Eddington ''was'' a Changeling infiltrator, and that this was obviously going to have a bearing on the upcoming season. Upon hearing this, the writers decided that they would ''never'' make Eddington a Changeling.(''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'') Later on, it would be revealed that Eddington was a threat, but not in the manner people expected: he was a member of the [[Maquis]] who would eventually betray Starfleet.
  +
*Sisko's opening log entry was not in the final draft shooting script.
*According to [[Jadzia Dax]], there are [[47]] people on board the ''Defiant'' in this episode.
 
  +
===Production===
*This episode marks the first appearance of several new sets aboard the ''Defiant'', namely [[main engineering]], the [[mess hall]] and the extended [[corridor]] set.
 
* According to the ''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'', the rifles used in this episode are the first rifles ever seen in ''Star Trek'' which actually have a trigger.
 
 
*The fight between Odo and the Changeling at the end of the episode was extremely complicated to put together due to all the morphing effects. Producer [[Steve Oster]] points out that there are more morphing effects in this short scene than in the entire [[DS9 Season 3|third season]]. According to actor [[Rene Auberjonois]], after principal photography was completed, all the cast were allowed to leave except himself and [[Lawrence Pressman]]. He explains that during the main shoot, he and Pressman had filmed the scene as normal, but to make sure the effects would work properly, each of them then had to re-enact the scene separately, looking at a monitor and matching their movements exactly. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'') There are actually some clips of both actors shooting the fight without the other present in the ''[[Deep Space Nine Chronicles]]'' intro to this episode.
 
*The fight between Odo and the Changeling at the end of the episode was extremely complicated to put together due to all the morphing effects. Producer [[Steve Oster]] points out that there are more morphing effects in this short scene than in the entire [[DS9 Season 3|third season]]. According to actor [[Rene Auberjonois]], after principal photography was completed, all the cast were allowed to leave except himself and [[Lawrence Pressman]]. He explains that during the main shoot, he and Pressman had filmed the scene as normal, but to make sure the effects would work properly, each of them then had to re-enact the scene separately, looking at a monitor and matching their movements exactly. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'') There are actually some clips of both actors shooting the fight without the other present in the ''[[Deep Space Nine Chronicles]]'' intro to this episode.
*The scene when [[Krajensky]] morphs into a Changeling and escapes through the vent is one of visual effects supervisor [[Glenn Neufeld]]'s favorite shots from the entire seven years of DS9.
+
*The scene when [[Krajensky]] morphs into a Changeling and escapes through the vent is one of visual effects supervisor [[Glenn Neufeld]]'s favorite shots from the entire seven years of ''Star Trek: Deep Space Nine''.
  +
*[[Kenneth Marshall]] commented that the episode was: "''technically one of the more interesting shows I've done. It's fascinating how they do the morph sequences. I haven't seen them do the actual special FX, but they shoot it three different ways on the set. In the last shot, everyone tiptoes off the set so as to not disturb anything even a fraction of an inch''". (''[[The Official Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Magazine]]'' Vol. 15)
*In the teaser for the episode Sisko is promoted to captain, however in the opening credits of the show he is still credited as "Commander Sisko". This is the last episode to credit Sisko as a commander. It is also the last time Sisko is seen with hair.
 
  +
===Reception===
*This episode marks the last time [[Alexander Siddig]] is credited as Siddig El Fadil as an actor. As a director, however, he remains credited as Siddig El Fadil for {{e|Business as Usual}}.
 
 
*[[Ronald D. Moore]] is a big fan of this episode because he considers it to be very un-''Star Trek''; "''It really appealed to me on this sort of visceral John Wayne level. There's a monster on the ship, it's after us, and we're gonna hunt it down and kill it. We're not gonna negotiate with it, we're not gonna worry about whether it's sentient, we're not gonna play any of the usual ''Star Trek'' games with it. It's just, 'Find and kill the monster.' There was something very pure about that show''." (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
 
*[[Ronald D. Moore]] is a big fan of this episode because he considers it to be very un-''Star Trek''; "''It really appealed to me on this sort of visceral John Wayne level. There's a monster on the ship, it's after us, and we're gonna hunt it down and kill it. We're not gonna negotiate with it, we're not gonna worry about whether it's sentient, we're not gonna play any of the usual ''Star Trek'' games with it. It's just, 'Find and kill the monster.' There was something very pure about that show''." (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
 
*[[Ira Steven Behr]] sees this episode as an important step in the show's movement towards serialization, which would reach a peak in the six-episode arc which opened [[DS9 Season 6|season six]] and the nine-episode, ten-hour arc which acted as the finale of the series itself; "''"The Adversary" was the first one where we really knew we were going to be starting to get the S-word, serialized, just a tad. In spite of all the finger-wagging and knowing we weren't supposed to, it was just a little bit, a little bit''." (''The Birth of the Dominion and Beyond'', [[DS9 Season 3 DVD]] special features)
 
*[[Ira Steven Behr]] sees this episode as an important step in the show's movement towards serialization, which would reach a peak in the six-episode arc which opened [[DS9 Season 6|season six]] and the nine-episode, ten-hour arc which acted as the finale of the series itself; "''"The Adversary" was the first one where we really knew we were going to be starting to get the S-word, serialized, just a tad. In spite of all the finger-wagging and knowing we weren't supposed to, it was just a little bit, a little bit''." (''The Birth of the Dominion and Beyond'', [[DS9 Season 3 DVD]] special features)
  +
===Trivia===
 
*This episode marks the first appearance of several new sets aboard the ''Defiant'', namely [[main engineering]], the [[mess hall]] and the extended [[corridor]] set.
 
* According to the ''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'', the rifles used in this episode are the first rifles ever seen in ''Star Trek'' which actually have a trigger.
 
*In the teaser for the episode Sisko is promoted to captain, however in the opening credits of the show he is still credited as "Commander Sisko". This is the last episode to credit Sisko as a commander. It is also the last time Sisko is seen with hair and it is the last episode to have the opening credits from Season 1.
 
*This episode marks the last time [[Alexander Siddig]] is credited as Siddig El Fadil as an actor. As a director, however, he remains credited as Siddig El Fadil for {{e|Business as Usual}}.
 
*According to [[Jadzia Dax]], there are [[47]] people on board the ''Defiant'' in this episode.
   
 
===Video and DVD releases===
 
===Video and DVD releases===
Line 120: Line 172:
 
*[[Cirroc Lofton]] as [[Jake Sisko]]
 
*[[Cirroc Lofton]] as [[Jake Sisko]]
 
*[[Colm Meaney]] as [[Chief]] [[Miles O'Brien]]
 
*[[Colm Meaney]] as [[Chief]] [[Miles O'Brien]]
  +
*[[Armin Shimerman]] as [[Quark]]
 
*[[Nana Visitor]] as [[Major]] [[Kira Nerys]]
 
*[[Nana Visitor]] as [[Major]] [[Kira Nerys]]
   
 
===Guest stars===
 
===Guest stars===
*[[Lawrence Pressman]] as the [[Krajensky]] and [[Krajensky (Changeling)|Changeling saboteur]]
+
*[[Lawrence Pressman]] as [[Krajensky]] and the [[Krajensky (Changeling)|Changeling saboteur]]
 
*[[Kenneth Marshall]] as [[Michael Eddington]]
 
*[[Kenneth Marshall]] as [[Michael Eddington]]
 
*[[Jeff Austin]] as a [[Unnamed Deep Space 9 personnel#Defiant Security Officer (Bolian)|Bolian security officer]]
 
*[[Jeff Austin]] as a [[Unnamed Deep Space 9 personnel#Defiant Security Officer (Bolian)|Bolian security officer]]
Line 148: Line 201:
   
 
===References===
 
===References===
[[1964]]; [[ambassador]]; [[Autarch]]; [[blood]]; [[Bolian]]; ''[[coup d'etat]]''; [[Curzon Dax|Dax, Curzon]]; [[duridium]]; [[Engineering extension course]]; [[Entebe]]; [[Federation-Dominion Cold War]]; [[Federation-Tzenkethi border]]; [[Federation-Tzenkethi War]]; [[Founder]]; [[Helaspont Nebula]]; [[M'kemas III]]; [[ore]]; [[Risa]]; [[sabotage]]; [[shield generator]]; [[Solais V]]; [[tetryon]]; [[Tzenkethi]]; [[Tzenkethi warship]]; [[USS Ulysses|''Ulysses'', USS]]; [[warp plasma conduit]]; [[World Series]]; [[Kasidy Yates]]
+
[[1964]]; [[2303]]; [[Alpha Quadrant]]; [[ambassador]]; [[Autarch]]; [[Barisa Prime]]; [[blood]]; [[Bolian]]; [[centimeter]]; [[Chateau Cleon]]; [[concussion]]; [[cortical analeptic]]; ''[[coup d'etat]]''; [[Curzon Dax|Dax, Curzon]]; [[Dominion cold war]]; [[duridium]]; [[Engineering extension course]]; [[Entebe]]; [[expanding energy pulse]]; [[Federation]]; [[Federation-Tzenkethi border]]; [[Federation-Tzenkethi War]]; [[Founder]]; [[Helaspont Nebula]]; [[holosuite]]; [[Jefferies tube]]; [[kayaking]]; [[M'kemas III]]; [[ore]]; [[power grid]]; [[replicator]]; [[Risa]]; [[sabotage]]; [[shield generator]]; [[Solais V]]; [[tetryon]]; [[tricorder]]; [[Tzenkethi]]; [[Tzenkethi warship]]; [[USS Ulysses|''Ulysses'', USS]]; [[warp plasma conduit]]; [[World Series]]; [[Kasidy Yates|Yates, Kasidy]]
   
 
===External links===
 
===External links===
* {{NCwiki|The Adversary}}
+
* {{mbeta|The Adversary}}
* {{wikipedia|The Adversary}}
+
* {{wikipedia|The Adversary (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine)}}
{{DS9 nav|season=3|last={{e|Facets}}|next={{e|The Way of the Warrior}}}}
 
   
 
{{DS9 nav|season=3|last={{e|Facets}}|next={{e|The Way of the Warrior}}}}
   
 
[[de:Der Widersacher]]
 
[[de:Der Widersacher]]

Revision as of 15:19, 24 July 2015

Template:Realworld

A Federation ambassador brings newly-promoted Captain Sisko orders to take the Defiant on a patrol of the Tzenkethi border, where a destabilizing coup has just taken place, but everything is not as it seems. (Season finale)

Summary

Teaser

"Commanders log, stardate 48959.1. It is with mixed emotions that I record this, my final commanders log. The last three years have been the most demanding, and rewarding of my career. I can only hope that the future will hold even greater challenges."
File:Sisko captain promotion.jpg

Sisko receives his promotion

In the wardroom, Benjamin Sisko is receiving his fourth pip from his son Jake, finally becoming a captain. After being congratulated by his colleagues and as Quark serves the champagne, Chateau Cleon, 2303, Federation Ambassador Krajensky informs Sisko that a coup has taken place on the Tzenkethi homeworld. Sisko is to take the ambassador and the USS Defiant to that sector to remind the Tzenkethi of the Federation's presence on nearby colony worlds.

In the Defiant's engine room, Sisko orders Chief Miles O'Brien to begin preparing the ship for combat in case the Tzenkethi start looking for trouble. As O'Brien begins his work, he hears a noise in the engine room, but sees no one.

Act One

"My son, the writer, thinks that I should say something profound on this occasion. He even offered to write me a brief statement. I told him I'd take care of it myself, but as it turns out, the only thing I can think of is: Begin captain's log, stardate 48960.9."

In the Defiant's turbolift, Lieutenant Jadzia Dax asks Sisko if he has told Kasidy Yates about his promotion. Sisko says he hasn't, and that he barely had time to tell his father the news. Dax presses Sisko about his relationship with Kasidy, saying that the whole crew is curious. Sisko tells Dax that the next time he sees Kasidy, he's taking her to the seventh game of the 1964 World Series. Dax, amused by Sisko's response, concludes that he likes Kasidy.

Arriving on the bridge, Sisko orders the Defiant to get underway. Not long after departing Deep Space 9, O'Brien is working in a jefferies tube. He sees Doctor Julian Bashir tying in a new medical console into the main power grid, with knowledge gained from an engineering extension course he took at Starfleet Academy.

In the mess hall, Sisko tells his Chief of Starfleet security, Lieutenant Commander Michael Eddington, to keep the ambassador out of harm's way in case the Tzenkethi decide to engage the Defiant. Eddington again congratulates Sisko on his promotion, and mentions how he wanted to become a starship captain himself when he first joined Starfleet.

"Captains log, stardate 48962.5. We are twelve hours from the border. I haven't been in this area since the last Federation-Tzenkethi War. Being here brings back a lot of memories, most of them bad."

On the bridge, Constable Odo picks up a distress call from Barisa Prime. The colony reports that it is under attack before the Defiant suddenly loses contact.

Act Two

"Captains log, supplemental. We've been unable to re-establish contact with Barisa Prime. Therefore, I have no choice but to assume we are at war with the Tzenkethi."

The Defiant sets course for Barisa Prime, and Sisko asks Odo to notify Starfleet Command of the situation. Dax tries to contact the USS Ulysses, which is the closest starship, but to no avail. Odo reports that the communication system is malfunctioning. O'Brien and Dax are dispatched to make repairs.

In the jefferies tube, Dax and O'Brien find several tendril-like devices working their way into the Defiant's systems. They are protected by force fields, making them difficult to remove. O'Brien reports to Sisko that the devices are all over the ship, attached to almost every critical system. O'Brien states that these devices were not aboard when the Defiant left Deep Space 9, leading to the conclusion that someone on board is a saboteur. O'Brien reluctantly informs Sisko about his encounter with Bashir in the jefferies tube earlier. Sisko insists that he is not accusing Bashir of sabotage, but still would like to speak with him. However, Dax comes up with an idea to find out for sure who placed the devices.

On the bridge, Sisko notifies his crew of the situation. Dax scans the crew for tetryon particles, since the saboteur would have been exposed to them when the devices were installed. The senior staff tests negative, including Bashir, much to O'Brien's relief. As Dax scans Ambassador Krajensky, O'Brien talks with Bashir about their encounter in the jefferies tube, to which Bashir has no memory. The scan completes, and Krajensky tests positive. Suddenly, the ambassador changes form and escapes the bridge, revealing himself to be a Changeling.

Act Three

The Defiant cloaks and Sisko orders Dax to bring the ship out of warp, but she cannot. O'Brien cannot uncloak the ship and Major Kira Nerys reports that the ship's weapons are armed. The crew has lost control of the Defiant. Sisko orders Odo and Eddington to begin a search for the Changeling before he can do any more damage, but they are unable to locate him. Odo is confident that the Changeling is still on board, saying that he will not leave until his mission is completed. Sisko believes that the Changeling's goal is to start a war between the Federation and the Tzenkethi, speculating that the distress call from Barisa Prime was faked, and goes so far as to suggest that their entire mission was engineered by the Dominion.

Knowing that the Changeling can impersonate anyone on board, Sisko orders all non-essential personnel to be confined to quarters and sealed in with force fields, and that no one be left alone. After issuing weapons and orders to the security officers, Odo tells Eddington how he has never found it necessary to fire a weapon or take a life throughout his career. In the middle of their conversation, O'Brien calls for a security team to be sent to the engine room. Odo and Eddington arrive to find Dax unconscious. Bashir reports that she has a severe concussion and takes her to sickbay.

On the bridge, Bashir tells Sisko that Dax will be unconscious for the next couple of days, leaving O'Brien alone in his attempts to regain control of the ship. Sisko tells Kira that he cannot allow the Changeling to start a war with the Tzenkethi, and that if O'Brien can't regain control of the ship, he'll have to destroy the Defiant.

Act Four

Sisko briefs the crew on their mission: They will break into two-person teams, each one equipped with phaser rifles, and systematically sweep the ship for the Changeling. A Bolian security officer voices his suspicions that the Changeling could be anyone of them, and Sisko reminds everyone to keep their partner in sight at all times for that very reason, and orders that anyone spotted alone be escorted to the brig.

The crew begins searching the ship. Eddington asks Odo where he thinks the Changeling might be, but Odo is unsure, unable to put himself in the Changeling's position since he does not know his own people that well. Meanwhile, while Sisko and another security officer are searching a jefferies tube, the Changeling suddenly attacks them. The security officer is knocked out, leaving Sisko to pursue alone. Having been alerted to the Changeling's position, the crew moves to intercept. Arriving in the transporter bay, the Bolian security officer fires in Sisko's direction, believing that he has spotted the Changeling. Kira arrives from the opposite direction and insists that she is who she says she is, despite the fact that she and her partner have been separated for several seconds. The Bolian continuously accuses Kira of being a Changeling, and is paranoid to the point of ignoring a direct order from Sisko to lower his weapon. Just then, Odo appears and knocks out the Bolian. Eddington appears a split second later from Kira's direction, leading Sisko to conclude that any one of them could be the Changeling. Odo notes however, that Sisko is bleeding and therefore could not be the Changeling. Sisko calls Bashir and orders him to meet them in the mess hall.

Bashir and Bashir

The real Bashir reveals himself

In the mess hall, Bashir begins performing blood screenings of the crew. Kira and the Bolian security officer prove to be themselves, but when Bashir tests Eddington, his blood reverts to a gelatinous state. As he is escorted to crew quarters, Eddington maintains that he is not the Changeling. As Eddington is about to be forced inside the room, the adjacent door suddenly bursts open to reveal the real Doctor Bashir yelling for help. The Changeling that took Bashir's place morphs into the ventilation system and Odo pursues. A call comes in from the bridge notifying Sisko that the Defiant has entered Tzenkethi space.

Act Five

Kira reports that the Defiant is twelve minutes away from a Tzenkethi settlement on M'kemas III. With this news, Sisko and Kira activate the auto-destruct sequence and set the timer for ten minutes. Sisko calls O'Brien in engineering and asks if he has had any progress in regaining control of the ship. O'Brien thinks he may have a way to shut down the force fields and deactivate the devices. As O'Brien works, Odo and the Changeling - who is disguised as Odo - make their way into the engine room and each one tries to prove to the chief that the other is the saboteur. O'Brien refuses to play "choose the Changeling", and has the other officer in engineering keep his phaser on both of them while he deactivates the force fields. As the force fields deactivate, the Changeling drops his disguise and attacks O'Brien and the engineering officer, leaving Odo to face the Changeling alone. As the two struggle, the Changeling tries to convince Odo to return to the Great Link, but Odo refuses and pushes the Changeling onto the warp core, fatally wounding it. Before he dies, the Changeling whispers something to Odo, which startles him.

O'Brien regains control of the ship. After Sisko and Kira abort the auto-destruct sequence, the Defiant leaves Tzenkethi space and heads back to Deep Space 9.

"Captains log, supplemental. We've returned to the station without further incident. However, I'm concerned about my chief of security, who hasn't said a word since we left Tzenkethi space."

In the wardroom, Sisko tells the senior staff that the real Ambassador Krajensky disappeared on his way to Risa. Starfleet Security believes that he has been kidnapped, or possibly killed. Bashir asks about the coup on the Tzenkethi homeworld, to which Sisko responds that it never happened. Odo joins the meeting and informs Sisko of the Changeling's dying words: "You're too late. We're everywhere."

Memorable quotes

"You'd be surprised. People don't enter Starfleet to become commanders. Or admirals, for that matter. It's the captain's chair everyone has their eye on. That's what I wanted when I joined up."

- Michael Eddington


"Why are you protecting these solids? You don't belong with them. You belong with us. Let go. Don't you see? You've lost. It's too late for you to help them, but it's not too late to help yourself. Link with me, Odo. We can escape together."
"I... don't... think... so!!"

- Changeling saboteur and Odo


"Getting jumpy in your old age, O'Brien."

- Miles O'Brien, to himself


"Oh, JULIAN!'"

- O'Brien, after the changeling impersonating Bashir surprises him in a Jefferies tube


"Dad, there's something I've been wanting to say to you for a long time and now that I finally have the chance, I'm going to make it short and simple. Congratulations, Captain Sisko!"

- Jake Sisko, at his father's promotion


"Now that you have another pip on your collar, does that mean I can't disagree with you anymore?"
"No, it just means I'm never wrong."

- Kira and Sisko


"This calls for a toast!"
"That better not be from a replicator, Quark.."
"Chateau Cleon, 2303 — I already put it on your account.."

- Quark and Bashir


"Don't you trust me?"
"No, I don't."
"I know exactly how you feel."

- Kira and a Bolian Security Officer


[O'Brien is faced with two Odos]
"Look. I've got more important things to do than play 'Choose the Changeling'. Keep the phaser on both of them."

- O'Brien, when faced with deciding which shape shifter is the real Odo.


"Captain, there's something you need to know. The Changeling, before he died, he whispered something to me."
"Go on."
"He said, 'You're too late. We're everywhere.'."

- Odo and Sisko

Background Information

Story and script

  • The working title of this episode was "Flashpoint". In the Deep Space Nine Chronicles intro, it is stated that the episode was untitled until a contest was held and "The Adversary" was selected.
  • The producers had initially planned to do a show that had a cliff-hanger ending involving Changelings on Earth. The story was set to introduce Joseph Sisko and would take place in Starfleet Headquarters, with the end to revolve around Benjamin Sisko saying that the Founders had infiltrated the very heart of...and that was the end of the show. However, for reasons still unknown, Paramount nixed the idea, saying they didn't want a cliff-hanger ending, and so the writers came up with a story about a Changeling wreaking havoc on the Defiant instead. As Robert Hewitt Wolfe puts it, "That's when the idea of the Defiant heading inexplicably toward destruction, like the death machine that she really is, being all locked down and going like a runaway train, became the basic hook that everyone really liked." However, the Changelings-on-Earth story later served as the basis for the episodes "Homefront" and "Paradise Lost" the following season. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)
  • The scene in the Defiant's mess hall where the senior officers are taking blood samples of each other to determine which one of them is the Changeling is very reminiscent of the 1982 John Carpenter film The Thing. This film is based on the 1938 John W. Campbell, Jr. (writing under the pseudonym of Don A. Stuart) short story "Who Goes There?", which contains a very similar scene. However, the writers cite neither the original story nor the Carpenter film as their primary inspiration for this episode, but rather the 1951 Christian Nyby film adaptation, called The Thing From Another World. That film did not feature the theme of paranoia or shapeshifters as the story or the later film adaptation did. Paranoia was something the writers were interested in exploring, as it was something rarely seen in the Star Trek universe. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)
  • The writers decided to use the line "No changeling has ever harmed another" as an important element in this episode. This line had been heard a few times already (in "The Search, Part II", "Heart of Stone" and "The Die is Cast"), and its importance would return in the fourth season finale, "Broken Link", where Odo receives his punishment for killing a fellow Changeling.
  • The character of Michael Eddington was deliberately set up as a red herring in this episode. The writers felt that the way actor Kenneth Marshall had portrayed the character in "The Search, Part I", "The Search, Part II" and "The Die is Cast" had always implied some kind of underlying threat, so they decided to use that to their advantage in this episode. Indeed, after the episode aired, the word around the internet was that Eddington was a Changeling infiltrator, and that this was obviously going to have a bearing on the upcoming season. Upon hearing this, the writers decided that they would never make Eddington a Changeling.(Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion) Later on, it would be revealed that Eddington was a threat, but not in the manner people expected: he was a member of the Maquis who would eventually betray Starfleet.
  • Sisko's opening log entry was not in the final draft shooting script.

Production

  • The fight between Odo and the Changeling at the end of the episode was extremely complicated to put together due to all the morphing effects. Producer Steve Oster points out that there are more morphing effects in this short scene than in the entire third season. According to actor Rene Auberjonois, after principal photography was completed, all the cast were allowed to leave except himself and Lawrence Pressman. He explains that during the main shoot, he and Pressman had filmed the scene as normal, but to make sure the effects would work properly, each of them then had to re-enact the scene separately, looking at a monitor and matching their movements exactly. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion) There are actually some clips of both actors shooting the fight without the other present in the Deep Space Nine Chronicles intro to this episode.
  • The scene when Krajensky morphs into a Changeling and escapes through the vent is one of visual effects supervisor Glenn Neufeld's favorite shots from the entire seven years of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.
  • Kenneth Marshall commented that the episode was: "technically one of the more interesting shows I've done. It's fascinating how they do the morph sequences. I haven't seen them do the actual special FX, but they shoot it three different ways on the set. In the last shot, everyone tiptoes off the set so as to not disturb anything even a fraction of an inch". (The Official Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Magazine Vol. 15)

Reception

  • Ronald D. Moore is a big fan of this episode because he considers it to be very un-Star Trek; "It really appealed to me on this sort of visceral John Wayne level. There's a monster on the ship, it's after us, and we're gonna hunt it down and kill it. We're not gonna negotiate with it, we're not gonna worry about whether it's sentient, we're not gonna play any of the usual Star Trek games with it. It's just, 'Find and kill the monster.' There was something very pure about that show." (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)
  • Ira Steven Behr sees this episode as an important step in the show's movement towards serialization, which would reach a peak in the six-episode arc which opened season six and the nine-episode, ten-hour arc which acted as the finale of the series itself; ""The Adversary" was the first one where we really knew we were going to be starting to get the S-word, serialized, just a tad. In spite of all the finger-wagging and knowing we weren't supposed to, it was just a little bit, a little bit." (The Birth of the Dominion and Beyond, DS9 Season 3 DVD special features)

Trivia

  • This episode marks the first appearance of several new sets aboard the Defiant, namely main engineering, the mess hall and the extended corridor set.
  • According to the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion, the rifles used in this episode are the first rifles ever seen in Star Trek which actually have a trigger.
  • In the teaser for the episode Sisko is promoted to captain, however in the opening credits of the show he is still credited as "Commander Sisko". This is the last episode to credit Sisko as a commander. It is also the last time Sisko is seen with hair and it is the last episode to have the opening credits from Season 1.
  • This episode marks the last time Alexander Siddig is credited as Siddig El Fadil as an actor. As a director, however, he remains credited as Siddig El Fadil for "Business as Usual".
  • According to Jadzia Dax, there are 47 people on board the Defiant in this episode.

Video and DVD releases

Links and references

Main cast

Guest stars

Co-star

Uncredited co-stars

Stand-ins and stunt doubles

References

1964; 2303; Alpha Quadrant; ambassador; Autarch; Barisa Prime; blood; Bolian; centimeter; Chateau Cleon; concussion; cortical analeptic; coup d'etat; Dax, Curzon; Dominion cold war; duridium; Engineering extension course; Entebe; expanding energy pulse; Federation; Federation-Tzenkethi border; Federation-Tzenkethi War; Founder; Helaspont Nebula; holosuite; Jefferies tube; kayaking; M'kemas III; ore; power grid; replicator; Risa; sabotage; shield generator; Solais V; tetryon; tricorder; Tzenkethi; Tzenkethi warship; Ulysses, USS; warp plasma conduit; World Series; Yates, Kasidy

External links

Previous episode:
"Facets"
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
Season 3
Next episode:
"The Way of the Warrior"