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Encyclopedia > The Ship (DS9 episode)
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode
"The Ship"
Episode no.
Prod. code 5x02
Airdate 10-7-1996
Writer(s)
Director
Year
Stardate 50049.3
Episode chronology
Previous "Apocalypse Rising"
Next "Looking for par'Mach in All the Wrong Places"

"The Ship" is the second fifth-season episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. The demise of the titular Jem'Hadar vessel occurs exactly one season later, in the second episode of season six. Image File history File links TheShip. ... Screenwriters, scenarists or script writers, are authors who write the screenplays from which movies and television programs are made. ... A television director is usually responsible for directing the actors and other taped aspects of a television production. ... A year is the time between two recurrences of an event related to the orbit of the Earth around the Sun. ... Stardate is one of the dating conventions used in the fictional Star Trek universe. ... Sisko after learning from Odo that a Changeling has taken Gowrons form, is now in control of the Klingon empire. ... Looking for parMach in All the Wrong Places is a fifth season episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and the 99th of the series. ... Space station Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (ST:DS9 or STDS9 or DS9 for short) is a science fiction television series produced by Paramount and set in the Star Trek universe. ... Ikatika, a JemHadar soldier in 2373 In the fictional Star Trek universe, the JemHadar are the shock troops of the powerful Dominion located in the Gamma Quadrant. ... Rocks and Shoals is the second episode of the sixth seasons opening six-episode story arc, beginning shortly after the events of the previous episode. ...


Quick Overview: Sisko must keep the Jem'Hadar from retaking a Jem'Hadar fighter which has crashed.

While conducting a planetary survey, Sisko and Dax are discussing a mining operation. They feel that, while being far from the supply lines, it is still a good location. Meanwhile O'brien and his subordinate Muniz, nicknamed Quique, are also involved in the survey; even though they tease one another, they seem to have a good working relationship. A ship then crashes on the planet surface. Sisko and Dax use the runabout to beam over to the crash site. Captain Benjamin Lafayette Sisko, played by Avery Brooks, is a Starfleet officer and the main character of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. ... Lieutenant Commander Jadzia Dax (played by Terry Farrell) was a fictional character in the first 6 seasons of the television show Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. ... Miles OBrien Miles Edward OBrien is a character in the fictional Star Trek universe, played by Colm Meaney. ...


The away team discovers the ship to be a Dominion Warship, which has landed upside down and is partially buried. Using a hatch, they enter the ship and find that the crew is dead. Dax discovers that the crew has been dead for several hours, meaning that the crew was already dead when the ship crash landed. O'Brien theorizes that the crew must have died due to a failure of the inertial dampers, causing the crew to be crushed to death instantly. Sisko is determined to get the vessel back to Starfleet so it can be studied, but with the Runabout's tractor beam insufficient to tow the vessel back to DS9, he sends for the Defiant. In the fictional Star Trek universe, the Dominion is a ruthless and militaristic Gamma Quadrant state, consisting of many different races, with ultimate power held by the xenophobic Changelings. ... The USS Rio Grande (NCC-72452), a Danube class runabout. ... For the ship seen in Star Trek: The Original Series The Tholian Web and Star Trek: Enterprises In a Mirror, Darkly, see USS Defiant (NCC-1764). ...


Back on DS9 Odo has arrested Quark and a co-conspirator, none other than Bashir. Odo takes the two to Sisko's office, where Major Kira is waiting for them, and learns that Quark had ordered a shipment of Rigelian Fleaspiders. The Fleaspiders were for Bashir. But as usual, Quark took the the opportunity to acquire more profit. He also smuggled Rigelian Liquid Crystals with the Fleaspider shipment. Kira leaves to take the Defiant to Sisko. In the Star Trek fictional universe, Deep Space Nine (or DS9) is a space station. ... Quark, son of Keldar and Ishka, is a fictional character in the television series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, played by Armin Shimerman. ... Dr. Julian Subatoi Bashir (played by Alexander Siddig) is a fictional character in the science fiction television series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. ... Colonel Kira Nerys was a character on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. ...


Back on the planet, Worf lets Sisko know that they have buried the bodies of the 42 Jem'Hadar soldiers and one Vorta. Hoya alerts Sisko that another warship has come out of warp; it destroys the runabout. Several Jem'Hadar soldiers then beam to the surface and attack. The away team retreats to the warship, and Muniz is shot. But the Jem'Hadar do not follow the away team into the ship. Inside, O'Brien tends to Muniz's injury. Sisko and the others then begin to form a plan. They search the ship, and find it spartan, with very little to provide crew comfort. They do find two headsets, which are for the Vorta and First, with eyepieces that provide a function similar to a viewscreen aboard Starfleet ships. They are then contacted over the ship's communication system by Kilana, the Vorta in command of the other warship. She offers to meet Sisko, each to be escorted by one guard. Ikatika, a JemHadar soldier in 2373 In the fictional Star Trek universe, the JemHadar are the shock troops of the powerful Dominion located in the Gamma Quadrant. ... Weyoun, a high-ranking Vorta. ... Starfleet Command In the fictional universe of Star Trek, Starfleet is the paramilitary defense, research, diplomacy, and exploration force of the United Federation of Planets (UFP) with – as of the late 24th century – hundreds of starships and starbases at its disposal. ...


Sisko agrees to meet her and she tries to be likeable. But she will not allow Sisko to take the vessel, and does not recognize his claim of salvage rights. She offers to take Sisko and his people back to the Federation safely; Sisko refuses. While they are discussing the ship, a Jem'Hadar soldier beams into the damaged warship. O'Brien and Dax find a suspicious device, and the Jem'Hadar deshrouds and attacks them with a knife. Dax is knocked out, and O'Brien is about to be stabbed when the Jem'Hadar is shot by a staggering Muniz.


Sisko and Kilana return to their ships, but things look bad for Muniz. They discover that the Jem'Hadar weapon has had an anticoagulant effect on his wound. Muniz begins to suspect that he will not live, which causes an argument between Worf and O'Brien. Worf believes that Muniz should be told he is going to die, and allowed to prepare himself. O'Brien believes that Muniz's only chance is to keep fighting. Sisko is then contacted again by Kilana and offers to meet her alone and without a guard.


Sisko agrees to meet with her and Kilana acknowledges that there is something aboard the ship that she wants. But the two do not trust one another; Sisko refuses to allow her on the ship, and Kilana refuses to tell him what she wants. Kilana realizes that their negotiations have reached an impasse and beams back to her ship. Soon after, the ship begins to shake from an orbital bombardment. But Sisko realizes that the attack is not directed at the warship, as they could easily destroy the ship with one hit, but is instead meant to psychologically rattle the away team. The crew realizes that what Kilana is looking for is very valuable, and they search for what Kilana is seeking. However, Muniz is not doing well, his condition worsens, and he begins to hallucinate. The crew begins to get tense and irritated with one another. O'Brien and Worf have a brief physical altercation, and Dax responds with sarcasm. Sisko knows that this will not help them, and orders them to pull themselves together and orders Muniz to stay alive.


After ten hours, the bombardment continues and O'Brien has managed to restore main power and helm control. If they can bring the main engines online, they may be able to lift off the planet and escape. O'Brien does his best to bring the main engines back online, but when they try to take off, an overload damages the power circuits and their condition worsens. Muniz has also died, causing silence among the crew. As Dax tries to console Sisko, they notice a drip of liquid fall on the floor (which is actually the ceiling). They look up and realize that the dripping is coming from a Founder who has disguised himself as a bulkhead. It is no longer able to hold its shape, and is dying from injuries it sustained from the accident that killed the crew. As it dies, it cries out loud enough for Kilana and the Jem'Hadar to hear. The Founders are a political entity in the fictional Star Trek universe. ...


Kilana then beams aboard the wrecked ship by herself. She informs the away team that the Jem'Hadar soldiers killed themselves for allowing one of their gods to die. She lets Sisko know that her offer was genuine, she would have allowed Sisko and his crew to leave with the damaged warship. Sisko realizes that Muniz, the runabout crew, and the Jem'Hadar would not have died had he and Kilana trusted each other. He allows her to take a sample of the powdery remains of the Founder. The Defiant arrives shortly after, and tows the warship back to DS9.


Sisko mourns the death of Muniz, Hoya, and the others. Dax tells him that while their deaths were tragic, they knew the risks when they joined Starfleet. And even though the warship cost Sisko the lives of five people, it will help to save thousands of others. O'Brien is holding a vigil over Muniz's casket. Worf comes in and tells him he is performing the Ak'Voh ritual, a Klingon practice for keeping the dead safe from predators as they make their journey to StovoKor. He offers to stay with O'Brien to protect Muniz. O'Brien responds by saying that he's sure Quique would have liked that. This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims. ...


Notes

Worf's explanation of the Klingon ritual of guarding the body of a deceased warrior from predators is in direct contradiction to the Klingon funeral rites witnessed in Heart of Glory, where it was remarked that the bodies of deceased warriors were "just a shell", and were to be disposed of at will. Heart of Glory is a first season episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, first broadcast March 21, 1988. ...

See also

Preceded by:
"Apocalypse Rising"
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episodes Followed by:
"Looking for par'Mach in All the Wrong Places"

A Time to Stand is the first episode of season six of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. ... Rocks and Shoals is the second episode of the sixth seasons opening six-episode story arc, beginning shortly after the events of the previous episode. ... Sisko after learning from Odo that a Changeling has taken Gowrons form, is now in control of the Klingon empire. ... Looking for parMach in All the Wrong Places is a fifth season episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and the 99th of the series. ...

External links



 

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