The Square Triangle features the old love triangle
in one story line, but the second story line is of course about SHADO, and the two story lines intersect near the end of the episode. The overall theme, if there is one, is one of plans that dont work out quite the way one expects. This one has been a tough one to write about. I write something, I read it, I ditch it because it sucks. I think part of the problem is that Im having trouble figuring out what I want to focus on, plus the parts of the story are a bit disjointed and dont lend themselves to looking at them in sequence. Well see how this thing goes this time. The story begins with a woman driving alone along a country road when a mans apparently menacingly hand reaches out of the back seat of the car. It quickly becomes obvious that she knows him very well. The SHADO part of the plot begins with a UFO sighting. Its termination is southern England. And what is Waterman doing back flying interceptors? Was his promotion to Skydiver Captain a figment of Pauls imagination, too? I guess if Im having trouble with this, the place to start is Straker. When Straker gets the termination for the UFOs course, he tells Paul he will give the attack order as he performs some quick calculations. Its apparent to that he has some plan he wants to implement. Paul and everyone else is surprised when Straker gives orders to not fire on the incoming UFO. As a witness to their faith in their Commander they do follow orders, even if they are puzzled by them. Straker seems just a wee bit anxious about his plan. Alec arrives and Straker looks a bit like the cat that just ate the canary. Alec suggests they invite the aliens in for drinks as a way to question Strakers decision. Its a set up so Straker can explain his plan to us. His objective is to get more information on the aliens by capturing a UFO intact and before deterioration sets in. I think this scene gives us a measure of the closeness between Alec and Straker in an indirect way. Earlier, when Paul verified Strakers orders not to fire on the UFO, Strakers response was curt. When Alec made a smart remark about those orders (making him a smart alec! OLD slang The day my parents met, my mother told my grandmother she had met a smart alec.), Straker invites him into his office and discusses the decision with him. Alec points out that Straker has let a potential killer loose by letting the UFO land. Straker says its in a remote area, the danger must be slight. Were getting a bit here about the morality of individual choices. Right behind this we get into a side story about a game warden who encounters the alien. The game warden is killed to underline Alecs point about the danger involved in Strakers gambit. The alien uses the game wardens body and destroys the UFO in an attempt to hide his survival. I was puzzled about this action at first. My guess is that once he had broken the glass in his helmet he couldnt go back into space and that he knows SHADO has to be hunting for him. Paul finds the UFO, but it has been destroyed. He calls in his find. There is a moment when Strakers disappointment shows. He glances at Alec, who understands the reason for his reaction. Then it is back to business. Straker orders Paul to investigate. Straker and Alec retreat to the office, discussing why the UFO was destroyed. Heres another hint about Alecs status with Straker. He just walks in and sits down. Unless Im mistaken (which happens with alarming regularity), Alec is the only person who presumes to just walk in and sit without invitation. Paul figures out that the body in the wreck is not an alien. Straker seems a little worried. His attempt to learn more about the aliens has failed and now an alien is on the loose somewhere. Alec was right. Paul finds the dog and evidence of a struggle and reports it to Straker. Paul manages to track the alien with the help of the game wardens dog and follows him to the cottage. In the other plot line, we find out that Liz and Cass are plotting to kill Lizs husband. He is being lured to the cottage and will be shot as a supposed intruder. Its obvious that it is Cass idea and he is pushing Liz into it. His plan seems incredibly elaborate. The picture that emerges of Liz is that of an aging trophy wife. Shes still attractive, but past the youthful blush of beauty. Her husband is the stereotypical pompous Englishman and talks down to her. However, when he calls her, he seems to have some genuine affection for her and she seems to rethink her actions. Her downfall is her lover, though. He is a scheming scumbag and pressures her to go through with the murder. Oh, hell be right there, but he makes sure she is the one holding the gun. Why is she involved with him? I imagine she was feeling a bit neglected and unsure of herself as she gets older. Cass showers Liz with attention and makes her feel young and beautiful again. He is a manipulator and doesnt really care for her. The fly in the ointment of their scheme is that the alien shows up and gets murdered instead of Lizs husband. It becomes readily apparent to me that Liz has made a deal with the devil. When Liz shoots the alien and they realize the mistake, Cass smacks her and runs, leaving her to face the consequences alone. Paul arrives shortly, hot on the trail of the alien. He tells Liz to get her coat and they take her out. We find out theyve grabbed Cass, too. They are taken to SHADO for a little amnesia treatment. Lizs husband arrives at the cottage and finds Paul. Yes, his wife was expecting him. Yes, he keeps a gun there. The only person he knows for sure who knew about the gun is his wife. Paul becomes suspicious of just what was going on there. Paul gets high marks for figuring things out. I love it when we pop back to Straker finishing his little talk with Liz and Cass. Hes been a thoughtful host and supplied them with coffee. The general public must never know about the aliens. SHADO is going to help them forget their horrible experience with an amnesia drug. Its perfectly harmless and, oh, and its tasteless, too. LOL Straker returns to his office to find Alec and Paul waiting for him. He realizes something is wrong. He hears about Pauls theory that Liz and Cass were planning to murder her husband. There may be just a hint of Straker being scandalized. Its a question of moral responsibility to Paul and Alec. Straker is sarcastic about their concerns. What are they to do? They cant prove anything. They just erased the past 12 hours. Straker acts as though the events are none of their concern and sends Paul and Alec back to work. Then in one of those weird Straker things, as soon as Paul and Alec are gone, he expresses his moral outrage by having Liz and Cass almost thrown out. And then there is the eerie ending with Liz standing looking at a headstone over the credits. I cant believe shell be happy with her choice. Will Cass murder her later? Will he blackmail her? Shell wish she hadnt ever seen him. Diorite |
In a message dated 11/11/2007 9:09:16 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, [hidden email] writes: And then there is the eerie ending with Liz standing looking at a headstone over the credits. I can’t believe she’ll be happy with her choice. Will Cass murder her later? Will he blackmail her? She’ll wish she hadn’t ever seen him. Diorite Agreed, but I thought that was the best part of the episode. And I kind of like the idea the Straker had to make a human decision about letting these people go, knowing what they were planning. It would have been hard for me to even consider doing that, but Straker had to look at the bigger picture and possibly sacrifice one life for many. For me, it was the moral decision that makes it a really good episode. Wendy ************************************** See what's new at http://www.aol.com [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by Diorite Gabbro
I really love the ending of this one. It's another one of those dark
endings that are usually so rarely seen and one reason I love this show so much. When the biggest problem I have with this episode is that I don't get to see quite enough of my favorite SHADO people, it can't be too bad. When I watch TV or a movie, I tend to think too much. I'll be thinking back about something that happened earlier or trying to come up with a theory while things are going on, and then I'll realize that I've missed something important. Maybe that's what always happens in this episode because I never caught that the alien had destroyed his own ship. It makes a lot more sense now. I always wondered why it had disintegrated so quickly. This is a rather random and insignificant observation, but the map they use in this episode has its coordinates read (y,x) for some reason. Just something I noticed. Here's a question: why would Liz and Cass go with the SHADO guys? If they showed them their SHADO ID (although Liz didn't wait to see any at all), wouldn't they be suspicious, never having heard of SHADO before? And why are they wearing their little SHADO logos anyway? I think it's interesting how, at the end, Straker disapproves of the suspected plot, but for once, there's nothing he can do about it not really. Knowing the writing style of the series, I was not surprised at all that Liz did kill her husband (then again, there is no actual proof of it), but I wouldn't think that she would have gone through with it after the mess-up the first time and finding out what it's like to kill someone. By the way, doesn't The Responsibility Seat come after Ordeal? No problem with doing this one first, but I don't want you to have accidentally skipped it since I have some questions about that one that I've been waiting until your comments and review to ask. >Alpharaptor |
--- Alpharaptor <[hidden email]> wrote:
> Here's a question: why would Liz and Cass go with > the SHADO guys? If > they showed them their SHADO ID (although Liz didn't > wait to see any > at all), wouldn't they be suspicious, never having > heard of SHADO > before? And why are they wearing their little SHADO > logos anyway? My guess is that Cass and Liz were both pretty shook up when they saw the alien. That he was a surprise is an understatement. Then the SHADO guys showed up acting like authorities. The general tendency, particularly back then, would be to go along with what you were told. > By the way, doesn't The Responsibility Seat come > after Ordeal? No > problem with doing this one first, but I don't want > you to have > accidentally skipped it since I have some questions > about that one > that I've been waiting until your comments and > review to ask. > > >Alpharaptor I'm going through the US/A&E DVDs in order. After you asked, I noticed that The Responsibility Seat is listed after Ordeal for several possible orders, but it doesn't come up in the US/A&E DVDs until disk 5 of 8. Diorite |
Administrator
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> I'm going through the US/A&E DVDs in order. After you
> asked, I noticed that The Responsibility Seat is > listed after Ordeal for several possible orders, but > it doesn't come up in the US/A&E DVDs until disk 5 of > 8. Heh, heh... well there seems to be many possible UFO episode orders, although there is no real official order. A&E had to switch some episodes around compared to the UK DVD order because A&E hadn't received all the episodes in time for the release of their first UFO DVD set (at least, that is what I heard). Marc |
In reply to this post by Diorite Gabbro
"Here's a question: why would Liz and Cass go with
> the SHADO guys? If > they showed them their SHADO ID" I've always thought that the "SHADO ID" passes were probably MI5 or MI6 ID's. I'm sure the English members would have a better idea about which one. Or maybe by SHADO's time in the "future" there would have been something different but equally well known. Their cover for incidents was often "military manoeuvres". Whatever the case I'm pretty sure that if people in military uniforms armed to the teeth came busting in my door, I'd do whatever they told me. We members of the British Commonwealth don't have the same rights and freedoms as the US Constitution gives it's citizens and as a people in general, we aren't as likely to question or stand up to authority. In Australia for example we don't have "The right to remain silent", or refuse DNA or blood tests etc. And as Diorite says, it was also a different time. Lyn [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by Diorite Gabbro
In a message dated 11/13/2007 8:17:24 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, [hidden email] writes: In Australia for example we don't have "The right to remain silent", or refuse DNA or blood tests etc. If you are a person of interest in a crime you can be picked up by an officer for questioning without being arrested and remaining silent can still lead to an arrest. And while there is no way a court can order you to speak, they can order those tests you mentioned and at that point you can't refuse. Just call me a very jaded US legal assistant. Beyond that, all I will say is that Canadians do not have that right either. They also own more guns and don't lock their doors. Their crime rate is 75% less than ours per capita. If you feel safe walking alone in Sidney at 3:00 am, then all I can say is that no one I know would do the same in Philadelphia. Wendy ************************************** See what's new at http://www.aol.com [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by Alpharaptor
--- In [hidden email], "Alpharaptor" <segara0@...> wrote:
<snip> > I think it's interesting how, at the end, Straker disapproves of the > suspected plot, but for once, there's nothing he can do about it not > really. Knowing the writing style of the series, I was not surprised > at all that Liz did kill her husband (then again, there is no actual > proof of it), but I wouldn't think that she would have gone through > with it after the mess-up the first time and finding out what it's > like to kill someone. <snip> > >Alpharaptor If she was given the amnesia drug and it worked, she *wouldn't* know what it's like to kill someone. It would all be new to her again. Lorraine |
--- In [hidden email], "montgolfier100" <airtime25@...> wrote:
> If she was given the amnesia drug and it worked, she *wouldn't* know > what it's like to kill someone. It would all be new to her again. > Lorraine You're rightI didn't think about that. >Alpharaptor |
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