3.17 Sins Of The Father Despite this harsh attitude, Kurn deliberately goes easy on Worf, giving him sarcastically exaggerated praise, addressing him like a child, and making fun of his diet. Worf eventually snaps and attempts to fight Kurn, which causes him to reveal the truth: he’s actually Worf’s younger brother! What a twist! A twist with no foreshadowing! It turns out Kurn was staying with friends when Worf’s family was killed on Khitomer. Thought dead, he remained ignorant of his brother until he reached the age of ascension, at which point his adoptive parents explained the situation. Naturally, he decided not to do anything with this information for several years, until the Klingon High Council accused Mogh (his and Worf’s father) of aiding the Romulans during the attack on Khitomer that he and his wife died in. With Kurn acting as his bodyguard, Worf denies the charges against his father, while Duras, the child of Mogh’s most hated enemy, accuses Worf of being a disgrace. During a recess, Chancellor K’mpec tries to persuade Worf to drop the case. This makes Worf suspicious since (as he’s often demonstrated) Klingons are notoriously pernickety when it comes to matters of honour. While the Enterprise crew try to prove what actually happened, Kurn receives a note asking him to meet the sender in a dark corridor with limited escape potential. When he gets there, Duras ambushes him and tried to turn him against Worf. When it doesn’t work, he gets some guys to stab him. While, in the council chambers, Picard impresses the Klingons with his theatrical projection, the Enterprise crew discover that the Khitomer logs were tampered with to remove evidence that may exonerate Mogh. All the need is a witness, and they find one of those too: Kahlest, Worf’s nanny. Picard goes to visit Kahlest to try and get her to testify in favour of Mogh, but she refuses. Suddenly, Duras’ guys jump Picard, but in extremely unlikely circumstances he defeats one, while Kahlest kills the other. This changes her mind, and she agrees to testify. When they present Kahlest and her proof (by which we mean, quite probably biased account), the chancellor calls a recess. In a meeting with Picard, Worf, Duras and Kahlest, he reveals that they already know Duras’ father was the traitor, but that the truth would tear the Klingon council apart due to Duras’ political allies. Refusing to allow his father to be a scapegoat, Worf eventually suggests discommendation so that Kurn can be spared. They agree to never speak of this again. Worf is ritually discommended and stripped of his honour, but Kurn remains free in Klingon society, able to one day fight to restore his family’s honour. And then the episode is suddenly over. TNG WTF: This episode barrels along at such a pace that it’s almost possible to miss the strange logical leaps that keep happening. Worf accepts Kurn as his brother with remarkable ease (I guess he noticed they have the same forehead) and Kahlest’s testimony seems like it’d be the final proof they need, when in fact it’s far less helpful than the tampered sensor logs. Still, the Klingon justice system doesn’t make a lot of sense anyway, so we can let it pass. TNG LOL: A lot of Kurn’s fish-out-of-water moments are great, but as quotable lines go, his response to a roast turkey – “How long has this bird been dead? It appears to have been lying in the sun for quite some time.”- is about as good as it gets. Captain’s Log: The glimpses into Klingon society are particularly interesting in this episode, but it’s hard not to get the sense that all of Klingon culture involves shouting about honour and attempting to kill people. Even their assassins have special ritual blades, presumably so that you know someone was specifically trying to assassinate you, rather than offended that you questioned their judgement, or stepped on their side of the pavement or something. Still, it’s nice to get a Worf-centric episode that gives him some good material, and it sets up a few ongoing plots that’ll be mined a lot in the future. Aside from the fact that most of the cast have absolutely nothing to do in the rest of the episode, it’s not bad. Although the abrupt ending is a huge downer. It feels like the first half of a two-parter, but it isn’t! Read James’ review of the previous episode, The Offspring, here. Follow our Twitter feed for faster news and bad jokes right here. And be our Facebook chum here.