228 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
228 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Newsgroups: rec.arts.startrek
|
||
Distribution: rec
|
||
Subject: Lynch's Spoiler Review: "The Nth Degree"
|
||
Summary: Strawberry potatoes climbing Mt. Everest in tears!
|
||
Keywords: TNG, Barclay, HALgernon
|
||
|
||
WARNING: The following article contains critical plot information relative to
|
||
this week's TNG episode, "The Nth Degree". Those not wishing to be privy to
|
||
said information ahead of viewing should therefore forbear.
|
||
|
||
This one was AWFULLY nice. A slightly disappointing ending, but the rest may
|
||
make up for it.
|
||
|
||
Bringing Barclay back was definitely a plus. But before I go into a lot of
|
||
details, here's a synopsis of "Flowers for HALgernon"...no wait, that's not
|
||
the title...
|
||
|
||
The Enterprise has come to fix the Argus Array, a cluster of subspace
|
||
telescopes at the edge of Federation territory. After they find a small probe
|
||
that is presumably responsible for the Array's computer shutdown, Geordi and
|
||
a much improved Barclay head out in a shuttle to check it over. While they're
|
||
doing this, it flares up: Geordi is unharmed, but Reg is knocked unconscious.
|
||
|
||
He seems to be fine once they get back to sickbay. The situation, however, is
|
||
not: the probe starts moving towards them, they're too close to use photon
|
||
torpedoes, they can't outrun it, and phasers don't seem to have any effect on
|
||
it. (It's also sending out some kind of energy field which is in all
|
||
probability threatening.) The day ends up being saved by Barclay, who
|
||
channels warp power into shields in a previously unknown way, and strengthens
|
||
the shields enough for the ship to be able to fire photon torpedoes safely and
|
||
destroy the probe.
|
||
|
||
But Barclay's intuition, intelligence and confidence don't stop there. A
|
||
short time later, he proposes reprogramming the Argus central computer
|
||
virtually singlehandedly in two days, rather than fixing each reactor
|
||
individually (a task of at least 2-3 weeks' length). He gives a virtuoso
|
||
acting performance, wowing both Beverly and Deanna, and later makes a pass at
|
||
Deanna in 10-Forward. Finally, Geordi finds him arguing grand unification
|
||
theories with Albert Einstein in the holodeck (and holding his own, at the
|
||
very least). This is enough to set him worrying, and he takes Barclay to
|
||
sickbay, where Beverly finds that his brainpower has increased incredibly,
|
||
making him "the most advanced human being who has ever lived."
|
||
|
||
Since Barclay's hardly done anything that could be considered menacing, Picard
|
||
decides to let him do his work. This only changes when Barclay decides the
|
||
normal computer interface is too slow to let him stabilize the array properly
|
||
(which is true, as the reactors are about to all go critical), and hastily
|
||
constructs in the holodeck a device which allows him to directly patch into
|
||
the computer. In effect, he becomes the Enterprise computer--and by the time
|
||
it's clear what has happened, his mind has expanded enough that forcing him
|
||
back into his own body would be fatal.
|
||
|
||
Geordi, after hurried consultations with the bridge crew, gets to work on
|
||
rigging a bypass that would at least let them move the ship to a starbase.
|
||
Barclay, however, decides to use his newfound knowledge of speed and distance
|
||
to manipulate subspace, creating a never before seen disturbance. He ignores
|
||
Deanna's pleas to stop, and blocks Geordi's attempts just in time. He then
|
||
manages to repel the attempt by Worf and a security team to forcibly remove
|
||
him, and sends the Enterprise hurtling smack into the center of the
|
||
disturbance he's created.
|
||
|
||
After a major shake-up, the Enterprise emerges right by the center of the
|
||
Galaxy. The face of an alien appears, babbling nonsense, but a reconstituted
|
||
Barclay explains: their race, the Cytherians, also explore the Galaxy, but
|
||
they do it by bringing other civilizations to them, rather than traveling
|
||
themselves. In effect, they "reprogrammed" Barclay in such a manner as to let
|
||
him bring the Enterprise here--but they're benevolent, and only want to
|
||
exchange information for a while. Several days later, the Enterprise returns
|
||
to its own space intact, and Barclay settles down to being "plain old Barclay
|
||
again", with Deanna's and Geordi's help.
|
||
|
||
Well, I guess that should do. Now for my usual random ramblings.
|
||
|
||
As many times as I've said that I don't think action is obligatory for good
|
||
Trek, it was nice to see some here. I think that by not overusing it, the TNG
|
||
powers-that-be make it more pleasing when it shows up, at least when it's done
|
||
correctly. And they certainly did so here: this had at least one
|
||
edge-of-your-seat commercial break, namely the last one. To be honest,
|
||
though, the next-to-last one ("Yes, Commander. It's me.") had me riveted as
|
||
well.
|
||
|
||
It also had possibly the LONGEST teaser I've ever seen in TNG--a full 7+
|
||
minutes, not counting opening credits. Even more surprisingly than that, it
|
||
was made up of two long scenes. Most long teasers have one fairly long scene
|
||
(e.g. "First Contact"), often coupled with a very short one (e.g. "The
|
||
Defector"). This had two long ones: Barclay as Cyrano, and then the
|
||
probe/shuttle bit. This isn't really a good or a bad point, but just an
|
||
observation. I think it's interesting, anyway.
|
||
|
||
Oh, and about Cyrano. After the debacle that was the Scrooge bit in "Devil's
|
||
Due", it was nice to see something else of this nature used properly, and with
|
||
a strong connection to the remainder of the show. Mainly, the fact that
|
||
this was all the theater and not the holodeck was important to show Barclay's
|
||
growth (both at the start, and then later once he's been altered), and was
|
||
also VERY interesting on its own merits. (Beverly running an acting workshop?
|
||
Well, now we know what she does with her off-duty time; and given her dancing
|
||
past, I think it makes a lot of sense. Fun, too. :-) ) It also, as little
|
||
more than an observation, had Marina Sirtis looking the most appealing I think
|
||
I've ever seen her on TNG. That blue dress (not the usual off-center cleavage
|
||
model, but a little more like what she wears to bed) is just stunning. Mmph.
|
||
Anyway, back to the show...
|
||
|
||
It was an absolute pleasure to see Dwight Schultz back. A-Team or no, he's a
|
||
fine actor (anyone here actually go see "The Long Walk Home"? I haven't, but
|
||
in the clips I've seen of it, Schultz is magnificent.), and Barclay is an
|
||
equally interesting character. Again, he got to essentially be two different
|
||
people: himself, and the altered Barclay (as opposed to the real vs. holo
|
||
Barclay in "Hollow Pursuits"). And his computer-Barclay was magnificent.
|
||
Whoever did the voice of HAL 9000 should be very, very proud--and flattered,
|
||
too.
|
||
|
||
Yes, there were a bunch of 2001 similarities once Barclay had become the
|
||
computer, from the "I'm afraid I can't do that, sir" [just missing the
|
||
Jean-Luc there :-) ] to Geordi carefully removing the video and audio pickups
|
||
from the conference room to avoid Barclay overhearing them. Suits me just
|
||
fine, that. Those who loathed 2001 may object to all of this, but I think
|
||
that it stood up nicely on its own, and was a great tip of the hat for those
|
||
who picked up on it (namely, most viewers, I suspect).
|
||
|
||
There were also, as I alluded in my alternate title, some similarities to
|
||
Daniel Keyes' wonderful _Flowers for Algernon_. For anyone who's read it, the
|
||
similarities are obvious. For those who haven't, I won't spoil it, aside from
|
||
saying that it too deals with a sudden, exponential leap in intelligence, and
|
||
is among the most touching SF novels I've ever read. Go read it.
|
||
|
||
The direction was pretty good--surprising, considering that the only other
|
||
episode Robert Legato's directed was "Menage a Tripe...er...Troi". One shot
|
||
in particular which stood out was during the probe chase sequence: after
|
||
phasers have been made as powerful as possible, we see a shot which looks like
|
||
it was shot from about a foot to Worf's left and a few feet above his head,
|
||
cutting from Picard's "Fire" over to Worf's hand (not all of him, just his
|
||
hand) firing the phasers. I liked it a lot. Many of the shots of Barclay in
|
||
the holodeck were terrific as well.
|
||
|
||
The visuals were stunning, but that isn't a surprise. Robert Legato, the
|
||
aforementioned director, is also the Visual Effects Supervisor for about half
|
||
of TNG's shows to date, so it's a given that he'd play to his strengths while
|
||
directing. In particular, the entire "Enterprise going through the
|
||
disturbance" sequence was, to quote Zaphod Beeblebrox, "Wild". 'nuff said.
|
||
(The music during many of these sequences seemed well above par as well, at
|
||
least to me.)
|
||
|
||
The plot was fine, although I do have a slight bone to pick with the ending.
|
||
Not with what actually happened (superbeings or no, by the time Barclay had
|
||
gotten that far we needed something like that), but it seemed rushed. Oh,
|
||
well. But Barclay's growth and the crew's growing wariness of it was very
|
||
well put together, and had me engrossed.
|
||
|
||
One splendid bit of characterization beyond Barclay, and Bev's theatrical
|
||
leanings (and the Troi bit which I mention below): Geordi's off-the-cuff
|
||
comment to Barclay in the shuttle about this kind of thing being the reason he
|
||
joined Starfleet in the first place. Now THAT's the sort of thing I like to
|
||
see.
|
||
|
||
Some random thoughts:
|
||
|
||
--Barclay's argument with Einstein was interesting, and I'm willing to ignore
|
||
Geordi's statement that most of the blackboard's stuff was well over his head
|
||
despite the fact that it was elementary quantum mechanics because we only saw
|
||
about a tenth of the board, and because the elementary QM that was there was
|
||
100% correct, at least from my standpoint.
|
||
|
||
--A rare treat was getting to see Troi's slightly evil streak. After she
|
||
mentioned Barclay making a pass at her at the conference (something which did
|
||
seem a bit out of place, though not much), Riker later asks, "You said he made
|
||
a pass at you, but you failed to mention whether he was successful." (Note to
|
||
those who are reading this w/o having seen the episode: he wasn't.) Deanna
|
||
just smiles a bit and walks away. Confusing Riker is such a fun pastime. :-)
|
||
|
||
--We get to see the Enterprise going in reverse, something I don't believe
|
||
we've ever seen before. So much for "Star Trekking". ;-)
|
||
|
||
--Did you notice that Barclay's supposedly messianic belief that his powers
|
||
were given to him for some great purpose actually turned out to be right?
|
||
|
||
--It's a good thing this week's show was good, 'cos I'm right in the middle of
|
||
Eddings's _The Seeress of Kell_ and highly resented being dragged away from
|
||
it. At least the interruption was worth my while. :-)
|
||
|
||
And finally, a bunch of quotes, since this episode had a plethora of them.
|
||
|
||
[Riker asks how Barclay managed to do that to the shields}
|
||
"Well, I...[about 2-4 lines of complete technobabble]..."
|
||
"Mmm-hmm, I can see that..."
|
||
|
||
[Barclay's orders while creating the interface, verbatim. God, I loved this
|
||
scene.]
|
||
"...Create a standard alphanumeric console positioned for the left hand. Now,
|
||
an iconic display console positioned for the right hand. Tie both consoles
|
||
into the Enterprise main computer core utilizing neural scan interface."
|
||
"There is no such device on file."
|
||
[looking mildly annoyed] "No problem--here's how you BUILD it..."
|
||
[I just love that one...]
|
||
|
||
[Barclay's said that there are no limits to the ship's speed, and he'll take
|
||
them to all sorts of new places]
|
||
"Oh, shit...we've created an artificial Traveller..." --me
|
||
|
||
Barclay, when asked how he feels after it's all over:
|
||
"Smaller."
|
||
|
||
Gee, I guess I enjoyed this one, huh? :-) The ending seemed a tad
|
||
disappointing, but the rest of it was just so damned good that I'll forgive
|
||
nearly all of it.
|
||
|
||
Anyway, here are the numbers:
|
||
|
||
Plot: 9.5. A tick off for the ending.
|
||
Plot Handling: 9.5. See above--the former for the superbeing, here for the
|
||
rushed nature of it.
|
||
Characterization: 10, but it should be higher.
|
||
Technical: 10.
|
||
|
||
TOTAL: 10. Certainly the best one since "First Contact". Very nice.
|
||
|
||
NEXT WEEK: A rerun of "The Loss". No, thank you.
|
||
|
||
Tim Lynch (Cornell's first Astronomy B.A.; one of many Caltech grad students)
|
||
BITNET: tlynch@citjuliet
|
||
INTERNET: tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
|
||
UUCP: ...!ucbvax!tlynch%juliet.caltech.edu@hamlet.caltech.edu
|
||
"Yes, Commander...it's me."
|
||
--Reginald Barclay
|
||
--
|
||
Copyright 1991, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...
|
||
|
||
|