260 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
260 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING: The following post contains critical plot information relevant to
|
||
this week's TNG episode, "Remember Me". Therefore, anyone not wishing advance
|
||
knowledge of such information is hereby advised to duck.
|
||
|
||
Last chance.
|
||
|
||
I see. I'm expected to sleep tonight, am I?
|
||
|
||
This was one of the weirdest TNG episodes I've ever seen...and it was damned
|
||
good, too. I'll do my usual ranting 'n' raving after a synopsis. And going
|
||
into the synop, I'm wishing myself good luck in keeping it short. Here goes:
|
||
|
||
The Enterprise is docked at Starbase 133, and Bev greets her old friend Dr.
|
||
Dalen Quaice, who's departing the base after his wife's death (the Enterprise
|
||
will be taking him home when they depart). After getting him settled, Bev
|
||
thinks about his comments on losing everyone he knows, and goes to see Wesley.
|
||
Wes is in Engineering, working on some warpfield experiments. As Bev watches,
|
||
Wes tinkers a little, and then there's a bright, completely unexpected flash.
|
||
There doesn't seem to be any lasting effect, though, and we see the ship
|
||
depart the base.
|
||
|
||
The next morning, Bev goes to Quaice's quarters to invite him to breakfast, but
|
||
after he doesn't answer the ring, she enters--and finds neither him nor his
|
||
belongings. Further, the computer claims that no such person is on board.
|
||
She calls Worf, who is apparently not aware of Quaice's presence either, but he
|
||
agrees to start a search. Stranger still, Picard doesn't remember seeing any
|
||
mention of his visit, despite Bev's insistence that she sent the electronic
|
||
paperwork about it to him weeks ago. Even more bizarre, the starbase claims to
|
||
have no record of Quaice's existence--and he worked on the base for SIX YEARS.
|
||
Then, as if that weren't enough, O'Brien, whom we saw beam Quaice on board,
|
||
doesn't remember doing so--but does remember Bev coming in alone, looking
|
||
around, saying "Thank you" and leaving. And, of course, there's no transporter
|
||
trace of Quaice's existence, either.
|
||
|
||
While Worf, Riker and others start looking to see if the ship's somehow been
|
||
tampered with, Bev checks O'Brien to see if he's all right. He's fine, but Bev
|
||
finds that Drs. Hill and Selar, and four other medical personnel are gone as
|
||
well--and they've all been on board for months. After she reports this to
|
||
Picard, the two of them proceed to Engineering, where Wes talks about his
|
||
experiment. He'd been experimenting with Kosinski's warpfield equations, and
|
||
when he tried to create them (i.e. make a stable warp-bubble), it destabilized.
|
||
While a bubble could theoretically have swept up Dr. Quaice, it was limited to
|
||
Engineering, so it can't be the culprit--and there's no way it could alter
|
||
computers and memories like that either.
|
||
|
||
Bev goes back to sickbay--and finds it completely empty. When she reports the
|
||
absence of her staff to the bridge, they seem unsurprised--after all, says
|
||
Data, she's never had one. And the complete crew assigned to the ship only
|
||
numbers 230. As Bev reacts with somewhat understandable shock, Picard takes
|
||
her aside and begins expressing concerns for her mental state. He believes
|
||
her, and even sends the ship back to SB 133 based solely on her plea, but she
|
||
agrees to talk to Troi.
|
||
|
||
Then, not much later, Bev's in sickbay, when suddenly a bright vortex appears
|
||
out of nowhere, blowing papers and books everywhere, and nearly sucking Bev in.
|
||
Geordi, however, looks for it after it disappears and finds no trace of it--or
|
||
any evidence that it ever existed. By now, an analysis has shown that there
|
||
are no malfunctions--but now the complete crew only numbers 114. Worse yet,
|
||
when Bev suggests working with Worf on something, she finds that no one knows
|
||
whom she's talking about. She asks Deanna if she's going mad, and Deanna
|
||
comforts her, telling her that if it turns out this is all a mistake, all that
|
||
happens is that they're a little late at their next destination.
|
||
|
||
Bev goes to find Wes in Engineering--fortunately, he's still there. She tells
|
||
him that they've got to find someone who can help--someone who understands all
|
||
about warp-bubbles. Unfortunately, Kosinski's no help, and they're his damned
|
||
equations. However, Wes mentions that Kosinski's "assistant", the Traveller,
|
||
might be able to assist--but no one knows where, or even _if_, he is. The two
|
||
of them head up to talk to Picard--but only Bev gets as far as the turbolift.
|
||
Now truly panicked, she runs to the lift and goes to the bridge, finding a
|
||
sole occupant--Picard.
|
||
|
||
Picard has no memory of any of the people she mentions (Riker, Data, Troi,
|
||
O'Brien, Worf, and Wesley), insists that the ship's "never needed a crew
|
||
before", and doesn't remember the Traveller. To make her feel better, he
|
||
agrees to have his vital signs continually monitored, and the computer starts
|
||
talking about them continuously in the background. She promises not to forget
|
||
any of them, and to try to get them back. She tells Picard that she's got
|
||
something to say to him--but his seat is suddenly empty, and the computer is
|
||
silent. Then, the vortex appears again, and Bev again just manages to avoid
|
||
being sucked in. However, as we see her starting to recover from the vortex's
|
||
influence, we hear Geordi and Wes trying to maintain something--but then they
|
||
fail, and the vortex (in reality, a gate they tried to open) collapses. Wes
|
||
gives up, saying they'll never get Bev back now. But a voice says "It's not
|
||
over, Wesley...", and the Traveller phases in. "There's still a way."
|
||
|
||
The Traveller, on board the _real_ Enterprise, says that Bev is still alive,
|
||
for as long as she THINKS she is. It would seem that a warp-bubble did capture
|
||
someone--her; and while inside, Bev's thoughts created the reality she's
|
||
currently in. He cannot go in and get her, any more than he can enter her
|
||
thoughts, but together, he and Wes might be able to open a gateway. (However,
|
||
she'll have to choose to go through it.)
|
||
|
||
Meanwhile, Bev tries to reason things out, but gets nowhere. She tries to
|
||
contact the Traveller's race, and then orders a course to Tau Alpha C, that
|
||
race's homeworld. But as she says "Engage", she finds that the planet has
|
||
vanished from the computer's starfield. As the real ship heads back to SB 133,
|
||
and Wes begins to rework the equations, Bev tries to raise the starbase and
|
||
finds she cannot. She calls up the viewscreen, but sees only a mist outside,
|
||
which the computer describes as a mass-energy field 705 meters in diameter.
|
||
She continues her enquiries, and finds that according to the computer, the
|
||
known universe is a spheroid that is only 705 meters in diameter.
|
||
|
||
The Enterprise arrives at the starbase and begins to assume the _precise_
|
||
location and position they had when the bubble formed. The Traveller senses
|
||
the bubble, and Wes sees it again on his panel, but then the Traveller
|
||
shudders slightly, and says that the bubble's collapsing.
|
||
|
||
Bev calls up a graphic of the universe, and when she finds it looks exactly
|
||
like the schematic she saw in Engineering of the warp-bubble, realizes that
|
||
she's trapped inside it herself. Then there's a sudden hull breach--when she
|
||
investigates, she finds that reality is shrinking further; and she's only got
|
||
4 minutes 17 seconds left. As the Enterprise reestablishes the exact
|
||
coordinates, Bev theorizes that her thoughts created this reality, but she
|
||
can't figure out what to do next.
|
||
|
||
With about three minutes left, the Traveller starts phasing--and Bev realizes
|
||
while talking to the computer that the vortex she saw must have been the
|
||
gateway out of this reality. She decides to go to where the bubble originally
|
||
established itself, in Engineering, traveling just to deck 36 when she finds
|
||
the lift won't go directly to Engineeering.
|
||
|
||
By this time, both the Traveller AND Wesley are phasing, and the gateway is
|
||
beginning to form, but now time's running short. Seconds after Bev leaves the
|
||
lift, it vanishes, and now she starts outrunning entropy. She makes it to
|
||
Engineering, and manages to dive through the gate just as the bubble vanishes
|
||
entirely. She embraces Picard, thanks the Traveller, and clings to her
|
||
somewhat exhausted son. And all is as it should be.
|
||
|
||
Short. Yeah. Right. Oh, well. Anyway, now for Tim's Random Occasionally
|
||
Crunchy-In-Milk Ramblings:
|
||
|
||
God, this was good. I'm sure this show will get a fair amount of bashing from
|
||
the Anti-Crusher League, since center stage is occupied primarily by Bev, and
|
||
the rest mostly by Wes. However, in this case I don't think they have any
|
||
ground to stand on.
|
||
|
||
Gates is, admittedly, one of the weaker link's in TNG's acting chain in
|
||
general, but she gave one of the best performances I have EVER seen from her
|
||
here. There was only one scene which I felt she erred in even slightly (which
|
||
I'll go into later), but even that was just a slight overreaction. She can so
|
||
act.
|
||
|
||
Wil did a good job too, and Eric Menyuk's Traveller was nicely understated, I
|
||
thought. Everyone else did a good job with the small amount of time they had.
|
||
Even Marina, who had only one big scene, namely comforting Bev, did well--and
|
||
for once, Troi was written properly.
|
||
|
||
On to non-acting topics. This was a very solid plot, with no real loopholes in
|
||
sight. I have one small quibble: namely, if the phantom Enterprise was
|
||
created from Bev's thoughts, how did any of them (like Wes) know anything she
|
||
didn't? However, that can easily be rationalized out, or just plain
|
||
"suspension-of-disbelief" 'ed out, since there was a rather prominent dose
|
||
of unreality permeating the entire show.
|
||
|
||
The director, Cliff Bole (whom you might remember from both parts of "The Best
|
||
of Both Worlds"), together with Lee Sheldon (never heard of him/her), who wrote
|
||
this, did an absolutely magnificent job of keeping the audience guessing. I
|
||
know that I was completely baffled through the first two acts, and only had a
|
||
dim idea of exactly what was happening before the Traveller cleared things up.
|
||
Now, in many cases that's a bad thing--but here, it's precisely how I was
|
||
supposed to react. I'd definitely believe that I was meant to be whimpering in
|
||
confusion by the time pity was taken on me. Don't worry, I was. :-) However,
|
||
after the initial "what the HELL?" feeling was removed, everything STILL HELD
|
||
UP. And that, after all, is at least as important as the mystery.
|
||
|
||
The mystery, though, was really well done--I can't emphasize this enough. It
|
||
had me curious (and more than slightly uneasy/off-balance, as it was meant to)
|
||
to an extent I haven't seen in a "mysterious" TNG episode since "Conspiracy"
|
||
aired all those shows ago. In both cases, things were not what they seemed--
|
||
and in both cases, that was conveyed to us beautifully.
|
||
|
||
And now, as I mentioned before, the one scene which I felt was a tad
|
||
overdone. I'll actually quote most of it, because I like the thing--and
|
||
besides, I went to all this trouble to transcribe it. :-) Bev is now on the
|
||
near-empty bridge, and ends up having to quickly describe some of the bridge
|
||
crew to the confused Picard (having earlier described Worf as "the big guy
|
||
who never smiles"): She mentions, in fairly rapid order,
|
||
|
||
"Will Riker, your first officer! He's...he's very good at poker! Loves to
|
||
cook...he listens to jazz music, plays the trombone!"
|
||
"Commander Data, the android who sits at Ops! DREAMS of being human, never
|
||
gets the punchline of a joke!"
|
||
"Deanna Troi, your ship's counselor--half Betazoid, loves chocolate. The
|
||
arrival of her mother makes you shudder!"
|
||
|
||
and then proceeds with:
|
||
|
||
"O'Brien, Geordi, Worf, Wesley--my _son_! They have all been the living,
|
||
breathing backbone of this ship for over three years! They deserve more than
|
||
to be shrugged off--brushed aside, just pinched out of existence like that!
|
||
They all do. They deserve some honor." (Note: due to my horrible handwriting
|
||
and the fact that I wrote this in a hurry, I'm not sure that last word is
|
||
correct.)
|
||
|
||
Now, most of this I liked a lot (particularly the bit about Lwaxana making
|
||
Picard shudder :-) ), and I thought Bev did a good job playing half-hysterical.
|
||
However, I thought the last two sentences were a little bit of overkill, and
|
||
they blunted the impact...but only marginally. (I also think that some of this
|
||
phrasing is an apt capsule description of TNG.) Still, if that's the weakest
|
||
scene the show had, it's in very good shape.
|
||
|
||
Now for some really quick comments:
|
||
|
||
1) When Bev starting "outrunning entropy", as I put it (I just like the sound
|
||
of it for some reason :-) ), and the corridor dissolved behind her, was I the
|
||
only one who felt the same way as when the Falcon was trying to outrun the
|
||
collapsing Death Star in "Return of the Jedi"?
|
||
|
||
2) A quick technical quibble, but one which virtually all SF shows have fallen
|
||
prey to: if the bubble's EXACTLY where it was created, then they shouldn't
|
||
have gone back to the starbase. Sorry, folks, but starbases move too. Not a
|
||
big deal, though.
|
||
|
||
3) Even though I knew the Traveller was appearing, and even though I, like
|
||
most, have qualms about a superbeing coming in and saving the day, I felt a
|
||
rather profound sense of relief to hear his voice close out act 3. And this
|
||
time, he didn't do it himself (though I'm sure many will consider the option
|
||
they chose worse yet ;-) ).
|
||
|
||
4) I'm glad to see that Wes was so exhausted after saving Bev, and even more
|
||
interested to note that the Traveller was much less affected. That's a good
|
||
thing--after all, Wes should have had a lot more taken out of him than someone
|
||
who's used to this, even if the Traveller probably did do most of the work.
|
||
|
||
I think that's about it, and this is running really long. I'll just say that
|
||
I had high hopes for this episode, and was overjoyed to see them fulfilled.
|
||
A splendid way to tie TOS.
|
||
|
||
From one number (79 hours) to others; the ratings:
|
||
|
||
Plot: 9.5. A tiny bit off for how the phantoms seemed so perfectly real, but
|
||
since I'm not sure that's an error, it doesn't lose much. Aside from
|
||
that, truly blissful.
|
||
Plot Handling: 10. Cliff pulled off an unreality that I'd have expected from
|
||
Rob Bowman, and did so mighty well, too.
|
||
Characterization/Acting: 9.5. A tiny bit off for Bev's one outburst, but very
|
||
good otherwise. Gates gives what's probably her best effort to date.
|
||
Technical: 10. Considering that the entire plot complication was technically
|
||
based, this is saying something.
|
||
|
||
TOTAL: 9.8---10. Wow.
|
||
|
||
NEXT WEEK:
|
||
|
||
TNG breaks TOS's airtime with a visit to Tasha's world...and her sister. Is
|
||
she loyal or not? Is she a murderer or not? Was she holding a lightsaber
|
||
or not? (No, I'm not kidding.) We'll find out.
|
||
|
||
And so it goes.
|
||
|
||
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
|
||
"We will start with the assumption that I am _not_ crazy."
|
||
--B. Crusher, MD
|
||
--
|
||
Copyright 1990, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...
|