505 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
505 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING: This post contains spoilers (though mostly general ones) for the
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fifth season of "Star Trek: the Next Generation". Those not familiar with
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the season and wanting to avoid spoilers should stay clear.
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Well...here we are again. Another season gone by, which means another
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season's review to write.
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I'm going to change the format of this review, in several ways. Primarily,
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although I'll still be quickly going over each episode in turn and then
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averaging them, I'm going to have a long general piece afterwards, because
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this season (far more than most) is not at *all* expressible as the sum of
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its parts.
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And the usual disclaimer, although it'll be obvious: the individual ratings
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I give here will not necessarily correspond to my original ratings. Part of
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the whole point of this piece is to show how opinions evolve over time, from
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the first impressions (i.e. the initial review) to the somewhat more sedate
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thoughts after another viewing or two. (Yes, I rewatched the season for
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this...even "Cost of Living".)
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So: onwards!
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Episodic: |
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----------+
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"Redemption II"
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Initial rating: 6.5.
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My opinion of this one hasn't changed much. It still had a great opening 10
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minutes or so, and then fell apart over the rest of the hour. Some of the
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strategizing is nice (Picard really does feel like someone born to eventual
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admiralty; he'll love having a full-time fleet to command), and some of it
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isn't; it's about here that the Romulans start turning into buffoons. And
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then, of course, there's Sela, the lifetime holder of the
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Slap-Em-In-The-Face-And-Call-'Em-Bruised Origins Award. Pah.
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Finally, they tried to do too much here, and ended up doing too little. Both
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Worf's adaptation (or lack thereof) to Klingon society and Data's first
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command could have used entire episodes devoted to them; instead, we get them
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as side issues to the apparent main plot of the civil war. Sigh.
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All in all, I think I'd drop this down to a 5. It had its moments, but it
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needed a lot more.
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"Darmok"
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Initial rating: 9.5.
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This one comes up to a full 10. The one thing that had riled me at the time
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(Riker's overbelligerent behavior) doesn't seem nearly so bad after I've had
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time to look at it further. Yes, there's a wee bit of technobabble here and
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there, and a couple of bits that are _marginally_ slow, but nothing nearly
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enough to take away from the sheer power of this very simple idea. Second
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best of the season.
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"Ensign Ro"
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Initial rating: 7.
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This one slips. Again, there's some nice strategizing on Picard's part (and
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again, he enjoys it far too much to be confined to a single ship; get this
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man a cosmic chessboard!), and there are also bits of very snappy dialogue.
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Unfortunately, much of it occurs in a vacuum, and Les Landau's direction is a
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bit off. This was a straightforward piece with straightforward advantages
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and flaws. Down to a 6.
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"Silicon Avatar"
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Initial rating: 9.5.
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This one also slips. The things I loved about it most at the time, namely
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the late-episode Marr and the very bleak ending, are still there and still
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superb (as is the Entity's initial attack; it *still* hurts to see the
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colony's fate after the team is rescued). Unfortunately, with the bloom off
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the rose, it's very difficult to reconcile the late-term Marr with the
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early-term Marr; it's almost two different characters. I can't quite swallow
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it. This is still good, but no longer top-notch. Call it an 8.5.
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"Disaster"
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Initial rating: 2.
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You *must* be kidding. I thought this was pretty damned dumb then, and I
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think it's pretty damned dumb now. Almost all my initial attitudes (all the
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kids are a waste but Marissa, for instance, and that Worf's characterization
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is *awful) hold up, the only exception being that Keiko's lines seem a bit
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funnier now. This marks the beginning, incidentally, of the "let's make Worf
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a laughingstock" version of Worf that seems to characterize virtually every
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Worf show this season. This is still a 2.
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"The Game"
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Initial rating: 6.
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This was, and still is, a very uneven piece. Lots of the dialogue is very
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crisp and fun, but some of it falls very flat (unfortunately, the examples
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just flew out of my brain heading west; if someone could catch them and send
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them back I'd be obliged). The idea of something insinuating itself on the
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ship almost insidiously is a nice one, but it gets some poor handling. (Troi
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playing the bimbo in Ten-Forward, for instance, and Riker playing WITH a
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bimbo down on Risa; yawn.) And of course, there's the fact that in bringing
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back Wesley for the first time in a season, the natural impetus was to put
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him right back in the first-season cliches that had a lot of people clamoring
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for the character's head on a platter back then. Still, it is a fun ride.
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I'll keep this as a 6.
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"Unification I"
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Initial rating: 9.5.
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The bloom is off the rose here as well, but only a little bit. Yes, this and
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its successor were *very* hyped; and yes, like most things that hyped, it
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doesn't quite live up. But despite some of the problems and slow moments
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this piece had (the Picard/Data amateurish conduct on Romulus, the scene with
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Perrin, etc.), the fact is that I felt caught up in something big, and that
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feeling still sits in the show. It's a 45-minute prologue, yes; but as the
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people I saw "Back to the Future II" with can tell you, if it's done well I
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can really enjoy movie-length prologues. Give it a 9.
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"Unification II"
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Initial rating: 10.
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This show's taken a pummeling from most people, and I have to admit that I
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still don't really understand why. There are a couple of loose leaps in the
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plot (most notably the jump from blowing up the mystery ship to Riker looking
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for a fat Ferengi in the bar), and a couple of bad scenes (I *still* have an
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intense dislike for Klingon opera), but it's not enough to cause any real
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problems. And yes, Sela's plan here is an intensely hokey plot that couldn't
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possibly work; and the point being? I'd knock this down to a 9, but again no
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further.
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"A Matter of Time"
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Initial rating: 7.
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This one also slips a bit. (That's starting to sound typical.) My basic
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impression of this, when all is said and done, is that it's "shallow but
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clever". The plot involving Rasmussen isn't the sort of thing that's going
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to win awards for originality or sheer ability to draw one in, but it makes
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for a good bag of tricks; and now and then, sitting back and watching a bag
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of tricks can be fun. (The plot involving the planet, and Picard's speech in
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particular, is definitely a bit much, however.) Frewer is good, although I
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do have to wonder how this show would have changed were Robin Williams to
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have played this part. Down to a 5.
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"New Ground"
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Initial rating: 9.
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I went back and looked at that rating right before I watched the show again,
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and my thought throughout was "I gave this a NINE? WHY?" Looking back, I
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have absolutely no idea what about this show made it that appealing back in
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January. I don't consider it the trash others have called it, but it's got
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problems. It sets up a bunch of potentially interesting conflicts, but they
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don't *really* go anywhere. (They go further here than later in the season,
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though; more on that later.) The "jeopardy" plot was...well, "harmless"
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seems the best word to use. This had a few nice ideas, but blew most of them
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in the execution. (On the other hand, by setting up "Murphy Worf" here, it
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would seem that TNG will no doubt soon get an angry letter from the
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ever-esteemed Mr. Quayle...:-) :-) ) This guy's a 4.
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"Hero Worship"
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Initial rating: 8.5.
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That rating seems about right, give or take a point. It's a solid outing;
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probably the only solid outing this season that centered on a child. The
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main reason for this, of course, was that the fellow who played Timothy was a
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rare find: a *really good* child actor. But beyond that, the concept of a
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child "imprinting" on Data was an interesting one, and one fairly well
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explored. Yes, the ending was a bit rushed and the science was *intensely*
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silly, but that's not a big problem. Hmm...yep, 8.5 seems about right.
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"Violations"
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Initial rating: 6.5.
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This one came up on a repeat viewing. I think some of my initial qualms
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about it may have had to do with what I'd been led to believe about its
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origins (I'd been led to believe a friend of mine had written it; that belief
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turned out to be in error, as I found out rather sharply before long), and
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that's no longer a factor. It's still got some problems, most notably that
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(1) the story could have been made *much* more ambiguous, rather than waving
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a giant flag saying "yo! Jev's the villain here!" back in the teaser, and
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(2) the sudden rekindling of romance in the Riker/Troi scene in sickbay seems
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to come flying out of left field. But on a repeat viewing, this actually
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became *spookier*, which is always a good sign. So, I'd say "Attack of the
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Killer Jerry Brown" [well, LOOK at him! :-) ] ends up with an 8.
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"The Masterpiece Society"
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Initial rating: 7.5.
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This is also going to end up about where it started. My main points still
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rang very true: Hannah was a terrific character (if a lousy depiction of a
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scientist; "theoretical physics", my ass), and played very well off of
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Geordi. The Troi/Aaron scenes still scream "we are totally unnecessary!" to
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me, and the bind the Enterprise finds itself in at the end is still nicely
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done. On the other hand, the "the Prime Directive doesn't apply; they're
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human" rankles a lot more than it did before; would these people PLEASE get
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straight just what the PD is and what it applies to? (I still have the
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rudiments of a story in mind for that, come to think of it...) Call it a 7.
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"Conundrum"
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Initial rating: 10.
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This isn't going anywhere. It's still a terrific "fish out of water" story,
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and the only complaints I've heard are all plausibility-based rather than
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plot-based (and I can accept a *lot* more plausibility stretches than plot
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stupidities). Bits of it are very slightly overplayed, but not nearly enough
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to cause more than a momentary pang. Well planned and well executed; still a
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10.
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"Power Play"
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Initial rating: 7.5.
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This one slips. It's a decent ride, a la "Redemption II", but on a repeat
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viewing it ends up looking really, really shallow. Unfortunately, the bad
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aspects jump out more on a repeat than the good; the rather poor acting on
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the part of all three O'Briens (Miles, Keiko, and little
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Cliche...er...Molly), and some of the sizable plot problems. (It didn't help
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that this came right off of "Conundrum", which was much tighter in its
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planning than this.) On the other hand, Spiner is still terrific here, and
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Sirtis does a good job overall, especially in the first half. Call this a 6
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for a roller-coaster ride.
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"Ethics"
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Initial rating: 5.
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That seems about right. Like "New Ground" (only more so), this had a decent
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premise dully done. Just about all the strength of the show came out of the
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Bev/Russell interactions; scientific ethics is something that greatly
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interests me, and this seemed very well done. The rest of the good bits all
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sit pretty much in the two Worf/Riker scenes; that seemed real friendship.
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But Troi, with only about half a scene's exception, is window dressing with a
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lot of lines, and Alexander's presence is positively galling. And then, of
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course, that awful, awful, *awful* ending in the surgery. We were not
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supposed to laugh at that, and I couldn't stop. Still, the Bev/Russell stuff
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is strong enough that this stays a 5.
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"The Outcast"
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Initial rating: 3.
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Again, this seems fairly close to the mark. It gets a few points for good
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intentions; this show's heart was really in the right place. But between the
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inclusion of every plot contrivance in the book, some very dull direction,
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and some outright MIScharacterization (Worf in particular, but Riker to some
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extent), this suffered a lot. And additionally, in making the *explicit*
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point about gender intolerance, this show contained so much *implicit* sexism
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and discrimination as to feel extraordinarily hypocritical. I still hate to
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speak so ill of something so well intended, but it is what it is; and what it
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is is a very bad show. 2.5.
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"Cause and Effect"
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Initial rating: 10.
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Whew! Here's one I'm happy to say slipped not a bit for me. It's still one
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of the best "variations on a theme" stories I've seen in a long, long while,
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and is superbly written (and especially directed, in this case!) on all
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sides. This makes the third spot on the top five of the season, and falls
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on the short list of "TNG Episodes I'd Like to have Written." Great effects,
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great concept, great characterization (both incidental and crucial), and
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great *imagery* [the glass breaking], something TNG doesn't always do much
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with. 10, now and ever.
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"The First Duty"
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Initial rating: 9.
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This one came up. Yes, Satelk is distracting and badly done; but on a repeat
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viewing, he seems much less consequential, and the rest of the
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characterization is bloody *brilliant*. Locarno is still very interesting,
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as basically a Kirk-figure a few steps over the line; Boothby is still a
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treat; and the Picard/Wes conversation in Picard's ready room is still one of
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the single most tension-ridden character scenes this show has ever assembled.
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(And, of course, the fact that this was written by a fellow Cornellian
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doesn't hurt either. ;-) ) 10.
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"Cost of Living"
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Initial rating: 1.
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I shouldn't have bothered. Nothing seemed any better, and some of it seemed
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worse. Alexander is *still* back where he was at the beginning of "New
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Ground" in terms of character, Lwaxana is still stages beyond her most
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unpleasant, Worf is *still* continuing the hideous trend of being an utter
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laughingstock, and the holodeck sequence is *still* insulting to anyone over
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the age of about five. I've been told, indirectly, by a member of the staff
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that "in production, this didn't look that bad." I still have to wonder who
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approved this. Ugh. 1.
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"The Perfect Mate"
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Initial rating: 6.5.
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This comes up a little bit. The problems are still there (the Ferengi,
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mainly, and the very early Kamala-as-sexpot scenes), but again seem less
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consequential on a repeat viewing. (Drop those Ferengi down a deep dark
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hole, though; and no, "Deep Space 9" does not qualify as such.) Again, just
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as soon as she starts taking an interest in Picard, the episode picks up like
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lightning hit it, and stays there for the rest of the hour. There are
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interesting questions raised about being a metamorph (that are only partially
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answered), and some intriguing use of mirrors for imagery here, too. I'd
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give this one an 8.
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"Imaginary Friend"
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Initial rating: 4.
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This isn't going to move much. Both Troi and Clara were well written a
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somewhat well played (particularly Clara), but Isabella was in the absolute
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bottom tier of TNG actors, and the plot had basically nothing to speak of.
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(And that closing speech by Picard is one I could definitely have done
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without.) Not a winner here, folks. 4.
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"I, Borg"
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Initial rating: 9.5.
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This is likely to stay where it is. I still find Guinan's conversion over
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from extreme anti-Borg to somewhat pro-Hugh a little fast for my tastes, but
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as before, seeing the normally positive characters of Picard and Guinan show
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this dark a dark side makes up for that in almost every way. Superb work on
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the part of almost all involved, particularly Stewart, Goldberg, and Jonathan
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Del Arco. Very, very nice. 10.
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"The Next Phase"
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Initial rating: 7.5.
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Again, this seems pretty accurate, though this might slip slightly. Many of
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the character bits here were nice (Ro's and Data's, in particular), and
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there's some nice eeriness when Ro first finds out her condition. On the
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other hand, this one has plot and plausiblity problems from here halfway to
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Neptune, and this continues the post-Sela trend of making Romulans utterly
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faceless and dull villains. (Please, bring back Tomalak; *anything* on the
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level of "The Defector" would be wonderful.) Basically, this is pure fluff,
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but it's fun fluff. 7.
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"The Inner Light"
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Initial rating: 10.
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Simple. Beautiful. Quiet. Superb. 10.
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"Time's Arrow"
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Initial rating: 8.
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Now, what was that I was saying about 45-minute prologues? :-) This still
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has a start that's a little too slow for me, and the Riker/Troi/Data scene in
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the turbolift is a waste, but other than that things are brisk; and the extra
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bits of cleverness we've all discovered since (e.g. Jack "I'm the bellboy,
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gotta love me!" London) impressed me a lot. Call it a 9.
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So, if we were to take this solely as the sum of its parts, we'd have an
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average for the season of just marginally under a 7. That feels somewhat
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right, I suppose, but it doesn't give a hint as to the real situation. So...
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General Comments: |
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------------------+
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This season in general, and especially the latter half, was an incredibly
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*uneven* season. I'd heard occasional comments about how TNG had settled
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into "formula"; based on what I've seen, I can't agree. If it were formula,
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it would be likely to be consistently watchable but uninspired. Now, that
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may be about what it *averaged* out to, but it by no means describes the
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season as a whole.
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I mean, for example, I'm looking at my ratings from "Ethics" onward: we had
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in rapid succession: 5, 2.5, 10, 10, 1, 8, 4, 10, 7, 10, 9. That's not
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formula, that's a mountain road. :-) Sheesh.
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I suppose one of the best things to do in a situation like this is point out
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good and bad *trends* in the season, rather than anything more concrete. So:
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Two of the trends (mainly, the two distressing ones) are ones I've already
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alluded to in the first part of this review. The first is Worf: This season
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has seen, in my opinion, the slow destruction of everything that made Worf
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interesting from seasons 1-4. I'm trying to compare the Worf I saw in "Sins
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of the Father" and "Reunion" to the Worf I see in "New Ground" and "Cost of
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Living", and I absolutely cannot see them as the same character in the
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slightest. The old Worf was confident in his abilities, a bit rigid in his
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attitudes, full of original thought when he gave it a try ("The Emissary"),
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and an interesting balance of instinct and honor ("Reunion", mostly). This
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one is Bozo the Father; ultra-rigid, yelling at the drop of a hat, utterly
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clueless in a great many situations, and mostly spouting platitudes. Why?
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What happened?
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The other bad trend is much less important, given its occurrence: the
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Romulans. The Romulans we saw in seasons 2-4 were interesting: distinctly
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individual, bright, scheming folk that were usually very interesting to
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watch. Now, the only one with *any* personality is Sela, and that's due to
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origins I find abhorrent. All the others are faceless, for all we can tell;
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the plots are a little more obvious, a lot less subtle, and a lot less
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motivated. It's a pity, but since they don't get used that often anyway,
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it's not a huge problem.
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Now, on the other hand, there are some good trends. One of them is a trend
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towards more "dark" endings to shows. TNG is often accused of being very
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"sweetness-and-light", and to some extent that's justified and expected,
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owing to the underlying ideals. But the lesson seems to finally be hitting
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home that an optimistic future does not *have* to mean an optimistic ending.
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"Silicon Avatar", "A Matter of Time", "Darmok", "Violations", "The
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Masterpiece Society", "Ethics", "The Outcast", "The First Duty", "The Perfect
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Mate": all of these had, to some extent or another, very bleak elements to
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their conclusions. And *most* of them ended up as stronger stories as a
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result. There's nothing that says a bad ending is better than a good one
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(after all, look at "The Inner Light", which I would say had a rather
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poignant ending, but not a dark one), but having a story without any
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sacrifice tends to be less interesting to me; and in just about every case
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above, even if I disliked the show I had a little bit of respect for the
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ending. This is a trend I'd like to see continue.
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The other, equally interesting trend that I see came in during the season's
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second half. TNG is finally, *finally*, starting to show a willingness to
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play with its success, and do some experimentation. Look at some of the
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shows we had since about March:
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--"Cause and Effect". Time travel is nothing new, but this type of it
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*certainly* is; and the idea of assembling an entire show over what can
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almost be described as the same events through slightly different viewpoints
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is almost unique. (Okay, "A Matter of Perspective" tried, but that was
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internal; everyone there knew that's what was happening. They didn't here.)
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--"The First Duty". A show set entirely on Earth? At the *Academy*? Wes
|
||
screwing up in a major, major way, and *paying* for it? Picard and Wes at
|
||
each others' throats in a real way (as opposed to early first season)? This
|
||
is new throughout.
|
||
|
||
--"Cost of Living." I can only assume this was an experiment. I've no idea
|
||
what in. :-)
|
||
|
||
--"I, Borg". Taking this approach to the Borg is a real risk (as the
|
||
anguished reactions from some people expecting nonstop action demonstrates).
|
||
But it's also an important step in keeping them viable, and it paid off.
|
||
|
||
--"The Inner Light". There's almost nothing about this one that ISN'T
|
||
experimental from a TNG standpoint.
|
||
|
||
That's a lot of experimentation for a three-month period. I like it.
|
||
|
||
This is also something I'd very much like to see continue...but with a
|
||
caveat. In the past, it's looked like TNG was going experimental, but it
|
||
seemed to fade. The reason, I think, was that the show failed to show the
|
||
courage of its convictions. The utter lack of fallout from BOBW1 and from,
|
||
for example, "The Mind's Eye", is a major disappointment.
|
||
|
||
Now, there are new challenges and new items around. *Do something* with
|
||
them. Don't let them drop by the wayside. Let's see, or at the very least
|
||
hear about, what Wes has now gotten himself into with this repeated year.
|
||
Let's see what impact "I, Borg" has, both on the Borg themselves and on
|
||
Picard's future attitude (whether his hope succeeds or fails). And for
|
||
heaven's sake, Picard *MUST* show the signs of his experiences in "The Inner
|
||
Light". Consistently, and significantly. I cannot overemphasize that.
|
||
|
||
I think that's close to it, but a few quick lists.
|
||
|
||
Characters worth seeing more of: Picard, Data, Worf (if this trend is
|
||
reversed), Beverly (esp. with Wes), Wesley, Troi (another trend; much of this
|
||
season she's actually been good, for a change).
|
||
|
||
Characters worth seeing less of: Alexander. Lwaxana Troi. Worf (if this
|
||
trend continues).
|
||
|
||
Directors who should be given more work:
|
||
|
||
--Rob Bowman. Come on, he hasn't been used in almost two seasons, and he's
|
||
still the best director of the crop. Where *is* he?
|
||
|
||
--Jonathan Frakes. Even if it means less time in front of the camera, he's a
|
||
far better director anyway.
|
||
|
||
--Peter Lauritson. Anyone who comes out with a rookie effort as good as "The
|
||
Inner Light" is a jewel that should not be let go of.
|
||
|
||
--Patrick Stewart. Just to see what happens.
|
||
|
||
Directors who should be given less work:
|
||
|
||
--Gabrielle Beaumont. We've got "The Bonding", "Disaster", and "Imaginary
|
||
Friend". All rather uninspiredly done, in my view.
|
||
|
||
--Chip Chalmers. "Ethics" was not a good idea, and it's added to such
|
||
credits as "Captain's Holiday" and "The Loss".
|
||
|
||
Writers who should be given more work:
|
||
|
||
--Brannon Braga. The plots are not always the best ("Power Play", "The
|
||
Game", and "Imaginary Friend", for instance), but Braga seems to have the
|
||
best ear for good character dialogue of all the staff writers. Combine that
|
||
with more plots on the level of "Cause and Effect" and we're in business.
|
||
|
||
--Naren Shankar. I know he's not a staff writer. Get him. "The First Duty"
|
||
was a superb first outing.
|
||
|
||
--Morgan Gendel. Same applies, except in this case it's "The Inner Light".
|
||
|
||
--Rene Echevarria. She helped on "The Perfect Mate" and wrote "I, Borg".
|
||
Sounds promising to me, particularly when you add in past credits like "The
|
||
Offspring".
|
||
|
||
Writers who should be given less work:
|
||
|
||
--Peter Allan Fields. "Cost of Living". 'nuff said.
|
||
|
||
--Sara and Stuart Charno. I'm sorry, but when one team is responsible for
|
||
both "New Ground" *and* "Ethics", it's a bad sign.
|
||
|
||
Well, that seems to be more than long-winded enough for a single season.
|
||
(Wait 'til the show as a *whole* comes to a close! :-) ) It's been an
|
||
interesting season; onwards to the future!
|
||
|
||
Tim Lynch
|
||
BITNET: tlynch@citjuliet
|
||
INTERNET: tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
|
||
UUCP: ...!ucbvax!tlynch%juliet.caltech.edu@hamlet.caltech.edu
|
||
"Seize the time, Meribor. Live now; make *now* always the most precious
|
||
time. Now will never come again."
|
||
--"The Inner Light"
|
||
--
|
||
Copyright 1992, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...
|