Why do people dislike The Outcast?

Discussion in 'Star Trek: The Next Generation' started by MHT1138, Jul 19, 2011.

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  1. MHT1138

    MHT1138 Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    I actually really enjoy this episode and have since it first aired. I remember brother saying it was the one episode of TNG he couldn't watch all the way through. And I noticed in the best/worst thread in Gen Trek that several posters have listed as the worst or their least favorite. Any ideas on why? or am I just imagining things?
     
  2. Kelthaz

    Kelthaz Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Because it was an incredibly pathetic attempt to address homosexuality while simultaneously being too afraid to address homosexuality. We end up with an episode that is awkward as hell to watch and you're either groaning or laughing at it. Occasionally both at the same time despite that being physically impossible.
     
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  3. inflatabledalek

    inflatabledalek Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    Well, just speaking for myself there's several things wrong with it. In the most basic terms, I find it really badly directed, especially the shuttle sequence which is supposed to be a life or death struggle but winds up looking like a slightly dull drive in the park.

    As for the basic idea, there's actually a decent and very Trek concept at its heart. A planet where hetrosexuality is treated with the same bigotry that homosexuality often suffers from today in order to show how stupid the whole thing is. It's not exactly subtle but it's a nice enough idea and a better episode could have made something more of it.

    But, and it's a big one, the whole episode depends on buying into the Riker/Amy-off-The-A-Team relationship. And it never convinces me. You don't get for one second that Riker would throw his entire career away for this person, and in order for him to go rouge Picard is written as a bit of a heartless bastard (yes he'll stick to the letter of the Prime Directive- at least when it's not some woman he wants to shag under threat- but he can and should be still pissed off at how this culture treat its people. Even a terrible episode like Symbiosis still had him mightily riled).

    And of course, it would have been a far more powerful alternate sexuality statement just to have a gay character in one of the shows.
     
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  4. Kelthaz

    Kelthaz Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Exactly. That's the best way to handle the issue. Have a main character on the show who is gay and NEVER make an issue out of it. It's that fucking simple writers.

    Anyway, as for the Outcast, it would have worked much better if Riker's love interest had been a male actor. You know, when you want to address homosexuality it helps when you actually have a homosexual relationship.
     
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  5. MHT1138

    MHT1138 Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    I agree that the allegory is rather obvious, but that doesn't really bother me. Trek is rarely subtle when it comes to messages. I actually buy the Riker/Soren romance, and I love the fact that Worf helps Riker try to rescue Soren. I agree about Picard's reaction, pretty pathetic. What I don't understand, is how many fans, from what I understand, hate this episode instead of just not liking it.
     
  6. Arpy

    Arpy Vice Admiral Admiral

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    When I first read the title I didn't get why anyone would hate the episode - it's just ho-hum but it's certainly not bad.

    But when I thought back to when it first aired, I do remember it being a bit too safe and noncommittal.

    Plus, it still doesn't quite sit well with me that Riker fell in love and nearly gave everything up for this quasi-homosexual person since that you know that there was no way that they were going to end up together at the end of the episode. Too reset button.

    Still, the episode was a further support for homosexual rights when people were a lot more anti than they are now.

    And it's funny how the further away we get from debating gayness and remembering the context of when the episode aired, the better I think it becomes. After all, you knew that Kirk wasn't going to end up with Edith Keeler too but the reset button doesn't quite seem like a cop-out there.
     
  7. Arpy

    Arpy Vice Admiral Admiral

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    When I first read the title I didn't get why anyone would hate the episode - it's just ho-hum but it's certainly not bad.

    But when I thought back to when it first aired, I do remember it being a bit too safe and noncommittal.

    Plus, it still doesn't quite sit well with me that Riker fell in love and nearly gave everything up for this quasi-homosexual person since that you know that there was no way that they were going to end up together at the end of the episode. Too reset button.

    Still, the episode was a further support for homosexual rights when people were a lot more anti than they are now.

    And it's funny how the further away we get from debating gayness and remembering the context of when the episode aired, the better I think it becomes. After all, you knew that Kirk wasn't going to end up with Edith Keeler too but the reset button doesn't quite seem like a cop-out there.
     
  8. Python Trek

    Python Trek Commodore Commodore

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    I liked the allegory, myself. A sexless planet that hates sex? It's a much better "up yours!" to the right-wingers than "we're black down one side of our faces, and white down the other side". <shrug> Never minded "The Outcast" at all. And as for hiring a male actor to play Riker's love interest, that would've been silly, because Riker is a butch dude who is well-established as a guy who likes VERY feminine women. Just making up Melinda Cullea to look so neutral, gender-wise, was already pushing things, IMHO.
     
  9. BillJ

    BillJ The King of Kings Premium Member

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    This pretty much sums it up.
     
  10. ClayHefner

    ClayHefner Commander Red Shirt

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    Riker is so awesome, he can find a woman on a hermaprodite planet.
    I think one problem is that we don't buy our ladies' man Riker is truly helplessly falling in love with that woman.
    It seems forced. If they had used Geordi it would have worked better.
    Geordi would even have laid one of the hermaphrodites I'd bet.
    I don't think it was a bad episode, but apart from the rather cool Sci-Fi way of turning contemporary issues on their head and making a social commentary out of that, it wasn't really exciting.
     
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  11. MikeS

    MikeS Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    This explains why I disliked it. You just don't believe that Riker could fall for a hermaphrodite. I agree with the poster above. We'd have all been able to believe it if this had been a Geordi episode.
     
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  12. SPCTRE

    SPCTRE Badass Admiral

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    I know this is a super-common typo, but for a second there I visualized Jonathan Frakes putting on some heavy makeup *shudders*
     
  13. inflatabledalek

    inflatabledalek Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    Did you miss that scene?


    I always do that, stupid brain...
     
  14. Supernuke

    Supernuke Commander Red Shirt

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    I've always liked this episode. I think it does a good job of addressing the issues for the time that it aired. I don't get the comments I see in this thread, though. I'm surprised that people are upset on two polar opposites of an idea; that it was "too afraid" to address the issue and that it was too obvious in addressing the issue. I really don't understand these criticisms. It addresses the issue through allegory, just as countless other trek episodes do. IMHO if you don't like the episode for the reasons I stated above, I don't know how you can enjoy trek at all, since most episodes convey their message in the same form.
     
  15. Cyke101

    Cyke101 Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    The thing though, is that while Trek is rarely subtle when it comes to messages, Trek usually goes all the way through with its moral or intended message. For the Outcast though, just when it seemed that they were going for that message, they dodged it at the last possible second for something more ambiguous and quote-unquote "neutral" (and when is Trek neutral?) The thing is, that neutrality seems to be quite backwards when compared to Trek's history of provocative episodes. Yes, the episode makes it clear that sexual discrimination is wrong, but it doesn't really delve into WHAT constitutes the myriad of sexual identities that are out there, and it's further muddied by Soren being played by a woman; how do you really fight discrimination if you can't identify it?

    Funny thing is, Jonathan Frakes himself felt that casting men as J'naii, or at least that Soren be more "evidently male," would've made the episode stronger. He thought doing so would've been comparative to the Kirk/Uhura kiss in TOS.

    With that said, to me it's a mediocre episode, not a horrible one. That it ended on a downer could've been more effective had the episode taken a true stance and stuck with it.

    The criticisms make sense if you divide the episode into acts. The majority of the episode is pretty strong in in allegory, but it plays chicken with the topic and loses in the last couple of acts. Off to a good start in its obviousness but then too afraid by the end to cash in on its intended message. I would believe THAT's the part that's frustrating for a lot of viewers, regardless of orientation.
     
    Last edited: Jul 20, 2011
  16. SPCTRE

    SPCTRE Badass Admiral

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    Pretty much what I thought about the episode. I think JF's feelings about the casting choice were spot-on.
     
  17. Kelthaz

    Kelthaz Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    That's exactly it. The episode starts off like it might be going somewhere, but then the higher ups start worrying about upsetting their audience so they butcher the message. Just check out this piece of cut dialogue that Memory Alpha mentions:

    [QUOTE="Memory Alpha]Two lines of dialogue were cut from the final release: Noor explaining to Riker that the J'naii are by all measurements an enlightened race and Riker asking "Then how is it that Soren has no choice about her sexual orientation?"[/QUOTE]

    http://memory-alpha.org/wiki/The_Outcast
     
  18. Michael

    Michael Good Bad Influence Moderator

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    Well, I always loved The Outcast and think of it as one of my favorite episodes. And that's not just because Riker is my favorite TNG character. I find it to be an episode which is bold enough to tackle a subject that was rather taboo when it originally aired. Sure, it would have been even more consequent if they'd have cast a man as Soren, but still, there's a beautiful message about love at this episode's heart. I mean, when even Riker, the quintessential lady's man, can fall for a being which he doesn't perceive as fully female, it says a lot about the power of love.

    Am I making sense here?
     
  19. WillsBabe

    WillsBabe Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Yes. And I enjoyed reading your point. I like the episode, too, and it's a change to read someone's positive opinion.
     
  20. Cyke101

    Cyke101 Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    I think this is specifically why the episode had to showcase Riker, instead of earlier posts suggesting someone like LaForge (sorry dude, seems you can't get a romantic interest no matter the gender!). That Riker, the manliest of men on TNG, could go for someone like Soren speaks volumes about the fact that masculinity and sexuality can be separated yet comfortably co-exist in 24th century Earth society. If people seem uneasy about the idea of Riker kissing a man -- well, that was precisely the original point of the episode.
     
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