One of the best moments, in a very entertaining episode, is the last line. Just when you figure the ordeal is finally over, Barclay says "Computer... End program"
That end always puts a wry smile on my face, because who better to say it than the guy who'd been known to do that very thing, create programs with his real life comrades? So not only do you get the rub of life possibly being a simulation, like Picard said just prior, you also get a bit of a tease, because with this character that outcome is also just as possible.
It always makes me think. Despite being an enjoyable episode, it otherwise stretches believability to the breaking point. The ship's captain, a holodeck prodigy & an android being so successfully duped by a 19th century holodeck character, (Even a genius one) into thinking holodeck creations were their real ship & crew, is pretty thin. There's like a hundred ways that should be plain impossible.
So I have to wonder... Might the episode have worked better, or been more believable, if Barclay's final line was followed by a dissolve into Barclay standing on the blank holodeck? So then, apart from fixing everything otherwise unbelievable about the episode, the crux of the episode shifts to being about Barclay taking pity on Moriarty, after discovering him, & his aberrant uniqueness, & deciding to give him his ultimate wish, a story wherein he could outwit the crew that made him, & free himself. Somehow, I think the episode might actually have been even better had they'd done that.
Sure, that would make it an episode that's not about the real crew, & it kind of makes a sad statement about Barclay himself, in that he would've reverted into recreating his real life as a holodeck program yet again, but I think that in this one forgivable case, his ability to do so, is the perfect solution for the Moriarty problem. Who better to pull that off? Besides, it would've been one hell of a zinger, that made you rethink everything you'd just seen
Just a thought
That end always puts a wry smile on my face, because who better to say it than the guy who'd been known to do that very thing, create programs with his real life comrades? So not only do you get the rub of life possibly being a simulation, like Picard said just prior, you also get a bit of a tease, because with this character that outcome is also just as possible.
It always makes me think. Despite being an enjoyable episode, it otherwise stretches believability to the breaking point. The ship's captain, a holodeck prodigy & an android being so successfully duped by a 19th century holodeck character, (Even a genius one) into thinking holodeck creations were their real ship & crew, is pretty thin. There's like a hundred ways that should be plain impossible.
So I have to wonder... Might the episode have worked better, or been more believable, if Barclay's final line was followed by a dissolve into Barclay standing on the blank holodeck? So then, apart from fixing everything otherwise unbelievable about the episode, the crux of the episode shifts to being about Barclay taking pity on Moriarty, after discovering him, & his aberrant uniqueness, & deciding to give him his ultimate wish, a story wherein he could outwit the crew that made him, & free himself. Somehow, I think the episode might actually have been even better had they'd done that.
Sure, that would make it an episode that's not about the real crew, & it kind of makes a sad statement about Barclay himself, in that he would've reverted into recreating his real life as a holodeck program yet again, but I think that in this one forgivable case, his ability to do so, is the perfect solution for the Moriarty problem. Who better to pull that off? Besides, it would've been one hell of a zinger, that made you rethink everything you'd just seen
Just a thought