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Bigger, Badder, Balder: Revisiting Star Trek: The Next Generation

Note: from this episode on, I'm adding two new categories: "Trollheart of the past" and "Trollheart of the present". Pretty self-explanatory. So let me explain them. The first is how I remember the episode, good or bad or meh, if it made any impression on me or if I've totally forgotten what it's about, and the second, shown at the end, is how I feel now: was I right, wrong, do you care?

Engage something to a warp factor of another thing and push the big red button. No, not THAT big red but-

Episode title: “Too Short a Season”
Season: 1
Basic plot: Hostage situation on a planet and only one man can save them. And no, this guy actually has hair, thank you very much.
Trollheart of the past: I remember hating this for the pathetically stupid ending. Let’s see if I still feel the same about it.
Importance: 0
Crisis point(s) if any: There are hostages. Hostages gonna crisis.
Original transmission date: February 8 1988
Writer(s): Michael Michaelian, D.C. Fontana
Director: Rob Bowman
Stardate:* 41309.5
Destination: Persephone V
Mission (if any): Convey a Starfleet admiral to negotiate with terrorists for the release of hostages on another planet
Main character(s) in Plot: Picard, Beverly
Main character(s) in Subplot (if any):
Not appearing: Wesley, O’Brien
Villain/Monster (if any): None
Deaths: 1
Lives saved (episode): 0 (The hostages are saved but it doesn’t clarify how many there were, so I can’t count them)
Lives saved (cumulative): 24
Locations:

Shipboard:
Bridge
Transporter Room
Jameson’s Quarters
Ready Room

Space:

Other:
Persephone V

Ships/vessels (encountered): 0
Ships/vessels (mentioned only): USS Gettysburg
Space battles: 0
Bodycount

Historical
0
Incidental
0
Direct
1 (Admiral Jameson)
Total: 1
Running total: 87

Make it so: 1
Engage! 0
Combat factor: 50
Planets visited: Persephone V, Mordan IV
Planets mentioned: Cerberus II, Isis III
Aliens: 0
Mysteries: How is Jameson getting younger?
Patients in sickbay: 1 (Jameson)
Data v humanity: n/a
Data 3 - Humanity 6
Character scores:
Picard 35
Riker 10
Data 25
Troi 10
Bev 85
Worf 20
Geordi 20
Wesley 0
Yar 20
O’Brien 0

Earl Grey: 0
Shuttlecraft: 0
Admirals: 1 (Jameson)
Starbases: 0
First contact: 0
Humour: 0
Episode rating: 2/10
Episode score: 355
Trollheart of the present: Yeah just as bad and stupid as I remember.

We’ve seen characters made up to be older than they were before - Kirk in “The Deadly Years”, Picard later in “The Inner Light”, Troi in “Man of the People” and so on. But usually they’re quite convincing, whereas here it looks like the admiral has been exhumed and then someone stuck a bad wig on him and tried to cover up the rotting flesh with makeup. He looks far, far older than his supposed eighty-some years, even allowing for the debilitating effects of this disease he’s supposed to have. There’s a certain sense of Dracula about this too, as the man starts off decrepit, almost a walking corpse as I say above, and then regenerates as the episode goes on, till fairly quickly it’s impossible to attribute his de-ageing to anything natural. Beverly is of course suspicious as is Troi, and it’s not just women’s intuition either.
02.png


"Grumble.. grumble.. take my seat, would you? Grr! I hope you suddenly turn into a dessicated mummy, so there!"

I must say, it’s incredibly selfish of Jameson to have taken BOTH doses of the drug; one was for his wife. Now that he’s been able to use both on himself and return to his youth, what about her? He won’t be interested in her now that he’s so much younger, so is she just to be dumped? Of course there’s a price to pay for the fountain of youth: is there ever not? Good callback to “A Private Little War”, where Jameson does the same thing Kirk does: arm both factions equally, precipitating a war between the two races instead of brokering a peace. One of the bleaker episodes of TOS, and one whose ending I hated. This one I don’t hate for the same reason, but I’m pretty sure I’ll still hate it.
01.png


"Does nobody pay electricity bills on this ship?"

I guess for once it is nice to see Starfleet go for the direct, aggressive approach, even if it’s not quite officially sanctioned. Of course it goes wrong. But you have to laugh at Karnas too, blaming Jameson for the state of his planet and all the deaths caused by the war. Wasn’t it he who demanded the weapons? Did someone force him to use them? Oh, of course: if only his people had been armed that would have been all right. ****ing typical. What was it Q said in the pilot: savage life forms never follow even their own rules? Yeah, I hate the way Karnas changes in an instant from a revenge-filled anger to accepting sympathy. Bollocks. He hated the guy; he should be a) glad he’s dead or b) angry he has been cheated of his revenge but no, he says “your long night and mine are over.” Again I say, bollocks. There’s also a sort of heavy-handed but pretty simple double morality message here: you can’t be young again and just say no to drugs.
 
This is, truly, a lesser episode of season #1. This admiral was de aged back to about 19 as far as I can see, but Karnas recognized some kind of brotherhood scar that he and Jameson shared. The background music that they used in this episode was unique to this episode. What if Karnas had been portrayed by Lawrence Tierney?
 
It's
chart time again!
Not that there's much to see really. After a really poor episode in which nobody did much of anything, despite a decent score for Beverly she remains where she is, at number 6, and other than Data and Yar separating as she falls to 4 and he remains at 3, everyone else being pushed down one place as a result, it's kind of as you were. Which is no surprise. Oh, Deanna falls two places. Yeah.
BBBTooshort.png
 
Episode title: “When the Bough Breaks”
Season: 1
Basic plot: All the kids from the Enterprise are, well, kidnapped and forced to live a life of luxury and in which their every need will be catered to... hang on!
Trollheart’s memory: Being both a Wesley-centric episode and one involving kids, I remember hating this with a passion
Importance: 0 (In the development of Wesley, maybe)
Crisis point(s) if any: I suppose when all your children are kidnapped that could be considered a crisis point!
Original transmission date: February 15 1998
Writer(s): Hannah Louise Shearer
Director: Kim Manners
Stardate:* 41509.1
Destination: None really; just tooling around the galaxy
Mission (if any): None
Main character(s) in Plot: Wesley
Main character(s) in Subplot (if any):
Not appearing: O’Brien
Villain/Monster (if any): None
Theme: Kidnap, desperation, sterility, motherhood, radiation sickness
Deaths: 0
Lives saved (episode): 0 (Can you say all the children’s lives were saved? They weren’t in any actual danger, so I’d say no)
Lives saved (cumulative): 24
Locations:

Shipboard:
Bridge
Transporter Room
School

Space:

Other:
Aldea


Ships/vessels (encountered): 0
Ships/vessels (mentioned only): 0
Space battles: 0
Bodycount

Historical
0
Incidental
0
Direct
0
Total: 0
Running total: 87

Make it so: 0
Engage! 0
Combat factor: 0
Planets visited: Aldea
Planets mentioned: 0
Aliens: 1 (Aldeans)
Mysteries: Why the Aldeans can’t have children
Patients in sickbay: 0
Data v humanity:
Data is about as much use as a chocolate teapot here. Hey, nobody programmed him to look after kids, and anyway, can't they just manufacture - um, make, have - more? What's the big deal?
Data 3 - Humanity 6
Character scores:
Picard 20
Riker 15
Data 20
Troi 15
Bev 55
Worf 10
Geordi 10
Wesley 130
Yar 5

Earl Grey: 0
Shuttlecraft: 0
Admirals: 0
Starbases: 0
First contact: 1 (Aldea)
Humour: 4
Episode rating: 3/10
Episode score: 520
Trollheart of the Present: Not quite as bad as I remember, but still a pain. Fecking kids.

Touch of the Hitch-Hiker’s Guide here, with comparisons obviously being drawn between Aldea and Magrathea, and surely when Riker hears these people have no children alarm bells should be going off? What about Troi? Does she not suspect something? I also find it odd that she says “Humans are unusually attached to their offspring” - are not all races attached to their kids? Is not hers? Why is humanity so unusual? Why doesn’t she say that, like all races, humans are attached to their children, instead of making them some sort of exception? I love it when Beverly says “They’ve taken my son!” I can hear the Cat from Red Dwarf: “Quick! Let’s get out of here before they bring him back!”

Oh, and there’s a computer to talk to death. How TOS of you! I also love the face of Picard when Bev says “Captain Picard will do everything possible to get our children back.” It’s like he’s thinking well, yeah, sure, but you know, if they’re gone they’re gone; no point crying about it. Anyway, what’s our next heading? The story is well handled, I have to say. It’s not as if this is just a child-napping adventure; these people - though completely insane if they think they can get other people’s children without a fight - genuinely care for these children and want to bring out the potential they see in them, which their own parents may not see. Also, for once it’s a reversal of roles as Wesley becomes the de facto adult in the group, being the oldest of the children, more a young man than a child, though he’s always treated as a child on the ship. So now for the first time he’s a leader, and this is a test for him, which, to be fair, he passes with flying colours.
01.png


"So let me just get this clear. You'll take all our children AND give me this lovely plant? Deal!"

Oh come on now! Isn’t the Custodian just Zen from Blake’s 7? Look at it! And here we are again, with Landru, Vaal, name your computer-controlling-humans of choice. Give Wesley his due, he’s not fooled and he’s already gathering information in the hope of taking down the Custodian. Still, he acts like a bit of a tool when his mother presses something into his palm, obviously intending his “guardian” does not see it and the stupid ****er opens his palm, looks at it (how big is that damn thing anyway? How does she expect that to go unnoticed? It’s not like a paperclip or a note or something; it’s as big as like a hairbrush!) and then realises, a little late, how stupid he’s being and puts it away. And yet the dopey guardian does not see it. D’oh! So much for being more advanced huh?
02.png


"I'm sorry, Wesley, but I have not heard of this Zen of whom you speak. I would like to make that especially clear, should any of Terry Nation's relatives be watching this..."

And then he scans her with it AND returns it to Beverly and the stupid old bag STILL suspects nothing? Is she blind? Or just stupid? It’s good how the children soon realise that no matter how gilded a cage is, it’s still a cage, and they miss their parents. All except Harry, who has a thing about calculus and is the hold-out. Stupid kid. The “finger-flick” the Aldeans give the Enterprise is almost of Q proportions. Another heavy-handed morality message about the overuse of technology, which considering the Enterprise does about everything for the crew, rings a little hollow.
 
February 15 1998? We’ll, that makes me feel younger.
Anyway, the premises is stupid. Enterprise should know exactly where the planet is. Aldea can’t move the planet away from its orbit. If Aldea could do that they should be advanced enough to make their people fertile. Just my thought. Their superior technology would not make them in accessible forever. There’s no way that the Federation would allow this.

Wesley shines here. He handles this well. I would rewatch it next time around
 
February 15 1998? We’ll, that makes me feel younger.
Anyway, the premises is stupid. Enterprise should know exactly where the planet is. Aldea can’t move the planet away from its orbit. If Aldea could do that they should be advanced enough to make their people fertile. Just my thought. Their superior technology would not make them in accessible forever. There’s no way that the Federation would allow this.

Wesley shines here. He handles this well. I would rewatch it next time around
It's a good point. And yes, I was surprised by how much I didn't hate it, but it is still annoying.

Not that they should have to justify or explain, but when yer man says "You can just have more children", apart from the horribly insensitive tone of that comment, Bev should say "No I bloody can't. What am I supposed to do? Dig up my dead husband??"

Step forward Picard...?
 
BBBWhen.png

Not much in the way of change after this episode, as you might expect. Tasha loses her grip on third place, and as the only one to gain significant points this time, Wesley moves up and take her place. Other than that, just about everyone stays where they are.
 
Episode title: “Home Soil”
Season: 1
Basic plot: Things are going wrong on a planet being terraformed
Trollheart of the past: I remember liking this, though I think it has a pretty simplistic ending. I do remember thinking the way the aliens described us as “bags of mostly water” was cool.
Importance: 5 (The first time that first contact leads to war!)
Crisis point(s) if any: The alien life form takes over the ship and declares war
Original transmission date: February 22 1988
Writer(s): Robert Sabaroff, Karl Geurs, Ralph Sanchez (teleplay by Sabaroff)
Director: Corey Allen
Stardate:* 41463.9
Destination: Velara III
Mission (if any): Check on terraforming operation
Main character(s) in Plot: Picard, Bev
Main character(s) in Subplot (if any):
Not appearing: Wesley, O’Brien
Villain/Monster (if any): Alien life form known as “micro brain”
Themes: Conservation, greed, respect for other life forms, obsession, murder, war, negotiation
Deaths: 1
Lives saved (episode): 0
Lives saved (cumulative): 24
Locations:

Shipboard:
Bridge
Transporter Room
Sickbay
Ready Room
Observation Lounge
Medical Lab
Space:

Other:
Velara III


Ships/vessels (encountered): 0
Ships/vessels (mentioned only): 0
Space battles: 0
Bodycount

Historical
0
Incidental
0
Direct
1
Total: 1
Running total: 88

Make it so: 1
Engage! 1
Combat factor: 0
Planets visited: Velara III
Planets mentioned:
Aliens:
1 (Micro brain)
Mysteries: Why the micro brain is attacking the colony
Patients in sickbay: 1 (Does a micro brain count? Hell, they had cheese in Voyager!)
Data v humanity: Data is the only one who can evade the laser drill, so his superior speed and reactions save him.
Data 4 - Humanity 6
Character scores:
Picard 10
Riker 25
Data 15
Geordi 15
Yar 15
Worf 15
Bev 475
Troi 15
Wesley 0
O’Brien 0

Earl Grey: 0
Shuttlecraft: 0
Admirals: 0
Starbases: 0
First contact: 1
Humour: 0
Episode rating: 6/10
Episode score: 490
Trollheart of the present: yeah decent enough, but again, it’s an updated “Devil in the Dark”, innit?

Shades of The Wrath of Khan with the first mention in the series of terraforming - and the first and I think only mention of Terraform Command (I wonder if that’s a part of Starfleet) but the episode is basically “Devil in the Dark” in theme and execution. I think yer man is a bit unfair on Data: “What did you do to my laser drill?” he moans. Data shrugs. “Hell, it was wreck it or let it wreck me.” I mean, what did he expect? **** your drill, pal: I was in danger of losing my life. You can always get another laser drill. The idea of not quite inorganic but certainly different life to any we know is again filched from TOS: there, the Horta was carbon-based, here, they’ve gone further. There is no organic structure to this life form, yet it does appear to be able to react to outside stimuli and communicate. Naturally, for its first contact with us, it’s war.
01.png


"Oh right thanks guys! Leave me to clean up the mess! What were you doing in here anyway?"

Interesting how they name the life form “micro brain” - this is the very phrase Q used to describe Worf in “Encounter at Farpoint”: “Macro head, with a micro brain!” Also interesting how the only way Picard and his crew can negotiate with the aliens is to virtually kill them. I suppose you could say that he could have gone ahead and done that, and the danger to his ship would be over, but he decided to try to broker a truce instead, and leave the alien life form with at least a more favourable impression of us than it had up to then received.
 
I liked the early on battle, where Data is attacked but could avoid being shot until he disarmed the opponent. Some of those early displays of Data’s ability were really cool. It’s like when he jumped down into the trap that Picard and Crusher were in Arsenal Of Freedom.]
 
I remember a 7th grade science teacher telling we kids that we were Ugly bags of mostly water. That was a real dressing down.
 
I loved the use of lighting in this episode, season 1 excelled at this.

I enjoyed this episode better in retrospect, the aging bit is a side note to me, but the take on terrorism is more interesting.

The US at the time was getting involved with a lot of shady BTS deals and should have kept it's mitts off, we always made things worse. A timely message from a pretty decent Trek.




Note: from this episode on, I'm adding two new categories: "Trollheart of the past" and "Trollheart of the present". Pretty self-explanatory. So let me explain them. The first is how I remember the episode, good or bad or meh, if it made any impression on me or if I've totally forgotten what it's about, and the second, shown at the end, is how I feel now: was I right, wrong, do you care?

Engage something to a warp factor of another thing and push the big red button. No, not THAT big red but-

Episode title: “Too Short a Season”
Season: 1
Basic plot: Hostage situation on a planet and only one man can save them. And no, this guy actually has hair, thank you very much.
Trollheart of the past: I remember hating this for the pathetically stupid ending. Let’s see if I still feel the same about it.
Importance: 0
Crisis point(s) if any: There are hostages. Hostages gonna crisis.
Original transmission date: February 8 1988
Writer(s): Michael Michaelian, D.C. Fontana
Director: Rob Bowman
Stardate:* 41309.5
Destination: Persephone V
Mission (if any): Convey a Starfleet admiral to negotiate with terrorists for the release of hostages on another planet
Main character(s) in Plot: Picard, Beverly
Main character(s) in Subplot (if any):
Not appearing:
Wesley, O’Brien
Villain/Monster (if any): None
Deaths: 1
Lives saved (episode): 0 (The hostages are saved but it doesn’t clarify how many there were, so I can’t count them)
Lives saved (cumulative): 24
Locations:

Shipboard:
Bridge
Transporter Room
Jameson’s Quarters
Ready Room

Space:

Other:
Persephone V

Ships/vessels (encountered): 0
Ships/vessels (mentioned only): USS Gettysburg
Space battles: 0
Bodycount

Historical
0
Incidental
0
Direct
1 (Admiral Jameson)
Total: 1
Running total: 87

Make it so: 1
Engage! 0
Combat factor: 50
Planets visited: Persephone V, Mordan IV
Planets mentioned: Cerberus II, Isis III
Aliens: 0
Mysteries: How is Jameson getting younger?
Patients in sickbay: 1 (Jameson)
Data v humanity: n/a
Data 3 - Humanity 6
Character scores:
Picard 35
Riker 10
Data 25
Troi 10
Bev 85
Worf 20
Geordi 20
Wesley 0
Yar 20
O’Brien 0

Earl Grey: 0
Shuttlecraft: 0
Admirals: 1 (Jameson)
Starbases: 0
First contact: 0
Humour: 0
Episode rating: 2/10
Episode score: 355
Trollheart of the present: Yeah just as bad and stupid as I remember.

We’ve seen characters made up to be older than they were before - Kirk in “The Deadly Years”, Picard later in “The Inner Light”, Troi in “Man of the People” and so on. But usually they’re quite convincing, whereas here it looks like the admiral has been exhumed and then someone stuck a bad wig on him and tried to cover up the rotting flesh with makeup. He looks far, far older than his supposed eighty-some years, even allowing for the debilitating effects of this disease he’s supposed to have. There’s a certain sense of Dracula about this too, as the man starts off decrepit, almost a walking corpse as I say above, and then regenerates as the episode goes on, till fairly quickly it’s impossible to attribute his de-ageing to anything natural. Beverly is of course suspicious as is Troi, and it’s not just women’s intuition either.
02.png


"Grumble.. grumble.. take my seat, would you? Grr! I hope you suddenly turn into a dessicated mummy, so there!"

I must say, it’s incredibly selfish of Jameson to have taken BOTH doses of the drug; one was for his wife. Now that he’s been able to use both on himself and return to his youth, what about her? He won’t be interested in her now that he’s so much younger, so is she just to be dumped? Of course there’s a price to pay for the fountain of youth: is there ever not? Good callback to “A Private Little War”, where Jameson does the same thing Kirk does: arm both factions equally, precipitating a war between the two races instead of brokering a peace. One of the bleaker episodes of TOS, and one whose ending I hated. This one I don’t hate for the same reason, but I’m pretty sure I’ll still hate it.
01.png


"Does nobody pay electricity bills on this ship?"

I guess for once it is nice to see Starfleet go for the direct, aggressive approach, even if it’s not quite officially sanctioned. Of course it goes wrong. But you have to laugh at Karnas too, blaming Jameson for the state of his planet and all the deaths caused by the war. Wasn’t it he who demanded the weapons? Did someone force him to use them? Oh, of course: if only his people had been armed that would have been all right. ****ing typical. What was it Q said in the pilot: savage life forms never follow even their own rules? Yeah, I hate the way Karnas changes in an instant from a revenge-filled anger to accepting sympathy. Bollocks. He hated the guy; he should be a) glad he’s dead or b) angry he has been cheated of his revenge but no, he says “your long night and mine are over.” Again I say, bollocks. There’s also a sort of heavy-handed but pretty simple double morality message here: you can’t be young again and just say no to drugs.
 
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Often compared to DitD from TOS but has nothing to do with the original. The real interest is the planet-wide, living computer! Cool!

Even immobile crystal living in sand with superintelligence is more advanced than humans, and looking at the world lately, I'm inclined to agree.

This one has some stilted dialogue, the director or editor should have used a few more/different takes on this.

I couldn't help but think Roddenberry was thumbing his nose at the less realistic Genesis device in STII in this one.



Episode title: “Home Soil”
Season: 1
Basic plot: Things are going wrong on a planet being terraformed
Trollheart of the past: I remember liking this, though I think it has a pretty simplistic ending. I do remember thinking the way the aliens described us as “bags of mostly water” was cool.
Importance: 5 (The first time that first contact leads to war!)
Crisis point(s) if any: The alien life form takes over the ship and declares war
Original transmission date: February 22 1988
Writer(s): Robert Sabaroff, Karl Geurs, Ralph Sanchez (teleplay by Sabaroff)
Director: Corey Allen
Stardate:* 41463.9
Destination: Velara III
Mission (if any): Check on terraforming operation
Main character(s) in Plot: Picard, Bev
Main character(s) in Subplot (if any):
Not appearing:
Wesley, O’Brien
Villain/Monster (if any): Alien life form known as “micro brain”
Themes: Conservation, greed, respect for other life forms, obsession, murder, war, negotiation
Deaths: 1
Lives saved (episode): 0
Lives saved (cumulative): 24
Locations:

Shipboard:
Bridge
Transporter Room
Sickbay
Ready Room
Observation Lounge
Medical Lab
Space:

Other:
Velara III


Ships/vessels (encountered): 0
Ships/vessels (mentioned only): 0
Space battles: 0
Bodycount

Historical
0
Incidental
0
Direct
1
Total: 1
Running total: 88

Make it so: 1
Engage! 1
Combat factor: 0
Planets visited: Velara III
Planets mentioned:
Aliens:
1 (Micro brain)
Mysteries: Why the micro brain is attacking the colony
Patients in sickbay: 1 (Does a micro brain count? Hell, they had cheese in Voyager!)
Data v humanity: Data is the only one who can evade the laser drill, so his superior speed and reactions save him.
Data 4 - Humanity 6
Character scores:
Picard 10
Riker 25
Data 15
Geordi 15
Yar 15
Worf 15
Bev 475
Troi 15
Wesley 0
O’Brien 0

Earl Grey: 0
Shuttlecraft: 0
Admirals: 0
Starbases: 0
First contact: 1
Humour: 0
Episode rating: 6/10
Episode score: 490
Trollheart of the present: yeah decent enough, but again, it’s an updated “Devil in the Dark”, innit?

Shades of The Wrath of Khan with the first mention in the series of terraforming - and the first and I think only mention of Terraform Command (I wonder if that’s a part of Starfleet) but the episode is basically “Devil in the Dark” in theme and execution. I think yer man is a bit unfair on Data: “What did you do to my laser drill?” he moans. Data shrugs. “Hell, it was wreck it or let it wreck me.” I mean, what did he expect? **** your drill, pal: I was in danger of losing my life. You can always get another laser drill. The idea of not quite inorganic but certainly different life to any we know is again filched from TOS: there, the Horta was carbon-based, here, they’ve gone further. There is no organic structure to this life form, yet it does appear to be able to react to outside stimuli and communicate. Naturally, for its first contact with us, it’s war.
01.png


"Oh right thanks guys! Leave me to clean up the mess! What were you doing in here anyway?"

Interesting how they name the life form “micro brain” - this is the very phrase Q used to describe Worf in “Encounter at Farpoint”: “Macro head, with a micro brain!” Also interesting how the only way Picard and his crew can negotiate with the aliens is to virtually kill them. I suppose you could say that he could have gone ahead and done that, and the danger to his ship would be over, but he decided to try to broker a truce instead, and leave the alien life form with at least a more favourable impression of us than it had up to then received.
Episode title: “Where No One Has Gone Before”
Season: 1
Importance: 5 (first introduction of the Traveler, who will feature later in quite a spectacular way)
Crisis point(s) if any: The Enterprise goes beyond the known galaxy? I’d call that a crisis point, wouldn’t you?
Original transmission date: October 26 1987
Writer(s): Diane Duane (based on her TOS novel The Wounded Sky), Michael Reaves
Director: Rob Bowman

The first really transcendrnt TNG episode. One that made you think about space-time itself and human's place in it.

The manufactured conflict with Kosinski is just fine, but adds little to the episode.

This episode suffers from the show not being serialized. So many implications here, and no follow up...No the Traveler appearing randomly later doesn't count. Lack of imagination later on is the culprit. TNG could have used a good, experienced sci-fi writer on staff to work with ideas like this.

Go read the original novel.

Episode title: “When the Bough Breaks”
Season: 1
Basic plot: All the kids from the Enterprise are, well, kidnapped and forced to live a life of luxury and in which their every need will be catered to... hang on!
Trollheart’s memory: Being both a Wesley-centric episode and one involving kids, I remember hating this with a passion.

A very ho-hum episode.

The message is fine, but the episode is a TOS retread.

Many points given to Rob Legato for giving us a bit of eye candy at the end. It was unexpected and added to what was a strictly by-the-numbers story.
 
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The Horta is a silicon-based life form.
Doh! How could I have got that one wrong? Must have been when I sent my brain to the cleaners. Didn't take very long before they had it back, to be fair, and they hardly charged me at all.
I remember a 7th grade science teacher telling we kids that we were Ugly bags of mostly water. That was a real dressing down.
That's the kind of teacher you want.
My 7th grade science teacher let me do a term paper on futuristic spacecraft propulsion systems. He was my favourite teacher.
And that.
I loved the use of lighting in this episode, season 1 excelled at this.

I enjoyed this episode better in retrospect, the aging bit is a side note to me, but the take on terrorism is more interesting.

The US at the time was getting involved with a lot of shady BTS deals and should have kept it's mitts off, we always made things worse. A timely message from a pretty decent Trek.
BTS?
Often compared to DitD from TOS but has nothing to do with the original. The real interest is the planet-wide, living computer! Cool!
Ah it does. A living organism, almost undetectable as being intelligent to us, trying to protect its home planet from miners (or in this case, terraformers)?
Even immobile crystal living in sand with superintelligence is more advanced than humans, and looking at the world lately, I'm inclined to agree.
Certainly more intelligent than me (see above)
This one has some stilted dialogue, the director or editor should have used a few more/different takes on this.
I agree. It's a good vehicle for Beverly to actually do something for once, instead of just make eyes at JLP.
I couldn't help but think Roddenberry was thumbing his nose at the less realistic Genesis device in STII in this one.
Was he not involved in the writing of that though?


The first really transcendrnt TNG episode. One that made you think about space-time itself and human's place in it.

The manufactured conflict with Kosinski is just fine, but adds little to the episode.

This episode suffers from the show not being serialized. So many implications here, and no follow up...No the Traveler appearing randomly later doesn't count. Lack of imagination later on is the culprit. TNG could have used a good, experienced sci-fi writer on staff to work with ideas like this.

Go read the original novel.
They could have done a whole season - or even a series - based far beyond our gal - oh. Wait. They did. Unfortunately.
A very ho-hum episode.

The message is fine, but the episode is a TOS retread.
Indeed, with a slightly different slant. I imagine it was written as a chance for Wesley to do something other than complain and show the adults how clever he was when nobody cared.
 
Time for our next chart. "Home Soil" sees mother and son switch places, as Beverly rises to the giddy heights of third slot, pushing her son down into the basement with his comic books or engineering manuals, or whatever he uses to get his jollies, all the way down to six. Other than that, not a huge amount of change really.
BBBHomesoil.png

Data of course slides down to 4 while Yar remains at 5, and pretty much everyone else remains where they were. Picard has now finally joined that golden 1000-point club, while Data has reached 500 just before Tasha, but the doctor is well ahead of both of them, pushing towards the 900 points mark.
 
Trollheart’s memory: Being both a Wesley-centric episode and one involving kids, I remember hating this with a passion

I remember this episode for the same reasons and loving it with a passion.

Wesley was a big part of what kept my interest as a pre-teenage child, very relatable
 
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