I was reading a Smallville Wiki entry for the episode 2x17 "Rosetta," in which Clark first meets Dr. Swann (Christopher Reeve), who tells him his birth name and home planet's name, and came across this:
Interestingly, TV Tropes doesn't appear to have a term for a story with no antagonist in this broadest sense; its definition of No Antagonist includes stories in which there are central problems (addiction, natural disasters, disease, etc.) Heck, I'm not sure if the English language has a word for a non-sentient antagonist, maybe just the neutral term "opposing force"?
This got me to thinking if there are any Trek episodes without antagonists or clear/central opposing forces. (In "Shuttlepod One," for example, the lack of oxygen certainly qualifies as an opposing force, and in VOY's "Projections," IIRC, there's the real danger that the Doctor will delete his own program if he makes the wrong call.) I suppose "The Inner Light" would qualify?
This is the first episode in the entire series to have no real antagonist, not even a disease to fight against. Instead, conflict arises from the effects the key is having on Clark, Clark's arguments with his parents about finding out more of his alien heritage, suspicions of Dr. Swann (who turns out to be nothing but helpful), Lex Luthor and Dr. Walden getting more suspicious of Clark (and while both men later become antagonists, they do nothing hostile in this episode), and from the final alarming message from Kal-El's ship.
Interestingly, TV Tropes doesn't appear to have a term for a story with no antagonist in this broadest sense; its definition of No Antagonist includes stories in which there are central problems (addiction, natural disasters, disease, etc.) Heck, I'm not sure if the English language has a word for a non-sentient antagonist, maybe just the neutral term "opposing force"?
This got me to thinking if there are any Trek episodes without antagonists or clear/central opposing forces. (In "Shuttlepod One," for example, the lack of oxygen certainly qualifies as an opposing force, and in VOY's "Projections," IIRC, there's the real danger that the Doctor will delete his own program if he makes the wrong call.) I suppose "The Inner Light" would qualify?
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