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The Scariest TNG Episode

In "TATTOO", Wildman mentions her husband's name (hard to pronounce, even harder to spell) and that he's Ktarian. So we know her baby is going to be a human/Ktarian hybrid. It was just never established why her pregnancy took so damn long.
Right, I was suggesting they could have done the Naomi story differently. Just have the dad be someone was on the ship and died in one of the perilous episodes. Grieving wife, now she has to raise a daughter by herself in the DQ. This, to me, would have been more interesting and would dodge the 1 1/2 year pegnancy. :lol:
 
"Is it true that you only have a limited existence? You exist, then you don't exist. Your mind calls it death."

That line in Silence has Lease has always been more frightening to me than the entire rest of the series.

I'm pretty sure Silence has Lease is also the only "super powerful entity" episode I like.
I find the death of Random Helmsman to be very disturbing.
 
In honour of today being Halloween, what do we all think is the spookiest, most spine-chilling episode of TNG? Will you go with Identity Crisis (which seriously creeped me out as a kid)? How about Schisms, with the sinister clicking aliens? Then there was Night Terrors. Maybe all three freaked you out, maybe none of them, or maybe a different episode holds the honour for you. For me, I think Schisms wins this one.
Identity Crisis. Not the creatures, but that moment in the holodeck...
 
I find the death of Random Helmsman to be very disturbing.
The actor did play the hell out of that dying scene. The possibilities of how Nagilium was planning on "observing the different ways of dying" (or something like that) are also pretty disturbing.
Like...was he going to rapidly age a crewmember so that he could observe "death by old age"? Was he going to use his powers to make someone waste away in moments so that he could see "death by starvation"?
 
The actor did play the hell out of that dying scene. The possibilities of how Nagilium was planning on "observing the different ways of dying" (or something like that) are also pretty disturbing.
Like...was he going to rapidly age a crewmember so that he could observe "death by old age"? Was he going to use his powers to make someone waste away in moments so that he could see "death by starvation"?
Death my "OMG" reaction. :shrug:
 
I find the death of Random Helmsman to be very disturbing.
That one in Silence Has Lease is right up there with the most unsettling arbitrary crew deaths of all time, IMHO alongside the polymerizing guy in Schisms, the half materialized lady from In Theory, Carmen & the old man being sucked up by the Crystalline Entity & Armus spitting out Tasha
 
Genesis.

The crew de-evolving turning the ship into a ship of horrors. But that one scene where they reach engineering and Barclay suddenly leaps up against the glass partition and you see what's happened to him.

Scared the living #$!% outta me! I hate spiders! Nonononono.

Haven't watched that episode since.
 
Schisms takes the cake.

Too close to reality to easily dismiss as fun horror fiction.
The general concept already entirely exists in our reality even. Humans currently abduct and experiment on 'lower' beings.
It's not a stretch to imagine there might be other beings who view humans as the 'lower' beings to abduct and experiment on.
Nor is it much of a stretch to imagine humans who abduct and experiment on other humans under guise of extraterrestrial beings.
Watch/read a bunch of abduction testimonies then watch this episode late at night for full effect. 😬
 
Surprised I didn't post my entries before - either "Phantasms" for surreal visuals and Data being a stabby stabby assaulter, "Datalore" for Lore's sadism, "Cause and Effect" for a novel take on a time loop story and how they get around their destruction (great wind-ups despite knowing what will happen), "Conspiracy" for the bodysnatcher trope that's used well (even the cliché mealworm eatin' scene), but...

..."Genesis" wins the trophy here. It just nails the tone and style perfectly and sends it to the next level. Roll with the treknobabble and or one or two lines of dialogue/motivations behind it, and it's presented in such a terrific way, elevating the story well above the mere sum of its parts. The reveals, the attacks, the spinning ship, you name it, the direction is nothing less than first rate. Even the music has some soul that's been long-missing since a lot of season 5. I'll be rewatching it again today. The direction is magnificent, and I wish McFadden had done some of the previous aforementioned stories.

Indeed:

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(Good grief, I'd seen this clip maybe 2 months ago and it still jumpscares me -- every freakin' time. It's that great.)

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(a good reminder as to why they need a large crew; one circuit goes out and you have to compensate. Then something else goes out and the cascade effect quickly becomes monumental, a computer can't always re-stabilize on its own.)

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etc.


It's a gem from season 7, heck yeah! :luvlove: :luvlove: :luvlove: :luvlove: :luvlove:
 
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