One of my favorite episodes that first delved deeply into previously unexplored nuances of time travel is Yesterday's Enterprise. Upon my first viewing, I was left a little confused - I suppose because the story didn't hold my hand to explain why Prime Picard and crew had no knowledge of Altered Picard and crew - and vice versa. Even though I was a little puzzled, it instantly became a favorite episode of mine.
Subsequent viewings permitted me to fully understand what was going on. Maybe the fact that I was 16 at the time of the first viewing precluded my full understanding. I do maintain that teenagers are, by and large, are a fairly stupid segment of human population. But, I digress...
Thoughts on this episode?
You may be thinking of "Gravity" and of Lori Petty, rather than Lori Singer. Tuvok and Paris are stranded on a planet strongly resembling the Mojave Desert for what seems to be days, but when they finally get back to Voyager, only a few hours have elapsed, ship time. There's a nice sequence of scenes toward the end playing the two time-scales off of each other.Didn't VOY use that concept in two different stories. I forget the other title. It had Lori Singer.
VOY's "Nemesis" was another one where they played around with the idea of a non-functioning UT to good effect, I thought.Yes Lori Petty, shows you don't alway need the universal translator to advance the show.
Timescape was a great concept, but it's faaaaaaaarrrrrr from being good science!TNG had the most 'science' of all the Treks. When it got it wrong, it got it very, VERY wrong (Genesis). But when it got it right (Yesterday's Enterprise, Timescape, Cause And Effect) it did it very well.
Close. It was called "Remember Me".What was that episode where Doctor Crusher was trapped inside her own miniature universe for most of the duration, and people kept disappearing? 'Forget Me Not'?
Yeah, that one was very nicely executed.That was a great concept, particularly the way in which we don't realise the changeover has happened until the end. And the computer's description of what the 'Universe' is, before it all starts shrinking around her. It was always one of my favourites, that.
I know I'm going to get run up a flagpole for this, but there's something to be said for the entire Nomad/V'ger angle. All in all its an entire sub-genre of science fiction: a cosmic "return to sender" from an alien world.
Scotty would't think so.What about the transporter.
I think it was a great invention and a great hi-concept that they've used in interesting ways (and generally with restraint, I think) over the years.
One of my favorites is Voyager's season 4 "Scientific Method". I thought that episode ROCKED as far as Sci-fi goes. In it there are aliens that cannot be seen by Voyager's crew that are performing scientific experiments on them. The sight of Janeway with aliens sticking needles in her head!!! OMG! It was deeply disturbing and a great sci-fi show for me.
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