Well, let's see how much time I have to write these up. I'm about four episodes behind, and I have more and more to say about each one. Let's start with...
"Far Beyond the Stars"
This is clearly a special episode. I don't mean that in the cheesy, Diff'rent Strokes "very special episode" sense, like the one where Gordon Jump shows Arnold and Dudley pornographic cartoons (that one's still burned into my memory 30 years later), but in the sense that everyone involved put just a little more effort into it because they knew it was something different.
There are really two things going on in FBTS: the retro-1950s look of the episode, and the underlying story, which has an obvious social component.
First things first: this episode looks incredible! It makes me wish that someone would pitch a Mad Men-type show, but instead of being about ad men in the 1960s it would be about a scifi mag in the 1950s. Everything about the episode is absolutely gorgeous.
Second, it's great to see the "alien" cast members out of their makeup, and to see everyone in street clothes. I IDed most of the "aliens" based on their voices. J.G. Hertzler reminded me of someone I knew, and it took me a while to remember that it was a semi-homeless guy who used to hang out at me at work a long, long time ago. Ironically, given what Hertlzer's character does, he was also an artist, and figured in my very short and incredibly un-lucrative career as an art dealer. But that's another story.
I thought Cirroc Lofton's character's look was spot-on, too, with the straightened hair and mustache. He looked a lot like a hustler in the 1950s would have. This might have been the best episode of anything if they'd have called him Rinehart as a nod to Invisible Man. There are certainly some thematic similarities to the novel in the story of Benny Russell.
Which leads us to the real question: is this a good story? I say yes--it's incredibly powerful, and among the best of what Trek is capable of. Instead of talking about racism by using clumsy allegory ("Let That Be Your Last Battlefield"), FBTS tackles it face-on, in all its inhumanity and brutality. The scene where the police beat Russell is among the more brutal in all of Trek because it's so relatable, and it deserves to be. While we're talking injustice, sexism is also brought up. I'd say this isn't being preachy, because if you're going to tell an honest story about life in this period, you have to acknowledge the very real racial and sex-based barriers to achievement.
Sociologically, the episode gets it right by having two "successful" black men as foils to Russell: the street hustler Jimmy and the baseball player Willie Hawkins. Michael Dorn, by the way, is incredible without the makeup, and I really wish I could see him in more stuff where he gets to play a human.
The real power of the episode, is that it takes a sociological and historical concept, racism, and makes it biographical. Obviously the viewer, who is a sci-fi fan, is going to empathize with Benny Russell, and the cruelty of the world that can't allow him to share his stories is more apparent than it would be in a textbook. It's a great story.
From a Trek perspective, I've got a few quibbles. I wouldn't have set it up as a prophetic vision/synaptic potential thingie. Instead, I'd have shifted the focus just slightly, to Jake. Maybe he finds a Benny Russell manuscript, or maybe he finds a reference to the lost work of an obscure sci-fi writer of the 1950s, and then we get the story "told" by the DS9 cast. I'd also cut the preacher character and the references to the prophets, which to me take a little away from Benny Russell. Yes, maybe he's writing about DS9 because he's inspired by the wormhole prophets...or maybe he's just a very smart guy who can see a better future.
In any event, these are minor quibbles, and I think the episode is a triumph as it is. One of my favorites so far.
I'm eager to hear what other people think.