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Was I the only one who disliked Far Beyond the Stars?

If they wanted to do a commentry on racism then why not set it in the normal trek verse or do a real time travel plot.

I just dont dig the idea of a vision premise.

A real time travel plot to explore racism would have been awesome. But a vision was also awesome. Why not do both?

I did not like the direction DS9 sometimes took, but if there is one thing that really made it all worth, it was this episode.
 
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Far Beyond the Stars was a decent episode, well acted, and well written, but not one of my favorites. A more novel idea than your typical filler episode, and nice to see a lot of the actors out of makeup, but personally, I can take it or leave it. I prefer DS9 episodes that advance a story arc, or the Dominion War, really.
 
In many respects it is a superb episode. But every second spent with the Prophets drags it down, because inflicting this doesn't make sense. The suggestion that Star Trek is Benny Russell's fantasy doesn't need any Prophets. Being aware that DS9 is fiction does rather rob that of much impact.

I've seen people in extreme emotional states and Brooks isn't overacting. His character is vulnerable, not cool, and that may not be pleasant viewing. Not the same thing at all.
 
I love the episode, but I feel it needed a phildickian twist at the end where Sisko finds out that Benny Russell was real and really wrote stories of Deep Space Nine during sci-fi's Golden Age.

However, I understand why that wasn't done (assuming it was considered), because then it opens up a whole can of worms in continuity about what the Star Trek universe is -- a real place or a place of dreams.
 
I love the episode, but I feel it needed a phildickian twist at the end where Sisko finds out that Benny Russell was real and really wrote stories of Deep Space Nine during sci-fi's Golden Age.

However, I understand why that wasn't done (assuming it was considered), because then it opens up a whole can of worms in continuity about what the Star Trek universe is -- a real place or a place of dreams.
I was hoping that at some point Q/John de Lancie would show up, in a very short cameo. That would have meant that Sisko DOES write the stories about Deep Space Nine, but for real.


Everyone seems to rave over it.

But

I found the whole thing well boring.......


I watch startrek for the science fictions. The whole them of future and space ect

I don't watch startrek to sit and watch a 1950's drama about racism.

Thge only good thing about the whole thing was the acting.

By the way I find most holodeck episodes boring as hell too.
Is it really too much to endure 1 episode out of 170 that deals with 1950s racism?
 
Maybe if Cirroc Lofton could do the accent more convincingly...

He sounded like a racist radio show from the 1920s doing an African American character.

'Heavy handed' is the right word. A story about 1950s racism is a good idea, but hammering it into the audience's heads is not.
 
It was OK-ish to me. Definitely over-rated.

The broad concept was OK, but the whole "vision" thing was trite - there had to be a better way. Mind you, the silly Sisko-as-part-prophet thing kinda ruined seasons 6-7 of DS9 anyway, and this is merely another symptom.
 
Is it really too much to endure 1 episode out of 170 that deals with 1950s racism?

Endure yes. Enjoy and think its one of the best episodes no!

And its not the racism theme I have the issue with its the setting and the whole 1950's vision rubbish.
 
I like the episode but I think it's overrated. The whole affair was a little forced.

I thought it turned out to be the Pah-Wraiths behind his vision. Sarah Sisko said "The wraiths even sent you a false vision and you did not waver", presumably referring to his second 'Benny' vision where he's in a mental institution. (Or were they only behind the second one?)
Haven't seen the episode in years, but I took it to mean only the second vision of being in a mental institution.
 
Far Beyond the Stars is extremely overrated. I liked the episode but there were aspects I didn't care for that much like the whole inclusion of the Prophets into the story was really stupid. I would have preferred if they somehow stayed in 'Star Trek' universe instead of the dream/vision thing. About the only thing that makes this episode any good, in my opinion, is the "heavy handed" moral and "preachy"-ness as some have put it. Also, it was neat to see the actors without the makeup.
 
For me, the hook of the episode was seeing the regulars playing thinly-disguised famous science fiction authors and one famous science fiction editor.
 
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But without the episode we wouldn't have gotten this amusing video...


[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6lHgbbM9pu4[/yt]
 
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