I'm gonna go with both. She's both brilliant and scene-chewing. Which is a neat trick!I can never decide if Louise Fletcher is cheese with a side of ham or is giving a performance of unparalleled subtlety and complexity. Probably both.
I wince every time she says it.She can make a word like "child" seem like pure evil.
I don't think I was spoiled, so I remember it really confusing me at first and then the light dawned when I realized he was traveling to just before Encounter at Farpoint.Before I saw this episode all of the ads and interviews and the whole circus told us we would be seeing the past, and Tasha, and Q, and the Farpoint court. So I wonder what I would have thought seeing the Post Atomic Horror rabble in these early scenes, unspoiled?
One of my few nitpicks with this episode. It kept it from being perfect.OK, why isn't Future Picard saying "Hey, they did this scan thing on me in my present and figured out that I was building up days worth of memories in a few minutes and then everyone believed me. Why don't we do that?"
The other nitpick. I understand the narrative reason, but I still didn't like it.Deanna Troi - The Lois Lane of the Star Trek Elseworlds. Want a vaguely or not so vaguely dystopian future? Kill off Deanna / Lois.
inWelcome to the 30th anniversary of 1994! (And get OFF my LAWN!)
It occurred to me that we're in the run up to the 30th anniversary of All Good Things and Generations. So then I started thinking "Hey, I had kind of fallen out of Star Trek watching back then. Why not do it again (for the first time) now?" (I've seen all the episodes. Just not week to week.)
I meant to start this a week or two ago, so I've missed the DS9 episodes Rivals and The Alternate. And The Pegasus aired on January 10th.
If I remember right TNG and DS9 were syndicated so depending on your market these episodes all aired sometime during that week, right?
Anyway, 30ish years ago people who were watching Star Trek watched Homeward.
Next up, for those that feel like joining in on this shindig:
30 January: DS9 Armageddon Game
31 January: TNG (shudder) Sub Rosa
Wow. I'm not a 24th century guy. Not my favorite era, not my favorite characters, not my favorite ships or design. But this was where the bulk of Star Trek has taken place. And my goodness by this time TNG was looking GOOD. Watching that teaser and the opening credits feels a bit like coming home.
I'll go look up all the details on Memory Alpha later. But how the heck did they get Paul freaking Sorvino to be on this show? (Edit: MA is unrevealing on this point.)
Like I said, I wasn't watching TNG much when this was on. Was this the season where everyone got a family member? (Oh no! I didn't wait until after Sub Rosa to start this!)
Hey! Penny Johnson! How long before she shows up on DS9?
Oh, this was when I finally figured out that the Prime Directive (as implemented in TNG) was totally evil! And then Into Darkness doubled down on it! I suppose Pen Pals (was that the one?) had done this kind of dance before as well.
Because the Culture of the Week doesn't have warp drive they are beyond saving? But if they only had that level of tech then the Federation would do something? Yikes. And if I recall it's not even once a civilization explores and finds the Federation on its own. It's the moment they invent FTL. Bam! Welcome to our club!
I get that this isn't really about if the Prime Directive is good or bad. It's the TNG writers finding an impossible morale conundrum for our heroes.
Picard's reaction to Nikolai is that it's like Nikolai used the wrong fork. And Picard is really mad about it. And then Picard is all "What do you expect us to do now?" Um... Airlock? "That would be so... Icky!" (Didn't Picard have pretty much the same reaction to the 20th century space popsicles back in The Neutral Zone in season 1?)
I don't understand the stakes. Worst case scenario in Nikolai's plan: They find out that they were moved by aliens. Gods. Whatever. It becomes part of their culture. Not the first civ to have alien benefactors in its past. Including (according to Star Trek) ours.
But the worst case scenario in Picard's plan: They all die and are never heard from again. How is this a debate?
I can't even see Our Heroes as people in this episode. The only person I actually believed was the guy from the planet that killed himself. And then Picard (the writers) has the audacity to say "I wished I had known him better."
Hey, Deana's not wearing the space suit?
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