Nardpuncher
Rear Admiral
Also...I was going to start a Best of Both Worlds Part II thread because in a couple of weeks it'll be 20 years since it aired!
Picard didn't always know how to destroy that Cube in FC, his leftover connection to the Collective alerted him to a weakness that had developed as a result of the damage it took. As in, that weakness wasn't always there.
Anywho, it made sense the Feds would eventually figure out how to damage Borg ships with their own weapons. The Borg have a limit to their adaptability.
That might be how it played out on screen. But it was shit writing and unbelievable. It didn't do anything to make the Borg seem invincible.
I've thought this for years. Glad I wasn't alone. The music change was strange, why not use the same style since its a two-parter? Also, seeing Picard back in command at the end didn't sit right with me. I would have preferred seeing Riker retain command for a few episodes while Starfleet tests Picard to make sure he's emotionally recovered fully, as well as making sure Picard wouldn't "go Borg" at a later date. Than after 4 or 5 episodes Picard could make a comeback.
TNG was primarily an episodic series, not serialized as most shows today, which has its strengths and weaknesses. Having your main, very talented, very expensive actor absent from the show for 4 or 5 episodes is insane from the studio's point of view and I can't blame them. The great strength about an episodic type series is that for the most part they have to resolve the story arc at the end of the hour. The writers can't just leave things unresolved and assume they'll figure it out later. I think this is what makes for great stand-alone episodes, whereas with more serialized series watching one episode is hardly satisfying.
It suffers from TNG not being serialized, so everything in the episode is resolved to status quo bythe end of it.
It suffers from TNG not being serialized, so everything in the episode is resolved to status quo bythe end of it.
Yes
It would have been interesting to see Picard as the enemy for the better part of a season. Have Locutus choke Whorf to death while talking some Borg-smack about the inferiority of Klingons - or gouge out someone's eye or something so you could never forget the things he did within that identity.
Eventually bring him back (rescue mission), but have some people relate to him differently because of all the innovative things he empowered the Borg to do.
It suffers from TNG not being serialized, so everything in the episode is resolved to status quo bythe end of it.
Yes
It would have been interesting to see Picard as the enemy for the better part of a season. Have Locutus choke Whorf to death while talking some Borg-smack about the inferiority of Klingons - or gouge out someone's eye or something so you could never forget the things he did within that identity.
Eventually bring him back (rescue mission), but have some people relate to him differently because of all the innovative things he empowered the Borg to do.
Wow, and with those developments we would have missed out on many great episodes in the seasons to follow BOBW. Some fans seem to forget that both TOS and TNG (esp TOS) are more akin to anthology series, but with a continuing cast characters who are involved in a variety of ethical, moral or philosophical problems, wrestled with and debated on an episodic basis. Neither were meant to be night-time soap operas where character-related issues carried over throughout entire seasons. Eventually this type of storytelling did seep into TNG, mostly by necessity as the series last longer than TOS, and the writers developed a great mix of some serialized (such as Worf's discommendation) amidst the stand-alone, moral dilemma of the week. But I don't think that TNG would have somehow been a better series with an all-serialized format.
Quick addition-there was actually fan speculation in Summer 1990 that Picard would be killed, or no longer be on the Enterprise, Riker would be Captain with Shelby as the XO, etc.
No one's saying the entire show would be *automatically* better had it been serialized , people are just discussing the possibilities if the format was different and that the plot/major consequences of BOBW lends itself to serialization (frankly, if it didn't, why have Family in the first place? It wasn't part of the two-parter, after all). I also don't see how serializing BOBW would necessarily negate other Trek stories -- a number of them reference the events of this episode.
I also love how you insinuate that serial shows must be nightly soap operas. Someone should tell The Office, 30 Rock, Curb Your Enthusiasm, and Califironication that they should be more like soap operas, not comedies. We get it that you don't like serialized shows, but it's kind of pointless to imagine TNG as a series of stand-alone episodes when that's what we got in the first place; since serial shows are an alternative to a stand-alone series, that's where the discussion/hypotheticals went. Being serialized doesn't ensure quality because, like all forms of storytelling, the execution matters more than the format. But one can't deny the critical acclaim that many (not all) serialized shows have had over the years, from DS9 and Babylon 5 to Mad Men and The Sopranos.
Quick addition-there was actually fan speculation in Summer 1990 that Picard would be killed, or no longer be on the Enterprise, Riker would be Captain with Shelby as the XO, etc.
It was more than speculation. Stewart had been in talks with the suits to renegotiate his contract around the end of shooting season 3, so the were real questions as to if he would be back or not. That really amped up the anticipation for Part II over the summer. Will he be back or not?! Argh!!Let's just say, that was one long summer.
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