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Favorite Episodes Round Five

Spider

Dirty Old Man
Premium Member
OK folks, you get to select five here. There are 11 listed because Cause and Effect and The Drumhead were tied for 10th place.

It's getting down to the wire now. Some really fine episodes didn't make this cut, so this is going to get harder.
 
This was really a tough one, but I voted for:

All Good Things
Darmok
Tapestry
The Inner Light
Yesterday's Enterprise

It was really really difficult trying to pick between Darmok and The Measure of a Man for my 5th vote, but I went with Darmok if for no other reason, an alien was finally presented as alien. Star Trek as a whole rarely did that, and it was done to good effect here.

And yes, I really do consider those shows better than Best of Both Worlds. I like character dramas. It makes Spider sad Lower Decks didn't make it to this round. :(
 
This is getting seriously hard to choose. After some deliberation, I had to admit that Best of Both Worlds simply would not make the cut.
My top 5 are-

Darmok
Tapestry
The Inner Light
The Mesure of a Man
Yesterday's Enterprise

I hated to omit BOBW, it is a brilliant two-parter, but taken as single episodes, these 5 are better. And The Drumhead is a fantastic episode, which was only just left off my list.
BRG
 
'Twas hard, but I finally settled on:

All Good Things
Yesterdays Enterprise
Tapestry
The Measure of a Man
The Drumhead

GM
 
BRG said:
This is getting seriously hard to choose. After some deliberation, I had to admit that Best of Both Worlds simply would not make the cut.

That was very difficult for me as well. I love BOBW, but it just didn't make it. I would have loved a follow up episode on how Shelby made Captain.
 
BOBW I is my all time favorite episode, but something about part II just doesn't match up to the first one.

I voted:

BOBW I
All GOod Things
The Inner Light
Drumhead
Tapestry
 
Went with a predictable 5:

All Good Things,
BOBW I
The Inner Light
Yesterday's Enterprise
Cause and Effect
 
The Measure of a Man
Q-Who?
Yesterday's Enterprise
The Drumhead
The Inner Light
 
All Good Things
Cause and Effect
Inner Light
Measure of a Man
Yesterday's Enterprise
 
OK, this Officially Sucks Now. My choices for this round are:

All Good Things - Best series finale ever and a nice bookend to Encounter at Farpoint

Best of Both Worlds Part 1 - Introduced the cliff-hanger to Star Trek and to this day one of the finest ever done. For any TV series.

The Inner Light - A personal favorite and very Star Trek. Who wouldn’t like to live an entire life in a matter of minutes? A side of Picard that we rarely saw again.

Yesterday's Enterprise – Loved the premise. Loved the story. Loved Rachel Garrett. Loved seeing the Enterprise-C. Loved the tie in with the real world relationship with the Klingons. Time changed and in a good way.

And finally…

Q-Who? – For those of us that watched TNG in first run syndication, we only had TOS and four movies for reference. We knew about Klingons, we knew about Romulans, we even knew about the Conspiracy bugs. But the Federation had never encountered the Borg:
We are the Borg. Lower your shields and surrender your ships. We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. Your culture will adapt to service us. Resistance is futile.
The Borg is the ultimate user. They're unlike any threat your Federation has ever faced. They're not interested in political conquest, wealth, or power as you know it... they're simply interested in your ship – its technology. They've identified it as something they can consume. You can't outrun them, you can't destroy them. If you damage them, the essence of what they are remains. They regenerate and keep coming. They are relentless.
If you can't take a little bloody nose, maybe you ought to go back home and crawl under your bed. It's not safe out here. It's wondrous, with treasures to satiate desires both subtle and gross; but it's not for the timid.
The Borg in Q Who? were the single most frightening enemy of the Federation ever encountered. Even the Enterprise couldn't defeat them (a first as I recall). And the foreshadowing at the end left you with chills.

Good or bad, this was the episode that introduced the Borg to the Star Trek universe and subject of multiple episodes across every subsequent series plus one feature film. Regardless of what they became, Q-Who? in its original airing was memorable. None of us had any idea what was coming.
 
^Damn TNG had some great dialog in it didn't it. I just love that episode because of all the great lines. They don't write dialog like that like they used to.
 
The Borg in Q Who? were the single most frightening enemy of the Federation ever encountered. Even the Enterprise couldn't defeat them (a first as I recall). And the foreshadowing at the end left you with chills.

For me, they didn't become as frightening until the issue of assimilating people came into play. At first they were a major technological menace, but when the plot evolved into them violating your body and sucking out your soul, that's what creeped me out.
 
SmoothieX said:
For me, they didn't become as frightening until the issue of assimilating people came into play. At first they were a major technological menace, but when the plot evolved into them violating your body and sucking out your soul, that's what creeped me out.
Best of Both Worlds Part 1:
Data: "We were unable to retrieve him, sir. The captain has been altered by the Borg."
Riker: "'Altered'?"
Worf: "He is a Borg!"
The frustration and defeat in Worf's response is obvious. And then we get:
"I am Locutus, of Borg. Resistance is futile. Your life, as it has been, is over. From this time forward, you will service .. us."
You're quite correct in that assimilation added yet another terrifying capability to this already fearsome enemy. Too bad that Part 2 started the demise of the Borg as a threat.
 
I thought the way the dealt with the destruction of the Borg ship in BOBW II was creative and believable.

They managed to destroy the ship and eliminate the threat through a loophole in the collective's programming. None of the conventional weapons they threw at them helped.

It was in later incarnations where they held their own with ship's weapons that I thought they became watered down.
 
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