The only thing I remember is the Beverly masturbation scene.
One of the great Trek moments if you're a Crusher fan.
This. It seems fairly predictable to me at this point, that certain episodes, like "emergence", "masks", "phantasms", people gravitate towards, or are repelled by, seemingly hung up by the razor of their own intellect, missing other layers of information, being so caught up in dualities.Popular opinion is overrated as a tastemaker.
Yeah, Trek episodes based around grocery store romance novels make for riveting TV.
A TOS in Season 3 type story, maybe.
I've no problem when Trek breaks the mold and does something of a "high concept" story (see: The Inner Light.) But when that story is practically straight out of a $5 romance novel bought at the Apple Market in 1983, then you've got problems. I mean Beverly's family has been haunted by this alien creature for decades (centuries?)! She reads her grandmother's freaking porn-filled diary and gets off on it! The graveyard scene near the end was done pretty well but the episode was mostly filled with boring crap and "ghost-story/romance" that, frankly, probably didn't interest your typical Star Trek viewer if you consider the ramifications of what this being means it really mucks up the history of Star Trek universe and Beverly's family history and then you've got the ridiculous broad stereotypes in it.
It's an okay episode, not really bad, but not good either. Read Anne Rice's The Mayfair Witches: The Witching Hour (Book 1 of a trilogy.) It's a better telling of more or less (more IMO) of the same story.
Taylor denied that the story was inspired by Anne Rice's The Witching Hour. She explained, "One of Brannon and my favorite movies is The Innocents, which comes from Henry James' Turn of the Screw. We saw this episode as a homage, and we packed in every sort of Gothic ghost story trick that one could imagine." (Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion; Captains' Logs: The Unauthorized Complete Trek Voyages)
Yeah, because we all know that "Star Trek viewers" are single nerdy males obsessed with continuity who are not interested in icky girly things like romance novels and stuff. Talk about stereotyping.The graveyard scene near the end was done pretty well but the episode was mostly filled with boring crap and "ghost-story/romance" that, frankly, probably didn't interest your typical Star Trek viewer if you consider the ramifications of what this being means it really mucks up the history of Star Trek universe and Beverly's family history and then you've got the ridiculous broad stereotypes in it.
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