"Liaisons" *
The Enterprise crew play hosts to a new race and Picard is stranded after a crash landing.
I didn't care for this so many years ago and I still don't. The Picard sequences are insufferably boring. And the rest of it isn't much better. The only mildly entertaining parts are watching Worf struggle with being diplomatic with an obvious jackass. Add to this that the whole story suffers if you already know the outcome. Other episodes can overcome you knowing the outcome because you can still enjoy how the story is told---you can enjoy the mechanics of it. That doesn't apply here.
The other big problem is conceptual. Never mind that it is yet again fore-head-of-week, but if you have aliens in humanoid form and nearly indistinguishable from humans then it's hard to accept that there is absolutely no common ground. It's hard to accept that they cannot conceive of sensory experience and certain emotional experiences---those things are inherently part of the human form built up over a million years of evolution. This isn't the first time TNG does this, but it's even more stupid here.
TOS dabbled with the idea of aliens not understanding sensation and other human concepts, but TOS had the good sense to make those aliens actually alien but adopting human form. I'm referring to Sylvia and Korob in "Catspaw," the Kelvans in "By Any Other Name" and Yarnek in "The Savage Curtain."
The Enterprise crew play hosts to a new race and Picard is stranded after a crash landing.
I didn't care for this so many years ago and I still don't. The Picard sequences are insufferably boring. And the rest of it isn't much better. The only mildly entertaining parts are watching Worf struggle with being diplomatic with an obvious jackass. Add to this that the whole story suffers if you already know the outcome. Other episodes can overcome you knowing the outcome because you can still enjoy how the story is told---you can enjoy the mechanics of it. That doesn't apply here.
The other big problem is conceptual. Never mind that it is yet again fore-head-of-week, but if you have aliens in humanoid form and nearly indistinguishable from humans then it's hard to accept that there is absolutely no common ground. It's hard to accept that they cannot conceive of sensory experience and certain emotional experiences---those things are inherently part of the human form built up over a million years of evolution. This isn't the first time TNG does this, but it's even more stupid here.
TOS dabbled with the idea of aliens not understanding sensation and other human concepts, but TOS had the good sense to make those aliens actually alien but adopting human form. I'm referring to Sylvia and Korob in "Catspaw," the Kelvans in "By Any Other Name" and Yarnek in "The Savage Curtain."
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