Great post, galleywest.
I liked that you mentioned 'The Chase' - in my opinion, it's one of the most important ST episodes out of all the hundreds of them. In the theme of this particular thread, it excuses the fallacies of any other S6 episode, and then some.
It's a whole 'nother thread to discuss why the holographic Preserver/Progenitor looks exactly like the female Founder. Maybe because it's the same actress (Salome Jens), and taking that into account, same character?
I'm not a fan of the way TNG sometimes gives us a monumental episode filled with character growth, high drama and action with repercussions for our characters, and then follows that episode with a comedic romp.
"The Chase" was a nice episode and it is definitely a better explanation than the "law of parallel planetary development" from TOS. It was interesting how they followed all those clues and there was a bit of a chase (hence the title) and it wasn't clear what they would find at the end. I think all parties expected something akin to an ancient weapon (the Cardassians/Romulans/Klingons in order to acquire it, the Federation in order to keep others from acquiring/using it)
Though it made me sad that the planet of nothing but plant life was destroyed, that sounded like my favorite planet ever and one of the parties killed it for no apparent reason.
I think season 5 was a slight step down from the past and 6 a pretty big one (although with some very strong episodes and some improvement after the first third). It felt like some of the writers and actors were becoming less interested in the characters and especially less interested in taking risks.
At the same time, some of the characters became a little too self-righteous, for instance Picard and Crusher seemed a little too completely dismissive of Moriarty's desires and Data went way OTT, without consequences, in "The Quality of Life". OTOH, "Birthright" and then "Second Chances" and "Chain of Command" and then "Tapestry" were great in showing how Worf and Picard had and hadn't changed and were still changing.
Let it go, Indiana.
That thing belongs in a museum.
I said no camels! That's five camels! Can't you count?![]()
Best thread derailment arc ever.
[/I]I really liked Schisms, to me it was one of the most creative Trek episodes. I remember that at the time, aliens and alien abductions were a big part of popular culture (this was juuuuuust before X-Files started). I had never thought about how such a thing might play out in a world where your work on a daily basis with aliens--people who, incidentally, might consider the humans to be the aliens. To take the idea of the alien abduction and give it a deep space twist was so much fun to watch. Not gonna lie, the part where they reconstruct the room in the holodeck gave me the creeps.
Starship Mine? It entered the phrase Die Hard Picard into my lexicon, which makes it a winner in my book. Episodes where Picard gets to be a little more roguish are a pleasure to watch, Stewart embraces that sometimes underexplored aspect of Picard's personality. It's placed at an interesting point in the season, too, a few episodes after Tapestry. It's almost like a continuation of the idea that one of the things that got Picard to the captain's chair is that he has learned when not to play it safe.
The Chase: THANK YOU Star Trek for finally addressing the "why does everyone look the same but for pointy ears and weird foreheads?" question. And at the heart of it, it's a story about how important archaeology can be. As someone who wanted to be an archaeologist, this instantly won a place in my heart. As someone who is now an archaeologist, it still holds that place.
Timescape: Oh, come on--if you didn't find the smiley face scene hilarious, I think you might be dead. :P I love episodes like this--a one-off mystery to be solved over the course of 45 minutes. It was also a nice way to bring in the Romulans without it being all about "the Romulans are our enemy."
Speaking of which, Suspicions, which I know a lot of people find meh or worse, is--I'm gonna say it--one of my all-time favorite episodes. Yeah, I went there. It gave Dr. Crusher something interesting to do, and showed that she might actually be a person with interests outside being the ship's doctor. I thought as a mystery plot, it was a fun kind of "whodunit" enterprise with an appropriately suspicious group of possible suspects. Yeah, I'll watch that!
But, there were certainly duds, too. Aquiel--why are Geordi-centric episodes so off-putting? True Q is a yawn for me--a waste of Q that only made his usually buoyant presence feel overused. Lessons could have been renamed Should We Give Picard a Love Life? Nah.
I'm not a fan of the way TNG sometimes gives us a monumental episode filled with character growth, high drama and action with repercussions for our characters, and then follows that episode with a comedic romp.
Funny, this variety is why I love TNG!
"Episodic" seems to be a dirty word these days, as if it's automatically somehow worse than serialisation (I hate that term "filler episode" as if somehow any episode of a show that doesn't contribute to some massive arc, or have some life-changing event, is sub-par. If an episode is entertaining, it has done its job for me!)
I liked TNG because they did great work in having a real mix of episodes. DS9 did as well, until it got dragged down by the dreary "war arc" and the disappointing season 6-7.
What? A big step down? A comedic romp? Did you even watch the same episode I did?Just saw "Ship in a Bottle".
A big step down from the drama of Chain of Command.
I'm not a fan of the way TNG sometimes gives us a monumental episode filled with character growth, high drama and action with repercussions for our characters, and then follows that episode with a comedic romp.
What? A big step down? A comedic romp? Did you even watch the same episode I did?Just saw "Ship in a Bottle".
A big step down from the drama of Chain of Command.
I'm not a fan of the way TNG sometimes gives us a monumental episode filled with character growth, high drama and action with repercussions for our characters, and then follows that episode with a comedic romp."Ship in a Bottle" is one of the highlights of Season 6, and one of the best TNG episodes! You Monster!
On the subject of Filler Episodes, I'm with Trek Survivor on this one. There are only Good and Bad episodes. Focusing too much on a story arc can be bad as well (DS9 S6/7). Filler is just another word for "Badly written, empty fluff". Prime example: "Cost of Living". Ohh, just mentioning it makes my brain hurt. "The higherrrrr, the fewerrrr". Whatever.
Oh, and "Aquiel" is ten times better than "Suspicions". Suspicions is barely watchable. The actors must have had an off-day or something went wrong during editing. It feels.. wrong somehow.
Not only that, but the 'villain' is laughable and the 'twist' is so incredibly convoluted it makes my brain hurt again.
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