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Season Four Revisted

Armus

Commodore
Commodore
Season four revisited. I just watched the entire fourth season of TNG on BluRay. I found that I enjoyed season four more than the last time I saw the episodes. Season 4 was the last season TNG where Ron Jones scored the series, it was the season where Wesley departed, and it was the last year where Gene Rodenberry had any creative influence on the series.

The show had been getting more character oriented since season 2 and in the season 4 there is is a greater movement away from TNG's adventure roots and towards Star Trek Meets PBS Masterpiece theater, with episodes like "Family", "The Drumhead", "Half A Life", "The Host", and "In Theory". In seasons 1-3, like TOS, most of the episodes end on the bridge, as the Enterprise warps on to the next mission. That touch of TOS is abandoned in season four. Some random observations: Data seems more android like and less human in season 4 than he did in earlier seasons. Riker has almost a pompadour haircut in the later episodes of the season. There's at least 3 good Geordi episodes which is more than in any other year. There are several sequel episodes this year, such as "Reunion", which is a sequel to both "The Emissary" and "Sins of The Father", "Galaxy's Child", a followup to "Booby Trap" and "Q Pid", which follows up on "Deja Q" and "Captain's Holiday". Dennis McCarthy's music is not as memorable as his work in the previous seasons but it's still serviceable. The show feels a little softer and more antiseptic than the previous seasons yet it doesn't have feeling of malaise that the later seasons and other modern Trek series often do.

My favorite episodes were: "Best of Both Worlds Part II", "Brothers", "Future Imperfect", "Reunion", "Devil's Due", "Clues", "First Contact", "Identity Crisis", "The Nth Degree", "Half A Life", and "The Mind's Eye".

The opening 15 minutes of "Brothers" is sensational. Data sabotages the Enterprise and sets up a cascade force field to evade capture; Rob Bowman's direction and Ron Jones's music makes the action edge-of-your-seat fun.

There's a great scene in "Future Imperfect" where Riker realizes he's in an fantasy based on his own memories, he gets to tell Picard to shut up and Deanna to back off.

I enjoyed "Devil's Due" because it felt like an old Star Trek episode or a first season show. Kirk could have taken Picard's role in the episode to disprove Ardra's claim on the planet. When the tables turn and Picard discovers Ardra's power it's fun to see Picard use her power to prove her wrong. The Klingon monster costume is very well done and Ron Jones's music is excellent.

"Clues" was a quiet episode but an effective mystery. It was nice to see Picard so obsessed with unraveling Data's role in the situation, while Data had the fortitude to sacrifice his career rather than jeopardize the Enterprise.

"First Contact" was one of the more ambitious stories of the season. At times it seems slow and talky and I thought the Security minister was portrayed a little too one dimensional. He was ready to frame Riker and martyr himself to maintain "tradition". I liked the ending where Picard admitted that he made a mistake and Malcorian leader realized that the Malcorians were simply not ready for warp travel.

I found "Identity Crisis" a more suspenseful episode than I remember. Geordi's transformation into an instinctive alien species happens so fast that it's beyond his control to save himself. The design of the creatures was very cool.

"The Nth Degree" is enjoyable because its fun to see Barclay gain confidence and genius brainpower and take the Enterprise to edge of the Universe while there is nothing Picard or the crew can do about it. Ron Jones's music for this episode is one my favorite scores.

My least favorite episodes were "Family", "Suddenly Human", "The Host" and "In Theory".

"The Host" has an engaging premise but I find the soap opera elements of this episode excruciating. My favorite parts of this episode were the diplomatic and political wrangling between the two warring moons. It was also nice to see Riker step up and offer his body as the Trill Host.

"In Theory" is a boring drag, a plodding soap opera with an unexciting ship-in-jeopardy B plot that is just filler. Jay Chattaway, who took over from Ron Jones after he was fired, composed some insipid, dreary excuse for music for the Picard shuttlecraft scene, beginning a tradition of ruining edge-of-your-seat excitement on TNG. Also, the portrayal of Data in this episode bothers me. As someone else has stated, watching Data go through the motions for 45 minutes is not very entertaining. Data has handled more intimate emotional connections with others far better than he did in this episode, such as the way he interacted with his daughter in "The Offspring".

Since I just purchased the BluRay set, I'm going to revisit season seven, TNG's final year, next. Once I watch every season seven episode(and a few of the early first season shows) I will have seen every episode of Next Generation.
 
I actually prefer Laforge's stuff in S3 to him in S4. The Enemy is easily my favorite Laforge episode, followed by The Next Phase, and for some reason, I like Booby Trap more than Galaxy's Child. I think it was because, even though the awkwardness of Geordi had begun back in Transfigurations, the jerkishness, that became one of his calling cards, showed up in Galaxy's Child, & it's soured me a little on the episode. It's still a very good episode though. I'm also not hugely fond of Identity Crisis. It's not a bad episode, but Burton drew the short end of the stick on guest star casting. This lady kind of drives the episode into the boring range for me, & it's already a little dry just from being a crime scene investigating type of episode

Remember Me is a pretty weak episode, & so is The Loss. Legacy doesn't do much for me either. Suddenly Human is nearly intolerable. The Wounded, The Drumhead & Half A Life bring some stellar dramatics, & I may be in the minority, but I absolutely love Night Terrors

All in all, I find S4 a toss up in quality with S3
 
All in all, I find S4 a toss up in quality with S3
Same.

For me, approx 18-20 eps from seasons 3 and 4 that I consider good or better. (Same goes for 5 and 6, which surprised me a little. I expected fewer. ...Only 12-ish for season 7.)
 
"NIght Terrors" was better than I remembered. I thought "Legacy" could have been a classic if it was a little edgier. The hostage plot and underground passages reminded me of "Too Short A Season" which I thought was much more dramatic. "The Wounded" was well written but it came off a little low key on screen. I liked Season 4 overall but I think season 3 has more memorable episodes.
 
Season 4 is such a good season, it might be TNG's most consistent year (if it's not this year, it's season 3, as others have noted). For me there's almost no clunkers -- "QPid" and "The Host" are the only two episodes I decisively dislike. "Clues", "Devil's Due", "Future Imperfect", and "Remember Me" are series favorites of mine.

I know it's flawed, but I also have a soft spot for "The Loss" -- I love any excuse to let Troi have a harder edge for a minute.

Though there's some I realize I haven't rewatched since the 90's -- "Brothers", "Final Mission", "Data's Day", "In Theory." The first two in particular I'd be curious to rewatch and see if they still hold up for me.
 
TNG season 4 overall did deemphasize/move away from the action-adventure but I think that was more of a good thing, there had been enough if not just a little too much the first three years and I like the drama and bits of romance.
A weird thing was how abruptly "Remember Me" and "Night Terrors" ended, pretty much right after the solution/climax, there could have and maybe should have been more but they were both still good episodes.
Unfortunately I think Data and LaForge kind of peaked in season 3 and then were mostly static or slightly regressed for the rest of the show.
 
A weird thing was how abruptly "Remember Me" and "Night Terrors" ended, pretty much right after the solution/climax, there could have and maybe should have been more but they were both still good episodes.

That's a good point... "Remember Me" is a favorite, but I know I'm ignoring some issues in the back third. I just love that story, the vanishing crewmembers is so resonant and creepy. For me it's definitely the strongest Beverly episode of the series (not exactly a competitive race, but still)

Fun "Night Terrors" trivia: one of the freelancers who wrote that episode is also the author of probably the best book on writing for TV. That's all I can think when I'm watching it: "this mid-range episode was scripted by the woman who literally wrote the book on TV writing"
 
Today is John Delancie's birthday and I was just thinking about Qpid. Loved that episode when I was a kid (it might have been the first episode of trek I actually saw) and still do.

Season four was the season where you had the Klingon arc, which included Mind's Eye. It was a really well rounded season and probably my favorite in the entire run.
 
For my money Season 4 is the best ST franchise season ever, ranking right up there with TOS season 1. There are only 2 real stinkers in the entire bunch. It's a great ratio.


Season four revisited. I just watched the entire fourth season of TNG on BluRay. I found that I enjoyed season four more than the last time I saw the episodes. Season 4 was the last season TNG where Ron Jones scored the series, it was the season where Wesley departed, and it was the last year where Gene Rodenberry had any creative influence on the series.

The show had been getting more character oriented since season 2 and in the season 4 there is is a greater movement away from TNG's adventure roots and towards Star Trek Meets PBS Masterpiece theater, with episodes like "Family", "The Drumhead", "Half A Life", "The Host", and "In Theory". In seasons 1-3, like TOS, most of the episodes end on the bridge, as the Enterprise warps on to the next mission. That touch of TOS is abandoned in season four. Some random observations: Data seems more android like and less human in season 4 than he did in earlier seasons. Riker has almost a pompadour haircut in the later episodes of the season. There's at least 3 good Geordi episodes which is more than in any other year. There are several sequel episodes this year, such as "Reunion", which is a sequel to both "The Emissary" and "Sins of The Father", "Galaxy's Child", a followup to "Booby Trap" and "Q Pid", which follows up on "Deja Q" and "Captain's Holiday". Dennis McCarthy's music is not as memorable as his work in the previous seasons but it's still serviceable. The show feels a little softer and more antiseptic than the previous seasons yet it doesn't have feeling of malaise that the later seasons and other modern Trek series often do.

My favorite episodes were: "Best of Both Worlds Part II", "Brothers", "Future Imperfect", "Reunion", "Devil's Due", "Clues", "First Contact", "Identity Crisis", "The Nth Degree", "Half A Life", and "The Mind's Eye".

The opening 15 minutes of "Brothers" is sensational. Data sabotages the Enterprise and sets up a cascade force field to evade capture; Rob Bowman's direction and Ron Jones's music makes the action edge-of-your-seat fun.

There's a great scene in "Future Imperfect" where Riker realizes he's in an fantasy based on his own memories, he gets to tell Picard to shut up and Deanna to back off.

I enjoyed "Devil's Due" because it felt like an old Star Trek episode or a first season show. Kirk could have taken Picard's role in the episode to disprove Ardra's claim on the planet. When the tables turn and Picard discovers Ardra's power it's fun to see Picard use her power to prove her wrong. The Klingon monster costume is very well done and Ron Jones's music is excellent.

"Clues" was a quiet episode but an effective mystery. It was nice to see Picard so obsessed with unraveling Data's role in the situation, while Data had the fortitude to sacrifice his career rather than jeopardize the Enterprise.

"First Contact" was one of the more ambitious stories of the season. At times it seems slow and talky and I thought the Security minister was portrayed a little too one dimensional. He was ready to frame Riker and martyr himself to maintain "tradition". I liked the ending where Picard admitted that he made a mistake and Malcorian leader realized that the Malcorians were simply not ready for warp travel.

I found "Identity Crisis" a more suspenseful episode than I remember. Geordi's transformation into an instinctive alien species happens so fast that it's beyond his control to save himself. The design of the creatures was very cool.

"The Nth Degree" is enjoyable because its fun to see Barclay gain confidence and genius brainpower and take the Enterprise to edge of the Universe while there is nothing Picard or the crew can do about it. Ron Jones's music for this episode is one my favorite scores.

My least favorite episodes were "Family", "Suddenly Human", "The Host" and "In Theory".

"The Host" has an engaging premise but I find the soap opera elements of this episode excruciating. My favorite parts of this episode were the diplomatic and political wrangling between the two warring moons. It was also nice to see Riker step up and offer his body as the Trill Host.

"In Theory" is a boring drag, a plodding soap opera with an unexciting ship-in-jeopardy B plot that is just filler. Jay Chattaway, who took over from Ron Jones after he was fired, composed some insipid, dreary excuse for music for the Picard shuttlecraft scene, beginning a tradition of ruining edge-of-your-seat excitement on TNG. Also, the portrayal of Data in this episode bothers me. As someone else has stated, watching Data go through the motions for 45 minutes is not very entertaining. Data has handled more intimate emotional connections with others far better than he did in this episode, such as the way he interacted with his daughter in "The Offspring".

Since I just purchased the BluRay set, I'm going to revisit season seven, TNG's final year, next. Once I watch every season seven episode(and a few of the early first season shows) I will have seen every episode of Next Generation.
 
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