Greetings all. It's been a while (the perils of not having your own internet connection!)
It's been very nice to see that some people like the atmosphere of S1 also. Considering the time it was made (in the 80's), I think people are far too harsh on it. Effects technology was nowhere near as sophisticated as it is now, but the show still holds up very well I think.
As we're on S4 right now, I'd like to take the opportunity to talk a bit about the Klingons and Romulans as seasons 3-4 is when they really have their TNG heyday. To kick off, I don't think it's possible to talk of them without mentioning the work of Ronald D Moore.
Moore's vision of Star Trek starts to really take root at about the time of S4. After good work on 'The Defector' and 'Sins of the Father', I think 'Family' cemented his place as one of the most important writers of the time.
He saw the Enterprise crew as being mythological heroes, doing great deeds, slaying great foes etc. So the show enters its most vibrantly adventrous (on a galactic scale) phase about now (i.e in S4). And it's in this climate that Moore and Taylor set about fleshing out the other players on the galactic stage (Cardassians, Romulans, Klingons etc).
S4 sees an attempt to ressurrect the Romulans as one of the main enemies of the show. S3 was the first season that really tried to push them (they were an implied and rarely seen threat in the first 2 seasons). However, despite their early promise in 'The Neutral Zone' and 'Contagion' etc, S3 fails to deliver them as a truly menacing race in my opinion.
There are many problems with how the Romulans are used. There is inconsistency over what exactly they should be like. Initially they seem like crueler Vulcans, but still essentially aristocractic and arrogant etc. A sort of 'Dark Elves' kind of race.
But they fail to find the right faces to put on the race. Marc Alaimo and Andreas Katsulas are fine actors, but their penchant for civlised brutality is much better suited to the Cardassians. Because neither actor show up for very long in their Romulan roles, the race is left without any solid characters to get our interest.
Contrast this with the Klingons who under Ron Moore's supervision saw Worf develop hugely and join a cast of such noteables as Gowron, the various members of the Duras family, General Martok (in DS9) etc.
One problem seemed to be that only Moore seemed at all interested in developing the Klingons and Romulans at this time. He couldn't be everywhere at once and evidently preferred the Klingons. But he does try to have another run at the Romulans in S4, with the conspiracy plot between the two races.
This backfires somewhat however in my opinion. The fact is that Moore is much more interested in the Klingon side of things. Whereas they get Lursa and B'etor, more work of Gowron, Worf etc, the Romulans get a few throwaway characters and the very ill advised return of Denise Crosby as Seela.
The character is extremely poor and I'm sorry to say, acted in a rather silly way. She seems too much like a novelty character, robbing the Romulans once again of their chance to become interesting players in TNG. This continues in S5's 'Unification'. A drab story, it is initially interesting but soon becomes preposterous.
And that's pretty much it for the poor old Romulans. They rarely show up again, other than the odd episode of them up to no good. There is a belated (and rather poor) attempt to revisit the Unification storyline in 'The Face of the Enemy', but they are never really important again.
Variously usurped in importance by the Borg, Klingons and Cardassians, they remain an untapped resource in TNG and one that was never really used anywhere near as well as they could have been.
Anyway, that's all I have on them right now. As you can probably tell this is something quite close to my heart. I'm a big Vulcans/Romulans fan and the poor use of both races in TNG does annoy me. They don't show up much in DS9 either (although when they do, it's always in great episodes 'Visionary', 'Improbable Cause/The Die is Cast', 'In the Pale Moonlight', 'Inter arma enim silent leges').
Anyway, before I toddle off, here's my picks from S5 - a season concerned with 'Don't give up, try again!' and 'Know when to quit'.
The A list:
Redemption pt 2.
Darmok.
Conundrum.
Cause and Effect.
The B List:
Disaster.
Unification pt 1.
Ethics.
The First Duty.
I, Borg.
The Next Phase.
The Inner Light.
As you can see, although I liked a decent number of episodes, I wasn't wildly taken with most of them. And more than that, I just didn't really like S5 all that much. It felt a bit too sedate at times for me after the fire of S4. The disintegration of the Romulans as major players didn't help either.
And with no Lore, a rather lacklustre end to the Crystalline Entity, no Q, only a family matters episode for the Borg (it's not bad though, I'll grant you)... It really wasn't my favourite season.
It's a bad season for Ron Moore as well, marking an unfortunate downturn in his episodes that persists throughout the rest of the run. He still produces some fine episodes and comes up with occasional gems like 'Tapestry' and 'The Pegasus' but he doesn't recover his earlier class until he moves to the films and DS9 in my opinion.
Seeing as how I've got a bit more time than I thought, I may as well put my Season 6 picks down as well actually.
Season 6:
The A list:
'A Fistful of Datas.'
'Tapestry.'
'Birthright, pt 1.'
'Descent pt 1.'
The B List:
'Rascals' (for the bed jumping scene only - the cutest thing ever!)
'Lessons.'
I actually didn't despise this season as much as my small amount of favoured episodes might suggest. It's true that comparitively few episodes grabbed me, but it was more an execution thing. I liked the basic ideas behind several episodes.
But I was very disapointed with them in the end because they fell so short of their potential. 'Relics' was little more than a gimmick in the end, 'Chain of Command' pulled its punches far too much, 'Ship in a Bottle' was rather bland and 'Frame of Mind' (like many of Braga's episodes) has some arresting visuals and intense moments that ultimately lead nowhere.
Anyway, I really do have to go now. So take care, all!