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ST: TNG Rewatch

The Schizoid Man

At first, I wasn't sure why I was dreading this episode. As I watched it, it was mostly because of the inane dialog Wesley was given. He kept harping on "to know him was to love him was to know him."

Otherwise, this is another "not bad" episode enlivened by Brent Spiner's outstanding performance. Episodes like this are similar to original series plots that gave Nimoy a chance to step out of his usual persona and stretch a bit. Those were always noteworthy and this is no exception.

W. Morgan Sheppard, in his first but not last Star Trek appearance, is excellent at Graves, the man who "taught Soong all he knew" and is a spiritual "grandpa" to Data. This guy gets lost in the shuffle of the Data family lineage. So do we assume he's full of hot air? He's certainly a genius and can do what he says he can. Sheppard makes him entertaining in the short screen time he has.

Barbara Allyn Woods, so new to acting (this is only her second screen credit) is fine. Nothing special other than in her innocent beauty.

Props for giving the Star Trek universe Suzie Plakson as Dr. Selar. To be frank, she didn't do much for me in this role, but her best was yet to come. It was, however, nice to finally see a Vulcan crewmember with lines. She hit the right notes. What's weird is just how sidelined Diana Muldaur is this week. I'd understand if she wasn't in the episode at all, she wasn't an actual regular, but she's in the beginning and then given an excuse to be off screen and then comes back for the end, given Selar the center stage. Knowing Unnatural Selection (kill me) is next and the demands on her for that, I can understand that they gave her a lighter workload this week but still wanted to keep her involved.

They use the "tell me" feature when asking for Data locations for the first time in a while. And Picard cracks out another "grand" when talking to Graves/Data - they were still not ready to let that die.

The near-warp transport is, to be blunt, stupid. It usually takes them seconds to drop out of warp and go back in, so they couldn't spare a minute to let the away team beam down like normal? This felt like another one of those "weird filler scenes" and false risk.

Patrick Stewart is a fine, truly magnificent actor. But he can't do a reaction to a backhanded slap very well. That was one of the most unconvincing "knock out" scenes I'd seen in this series so far.

Still, overall, not a bad ride, but too many oddities for me to truly warm to it. Performances save this one more than anything else.

2.5/5
 
The Schizoid Man

At first, I wasn't sure why I was dreading this episode. As I watched it, it was mostly because of the inane dialog Wesley was given. He kept harping on "to know him was to love him was to know him."

Otherwise, this is another "not bad" episode enlivened by Brent Spiner's outstanding performance. Episodes like this are similar to original series plots that gave Nimoy a chance to step out of his usual persona and stretch a bit. Those were always noteworthy and this is no exception.

Spiner and Plakson, and W. Morgan Sheppard nail it.

At the time, I was more peeved that the story's title was based on a 60s TV show ("The Prisoner") and had no other inspiration.

W. Morgan Sheppard, in his first but not last Star Trek appearance, is excellent at Graves, the man who "taught Soong all he knew" and is a spiritual "grandpa" to Data. This guy gets lost in the shuffle of the Data family lineage. So do we assume he's full of hot air? He's certainly a genius and can do what he says he can. Sheppard makes him entertaining in the short screen time he has.

It's easier to roll with him as part of Data's family tree than 80% of who appears afterward. And definitely seconded on Sheppard.

Barbara Allyn Woods, so new to acting (this is only her second screen credit) is fine. Nothing special other than in her innocent beauty.

Props for giving the Star Trek universe Suzie Plakson as Dr. Selar. To be frank, she didn't do much for me in this role, but her best was yet to come. It was, however, nice to finally see a Vulcan crewmember with lines. She hit the right notes. What's weird is just how sidelined Diana Muldaur is this week. I'd understand if she wasn't in the episode at all, she wasn't an actual regular, but she's in the beginning and then given an excuse to be off screen and then comes back for the end, given Selar the center stage. Knowing Unnatural Selection (kill me) is next and the demands on her for that, I can understand that they gave her a lighter workload this week but still wanted to keep her involved.

^^this

She's a natural as a Vulcan but, hell, K'ehleyr is far more fun... until season 4 where she comes with Cousin Oliver Alexander and is quickly killed off.

They use the "tell me" feature when asking for Data locations for the first time in a while. And Picard cracks out another "grand" when talking to Graves/Data - they were still not ready to let that die.

:)

The near-warp transport is, to be blunt, stupid. It usually takes them seconds to drop out of warp and go back in, so they couldn't spare a minute to let the away team beam down like normal? This felt like another one of those "weird filler scenes" and false risk.

It's gimmicky, but not as much so as the torpedo tube fitted with life support and letting inertia somehow move her at warp 9 all that way.

If nothing else, it's like hypermiling, to improve fuel efficiency. Not really, rather, but I wish they had a more palpable emergency to give the scene a little more weight as, yeah, the time saved by doing this didn't feel significant enough.

Patrick Stewart is a fine, truly magnificent actor. But he can't do a reaction to a backhanded slap very well. That was one of the most unconvincing "knock out" scenes I'd seen in this series so far.

Still, overall, not a bad ride, but too many oddities for me to truly warm to it. Performances save this one more than anything else.

2.5/5

Spiner as IraData really hit the spot, though, and elevating the idea of putting a mind into a robot body as a result. The acting of Picard's slap didn't work, but the dialogue and unconscious bodies of security dude and Geordi did help set the scene. In a part of Engineering rarely seen, too.

It's not the best ever episode, not the worst. definitely middle or above average as, despite trying and not failing by any means, the story doesn't feel as significant as it wants to be. But it is in my regular rotation list.
 
Okay let's talk about

Loud as a Whisper

Woohoo!

I like the concept of this episode and the strong Troi involvement. Also props to casting an actual deaf actor to play Riva, the only guy to mediate a treaty between warring factions on Solais V. He's very good at in the role and I was convinced at all times during each change in his situation. Much like Too Short a Season, this episode is very much about the guest star. Which is fine. This episode isn't quite in the same league, but it's not bad. That doesn't mean it's good, it's kind of middling and lacking in energy. The lack of music at key point, like the cold open, make the episode just lie there.

Yeah, their beaming into an empty chamber then cue credits... definitely atypical. A sense of wonder for sure, but being Star Trek and sci-fi, one would think they'd do it with more gusto rather than playing it flat.


The chorus is a fun concept if a bit simplistic. Their death is both horrifying and comical. There was this habit that SF shows had, and this includes pretty much all of them, that show people getting hit by a laser beam and freezing while the effects department makes them dematerialize. V: The Final Battle showed a young man being thrown into the path of a beam and freezing in mid air for a second before the glow and disintegration took him away. It's theatrical and a trope but in this case, it's hilarious. All three members of the chorus get hit, fall back at the same time, freeze at the same time, with different expressions as they are (and this is the horrifying part) peeled away layer by layer.

They don't seem to have eaten in a bit...'t seem to have eaten in a bit...


The woman: "Oh the water is boiling over!"
Sexy Dude: "It's caught in my zipper!"
Mindy's Dad (without enthusiasm): "Oh nooo..."

LOL!

Nice touch on "Mindy" as well, na-nu na-nu! :guffaw:

and, yup, Sexy Dude (aka "Horny McPheromone") was single-entendre and grating at times.


I also have a problem with the physics of these bodies not flopping towards the ground as they break apart, but I know, I'm picking nits. It's just that this is the most memorable part of the episode. Seriously, this is all I remembered about it before I watched it.

You're lucky. More often than not, the first thing I remember about this episode can be summed up in a picture:

1769120995962.png

Now there's a crossover, if not "Herman's Head" where the biggest joke that flew over audiences' heads is how often men are said to be thinking about sex (hence most of the plots involving it at some point, much to critics of the time...).

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(A surprisingly underrated and sometimes extremely well-written show, albeit relic from the early 90s.)

It is a gruesome scene. To really go at the physics particles, to render that scene with the non-CGI of the time would have taken way too long... but would have been that much more horrific, as late-80s shows were wont to do. (For which 1988's "War of the Worlds" takes the cake and it was often sold along with TNG as well...) I wonder if "Fangoria" did a double-issue on that scene...

Moving on, Data learns sign language by watching 80's era computer still drawings of hands. If they made this show today, he'd just upload this information in seconds. Funny thing, he stands behind Picard and does a few half-assed signs. He doesn't need to do them at all, Riva can read lips. It's supposed to be for Picard and the others to understand Riva. And, seriously, 1000 crewmembers and passengers and nobody can read sign? Not a single deaf person on board? Or hey "computer, what is Riva saying?"

Very true. But I like the notion of Data doing this. Had Dr Pulaski been there, she might have respected him a tad more as well, but that is still too early in the season for her to do...

As for 1000 crewmembers, the story "The Enemy" is worse as no Vulcan can do a blood transfusion, despite the back and forth on biological science talks, yet only Worf could. Riiiiiiiiiight... (roll with it though, that season 3 story has far more going for it than one subplot's contrived subplot...)

Funniest part of the episode: Picard grabbing Riva by the head and SHOUTING at him.

loudasawhisper_hd_289.jpg


Picard's first contact with a deaf person, apparently.

"Must break through the deaf!"

^^this

The wack of that scene got to me as well.

Okay, fine, they resolve it and leave Riva to hopefully not be laser peeled right after they leave him behind for the next few months while he somehow teaches these goons sign language. Did they ever go back for him? Or did Solais VI explode ten months after he was left there? Was the planned 11th movie going to be The Wrath of Riva?

^^this

The ending is way too fairy tale. Trek is about optimism in the face of opposition or whatever, but that ending is close to TOS levels of blissful stupidity (e.g. the ending to "Plato's Stepchildren", among others). But it's a Trek trope at this point.

And then we get a weird cap scene where Picard has to call Deanna into the ready room just to say "well done." I mean, it's nice she gets recognition, but she pretty much romanced and flirted and Data learned to sign, and Deanna get's a weirdly tacked on final scene. A few episodes this season feel like they came out short so a few hasty scenes were shot to fill in time.

It's a bit after school special, but still not as bad as some of season 1's fare...?

I make light, but this was a "meh" episode in 1988 and it's a "meh" episode now. Really great idea, and again, I admire the use of Howie Seago in the role (I understand he and his wife were behind this concept). I just wish it were better.

2.5/5

^^this

Great ideas, woolly and inconsistent execution. :(
 
I really liked the way both "Datalore" and then also still "The Schizoid Man" were early enough that the crew initially wasn't really sure what might not be, might/would be out of character for him, when real Data does something like trying to wear a beard, his antics in "The Outrageous Okona" (or even later creating Lal) going from things like that to the (entertaining) ridiculousness of "To know him was to love him and to love him was to know him" isn't clearly out of character, clearly something wrong, and over time the behavior believably escalated to where Picard was convinced something was wrong. Ira's both wanting Data's capacities and completing disregarding of him otherwise and then, more for other reasons, feeling conflicted about remaining in the body were really well done as was Picard's determination against him.

Edit: I liked "Elementary, Dear Data" but it was pretty weird how the show shifted in its first to second half from Data as lead to Picard as lead, that kind of shift is pretty rare, I kind of wish Data had played some role in the climax/resolution but that might have felt forced and it feels kind of refreshing that he didn't.
 
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Unnatural Selection

Okay so let's get this out of the way: the disease is too close to "The Deadly Years" for my liking and the transporter phobia thing is, as we all know, an blatant effort to bring up McCoy vibes. Having said that....

This was much better than I remembered. It's an important episode for Pulaski's development (a moot point once she's gone but whatever). She begins to connect with Picard, who learns she was adamant in joining the Enterprise to serve with him. She apologizes quite sincerely to Data when she pulls her usual shit with him.

It's also important for officially giving us Chief O'Brien - the Most Important Man in the Universe. While we'd seen Colm Meany before (as "conn"), he's given a name, a designation and the transporter room is his home. TBH, other than the actor, there's little reason to assume Colm is playing the same person. It happens on TV all the time, so why not TNG? And he delivers this technobabble like a champ:

O'BRIEN: Well, I'd have to get into the biofilter bus to patch in a molecular matrix reader. That's no problem. But the waveform modulator will be overloaded without the regeneration limiter in the first stage circuit.

There are some lovely interactions between Pulaski and Picard. Picard's "I would appreciate you letting me finish my sentences once in a while" is great. You can start to see them making headway in their relationship, with a nice hug Pulaski is restored.

Picard busts out another "grand" early on. And the ending, with the somber destruction of the Lantree is another "space is dangerous" Maurice Hurley touch.

Honestly, I don't have a lot to say negative about this episode. It's really well done. Half a point off for the "McCoy Transporter Crankiness/Deadly Years" unoriginality. The age makeup it quite good though. I'll ignore the implications they just raised with the solution to this episode's crisis for now.

3.5/5
 
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Unnatural Selection

Okay so let's get this out of the way: the disease is too close to "The Deadly Years" for my liking and the transporter phobia thing is, as we all know, an blatant effort to bring up McCoy vibes. Having said that....

Yeah, that's true -- it's as if TNG knew the TOS original version was half-baked cobblers and wanted to ground it more. On the plus side, they didn't have Data saying "Nuh-uh, no way, never-dee-ever, nonesies, there is nothing even remotely like this" as with the Nagilum episode. Which isn't to say "The Deadly Years" was bad, but it wasn't exactly perfect either. Indeed, as much as there's a greater sense of threat that permutes and permeates in "Selection", the resolution - despite better - is also a trifle gimmicky, and open-ended as the transporter introduces a new feature that, despite being well thought-out*, creates new opportunity that is never used again - at least for this, as opposed to other discovered possibilities...

* Season 2 is underrated, especially as later seasons just scribble in the same old routine as shlock fodder​


This was much better than I remembered. It's an important episode for Pulaski's development (a moot point once she's gone but whatever). She begins to connect with Picard, who learns she was adamant in joining the Enterprise to serve with him. She apologizes quite sincerely to Data when she pulls her usual shit with him.

I never disliked it, but have grown to love it more over the years. Both story and Pulaski treatment. It's still a little tropey that this is her defining episode, but it's the one where they do the most high-concept thing on her instead of doing it to someone else, while keeping her journey with Data (and Picard with character build-up) as a subplot.

Oh carp, I just remembered the Riker dad episode ("Icarus Factor") where, if I recall, Pulaski was going at it with Riker's dad at some point in the past. Amusingly and thankfully, she isn't his dad and for some reason his dad looked a little like Gene, but that's what happens when you watch teens vaguely familiar with the behind-the-scenes folk.

It's also important for officially giving us Chief O'Brien - the Most Important Man in the Universe. While we'd seen Colm Meany before (as "conn"), he's given a name, a designation and the transporter room is his home. TBH, other than the actor, there's little reason to assume Colm is playing the same person. It happens on TV all the time, so why not TNG? And he delivers this technobabble like a champ:

Even the most ardent haters have to appreciate this scene. :D Meaney, as with Burton, make Treknobabble feel authentic. Even when it's obvious the writers are having too much fun with the equivalents to ctrl-c and ctrl-v in their word processor du jour of the time...

O'BRIEN: Well, I'd have to get into the biofilter bus to patch in a molecular matrix reader. That's no problem. But the waveform modulator will be overloaded without the regeneration limiter in the first stage circuit.

There are some lovely interactions between Pulaski and Picard. Picard's "I would appreciate you letting me finish my sentences once in a while" is great. You can start to see them making headway in their relationship, with a nice hug Pulaski is restored.

I love it. Season 2 continues its slow build-up of character interactions. Like a crock pot simmering that tender stroganoff all day. Whether it's beef, chicken, or skunk for the latter who hate season 2, it's all good.

Picard busts out another "grand" early on. And the ending, with the somber destruction of the Lantree is another "space is dangerous" Maurice Hurley touch.

:D

It's probably fortunate that merde wasn't used as often. Only twice, in this season as, as with "grand", it doesn't quite land. It's especially funny as the crew get into very dire situations and Picard isn't sitting there like a frog on a log in a bog calmly belching out every syllable of French profanity possible during those instances, by then they figured out Picard knows when to mull or react accordingly.

Honestly, I don't have a lot to say negative about this episode. It's really well done. Half a point off for the "McCoy Transporter Crankiness/Deadly Years" unoriginality. The age makeup it quite good though. I'll ignore the implications they just raised with the solution to this episode's crisis for now.

3.5/5


The ending where the Lantree is blown up is particularly sad, to keep a vicious virus from spreading. Problem is, they don't do that with Darwin Station and I don't recall any defense weapons, ships to orbit, etc, to ensure the baddies don't come in. By now, someone would surely have picked up the signal, which is basically saying "Hiya to all you strangers, there's a malicious biological agent here, don't you come here to get it!" as if all virii and other agents affect all species the same or anything as cross-species fritters are rare - not impossible, but given how this particular malady is described I'd wager that it could easily mutate to attack any humanoid species easier than it is to shove a light bulb in an EZ-Bake oven**.

Yeah, Pulaski shares some archetypal traits with McCoy, but it's not as many or as deep. Just enough for some parallels to be made but not completely. But there's a time when I will still yell "merde" from a mountaintop and that's when spinoffs started to genuinely rip off McCoy's meme-worthy catchphrases, which is something Pulaski did not do. Seems more than a trifle... unfair.

Lastly, at least the use of "Darwin" feels genuine and not like an ironic, snotty joke (read: "Darwin awards", not that I'm editorializing or anything as I'm not.)

4/5 for me


** (What, y'all thought I'd forget the footnote?)
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(Everyone loves Debra Wilson, who was in DS9' season 6 episode "The Sound of Her Voice", a great episode... but for every wholesome 90s TV show like Star Trek, you had a warped comedy show like MadTV!)
 
"Next time on Starrrrrrr Trek: The Next Generation"

A Matter of Honor

Riker volunteers to serve on a Klingon Bird of Prey as part of the cultural exchange program currently going on. At the same time, Mendon, a Benzite who looks and sounds just like Mordok from "Coming of Age" (to use the same actor because I remember Mordok was enjoying some fan popularity at the time), comes on as part of the program.

Mendon has a superiority complex and a custom of not reporting anything until he has the complete solution, which causes issues with Worf and Picard. This plot is a little on the grating side but Worf makes me laugh every time he says Mendon's name.

Mendon: "I am Men-don."

Worf: "Ensign Mendin." Every. Damned. Time.

Anyways, Mendin Mendon notices a parasite on the hull of the BoP and doesn't report it right away but aims a scanning beam on it for analysis. This will be a problem later, I'm just rushing past this to get to the meat of this episode.

Riker comes aboard the BoP and gains the respect of the crew with his understanding and honoring of the Klingon way. He eats their shitty food without complaint, but still with pause. He beats up his second and follows orders. He even allows the Captain to regain his command without disgrace by allowing himself to get cracked in the face and kicked off the ship.

This episode is amazing. A really fantastic look at the Klingons in a soft reboot of their culture. It's extremely effective and a lot more rational than the later "head butting, flagon draining Vikings" Ron Moore will give us. Frakes is fantastic in this setting as well. So many great moments as Riker spends time with the crew, flirts with females and butts heads with the captain (who is the only weak link here).

There's actually more tension on the ship because they're at peace. It's subtle, but you can see they're not thrilled and the captain's rush to attack the Enterprise is an extension of that. It's just that the casting in that role is iffy. He has this weird lisp I can't get past. Maybe it's the fake teef.

"I demand to be beamed back aboard my vessoh!" He sounds like Gollum.

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Again another music free cold open, which is really getting stale. But once it does kick in, Ron Jones delivers the goods with his measly 18 minute score.

THey're really giving us some greast O'Brian stuff. He f'ks with Riker before beaning him over and it's great to see a regular crewmember with a sense of humor. And it says a lot about Riker, because O'Brien wouldn't do that with Picard. It's a great touch.

While I don't really like the Mendin Mendon story, it does run parallel to the Klingon plot and it's not wasted time. But the Klingon stuff is just gold.

4/5 - best episode in weeks.

Up next:

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Have to tweak that a little.

"Next time on Starrrrrrr Trek: thenextgeneration!" ;)
I appreciate you. :rommie:

Jumped in to Measure of a Man

Brilliant, brilliant, brilliant. And is coming from someone who really doesn't like Star Trek's endless courtroom episodes.

There isn't a single wasted second, off note or poor performance. This story by Melinda Snodgrass is rightfully and justifiably revered. Everything about it works.

The beginning with the poker game initially feels like second season cold-open filler, but it factors into the story. More importantly, it becomes the off-duty bonding of the officers going forward (more O'Brien!). It's more intimate and real than Voyager's holodeck jaunts. It's identifiable. It started here.

Picard's past catches up with him and Amanda McBroom is excellent as Phillipa. A mature actress who is Picard's match. Love that.

Riker taking the adversarial position is also a lovely, if TV convenient, touch. Frakes is wonderful as he smiles when he discovers his ace in the hole and then realizes what that means. All done with facial expressions.

Stewart plays so many emotions in this one and he nails them. He's on edge around Phillipa, caught with his own prejudice by Data early on and then resolute after his talk with Guinan.

And yes! That's how you use Guinan. Whoopi's delivery of her dialog is friendly where Marina would have sounded haughty. It's a lovely way to deliver a hard hit. She lets Picard come to the realization.

Maddox is not a villain but still unlikeable. Yet redeemed in the end by Data's kindness.

Spiner also gets to shine some. It's a testament to this script that a "Data episode" doesn't rely on 45 minutes of Brent Spiner. Everyone does some heavy lifting here. The goodbye party is so great and I use the "with the application of a little care, the paper can be utilized again" line every Christmas.

Riker apologizing to Data before removing his arm really touched me. And then shutting him off is a kick in the balls. But....Picard is right....all of that is irrelevant. Nobody denied Data is a machine. Picard runs with that. His closing argument is gripping and more exciting than any space battle.

And then the end, with Riker and Data talking it out, is another reminder at how much I love spending time with these folks.

This is the perfect episode. A bottle show which probably cost next to nothing comparatively, but the writing and performances make this one of the franchise's best outings. No space battles, spinning cameras, shouting, crying, holodecks or goofiness. A compelling character story touching on the rights of an individual and the question of sentience. THIS is how you make great Star Trek.

If I were running a class on how to make a Star Trek show, this is one of the episodes I'd put on the list for study.

5/5
 
"Next time on Starrrrrrr Trek: The Next Generation"

A Matter of Honor

Riker volunteers to serve on a Klingon Bird of Prey as part of the cultural exchange program currently going on. At the same time, Mendon, a Benzite who looks and sounds just like Mordok from "Coming of Age" (to use the same actor because I remember Mordok was enjoying some fan popularity at the time), comes on as part of the program.

Mendon has a superiority complex and a custom of not reporting anything until he has the complete solution, which causes issues with Worf and Picard. This plot is a little on the grating side but Worf makes me laugh every time he says Mendon's name.

Mendon: "I am Men-don."

Worf: "Ensign Mendin." Every. Damned. Time.

Ah yes, Ensign Mendumb there...since the crew couldn't catfight each other, not at least until Lt Broccoli, Lt Shellgame, and Ensign Rolaids came about, they had to bring in the hoops and hurdles of "Foreign student exchange", the trope of which was also parodied in a fourth season episode of "Married with Children", in order to throw in the "humans have the ultimate superiority complex". Mendon really comes across as a stick figure parody, forgetting WHY he's there in the first place. Or whomever in Starfleet told the Benzite leaders how things worked, something got gummed in the communication back'n'forths.

That said, Mendon was pretty cool at the time - but, as with Sela, he's written as a 2D caricature for Picard to be all "Haughty version of Mr Rogers" at, then never to be seen again. I h8 it when that happens.


Anyways, Mendin Mendon notices a parasite on the hull of the BoP and doesn't report it right away but aims a scanning beam on it for analysis. This will be a problem later, I'm just rushing past this to get to the meat of this episode.

"Subatomic bacteria" - now sci-fi can be creative and clever at times... this ain't one of them. At the atomic level, there's no bacteria. Given the formality and breadth and depth of humanity at this point in time, the use of the term even as colloquialism doesn't ring true at all.

Naming snuusnuu aside, there are some types of bacteria that can eat away at metal. It's a shame, given how much time the camera lasciviously gawks at the screen flashing "SUBATOMIC BACTERIA" in red and white, like candy cane colors.)

Riker comes aboard the BoP and gains the respect of the crew with his understanding and honoring of the Klingon way. He eats their shitty food without complaint, but still with pause. He beats up his second and follows orders. He even allows the Captain to regain his command without disgrace by allowing himself to get cracked in the face and kicked off the ship.

Now this is when the episode really gets good, though Worf's dialogue with him earlier was also a tightly written scene, even if we all knew that the gizmo of the week would be used - just don't think of how something that tiny has a long enough battery life to power its subspace transceiver, but unlike something you'd otherwise likely see later in the show's run, this little cylinder can easily be hidden. Even with the skin-tight outfits, I was impressed at where Riker was able to shove it into while on camera.

This episode is amazing. A really fantastic look at the Klingons in a soft reboot of their culture. It's extremely effective and a lot more rational than the later "head butting, flagon draining Vikings" Ron Moore will give us. Frakes is fantastic in this setting as well. So many great moments as Riker spends time with the crew, flirts with females and butts heads with the captain (who is the only weak link here).

As much as the aura of mystery in "Heart of Glory" was awesome, this episode deftly handles exploration of this previously unexplored species and does so with much intelligence (being quite a polar opposite to the Menduh scenes.)

Plus, nobody - and I mean, NOBODY - was expecting the dining hall scene and certain dialogue therein. Someone and somemany were having a field day that week... Yeah, I think they superimposed the ceiling lights in the wrong direction, but it's a quick-or-you'll-miss-it moment to confirm or otherwise regarding light bulb placement, and it didn't matter. Everything else is simply perfect. Well, maybe blue bulbs via 9000k temperature instead of what looks like 5000k faint blusih white, but that means someone would have to change them.

But it was poignant, and fitting perfectly, the discussion of the lack of elders... granted, no species is a monolith (90% is still less than 100%), but they have to start somewhere and expand later on for the Klingon condition, the Human condition, the Planarian condition, the subatomic bacteria condition, and so on.

There's actually more tension on the ship because they're at peace. It's subtle, but you can see they're not thrilled and the captain's rush to attack the Enterprise is an extension of that. It's just that the casting in that role is iffy. He has this weird lisp I can't get past. Maybe it's the fake teef.

It's well done. And hints at a longer history with Captain Calgon, taking them away in some dirty laundry scheme or something. Oh, wait, I just remember, the name's Cargon. My bad, but the lame reference to that washing machine liquid stays as it's a stream of consciousness and their brand works really well.

"I demand to be beamed back aboard my vessoh!" He sounds like Gollum.

Is that the same one who screeches "My precious"? :D

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Again another music free cold open, which is really getting stale. But once it does kick in, Ron Jones delivers the goods with his measly 18 minute score.

Music can be hit or miss. Jones almost always nails it, but when not using music, the underlying material had better be good. Especially in later seasons, but I won't go there this time... ironic as, to give later seasons credit, there were some scenes that really had the dialogue meat and no farting frog symphony was to be found. Especially "Descent" pt 1. I think I just went there anyway...

THey're really giving us some greast O'Brian stuff. He f'ks with Riker before beaning him over and it's great to see a regular crewmember with a sense of humor. And it says a lot about Riker, because O'Brien wouldn't do that with Picard. It's a great touch.

O'Brien seems to be the "Everyman" trope, being a little outside the paradigm, and is done well in TNG. Whatever the makers saw in Colm in "Encounter at Farpoint", this is some great character development. Amazing considering what season 1 did...

While I don't really like the Mendin Mendon story, it does run parallel to the Klingon plot and it's not wasted time. But the Klingon stuff is just gold.

4/5 - best episode in weeks.

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Woohoo!

4/5 for me as well, even with Murhduck's subplot that's 100% due to flimsy scripting when it could have been a lot better (even if, one way or another, it'd end up being in After School Special territory).
 
Try as I might I just can't ever "get" Measure of a Man. The acting and direction is there but the content just doesn't make sense; Riker's case has nothing to do with AI sentience at all (but is presented as devastating by the script just to put Picard on the back-foot for drama's sake), Guinan's revelation to Picard is literally just his own view repeated back to him with no new angle or info, and Picard's big case-winning finish is just his initial case restated, which Maddox already knows but crumbles at this time around because there's only four minutes left before the credits.

A Matter of Honor is great fun though, the Mendon story is fun just in how much it makes the Ent-D crew look like lunatics.
This episode is amazing. A really fantastic look at the Klingons in a soft reboot of their culture. It's extremely effective and a lot more rational than the later "head butting, flagon draining Vikings" Ron Moore will give us. Frakes is fantastic in this setting as well. So many great moments as Riker spends time with the crew, flirts with females and butts heads with the captain (who is the only weak link here).
I hadn't considered that this episode is distinct from the boring Moore Klingons but on second thought you're right, the episode does treat them much more dynamically than the "a-haaa, bloodwine" variant coming later.
 
I appreciate you. :rommie:

Jumped in to Measure of a Man

Brilliant, brilliant, brilliant. And is coming from someone who really doesn't like Star Trek's endless courtroom episodes.

I've not seen this in a while and, depending on mood, I either highly enjoy it or dislike it, though in either case it gets people to talk about the subject material*, and the episode is presented really well overall. There's also an easy way for Riker to win that was bypassed because Data's never going to be reverse-engineered, but then the inclusion of the on/off switch - for whatever reason - was introduced in early season one, what fun, especially when - when combined with a certain other episode - you wonder if Yar accidentally tapped it while deliberately tapping him while he stands there.

But, this is still early on in the series' run, so a little leeway is going to be needed...

* Which, if we look at it a different way, for example, does a bird that builds a nest consider the twigs comprising said nest to be on par or better than it? To be fair, birds don't poop in their nests** so that's one plus... but the comparison is utter crackers, so that's one minus...​
** Well, the adults don't. Amazingly, the babies' doodoo plops out coated (a "fecal sac") that makes clean-up a breeze and allows the parents to pick it up and fling it out. Built-in nappies of sorts, so that's pretty cool...​

There isn't a single wasted second, off note or poor performance. This story by Melinda Snodgrass is rightfully and justifiably revered. Everything about it works.

I will be rewatching this after this post, but for now I'm going to go by memory. Speaking of, Data's stated memory is (what amounts to 100 PetaBytes) and everything on the internet now racks up far more in Zettabytes, cute cat pictures or otherwise, but back then his description sounded cool and still has the advantage of being mobile... but he still flatly states he's an Android and has no emotions. All he needs is an iPhone then he'll feel complete? Add in wireless connection and he needn't move at all, as full duplex wi-fi is surely as sentient as mutual telepathy?


The beginning with the poker game initially feels like second season cold-open filler, but it factors into the story. More importantly, it becomes the off-duty bonding of the officers going forward (more O'Brien!). It's more intimate and real than Voyager's holodeck jaunts. It's identifiable. It started here.

Wasn't this the first poker game scene?

I felt that Picard meeting an old fling with Phillipa Louvois (or it's implied) felt way too much like TOS. She calls him sexy, okay that's nice, so maybe they had dated and she wanted him but not vice-versa... or they did get it on like Yar and Data... this subplot doesn't get too far, apart from a dinner question (or possible joke?) at the end. The fact she was also on him during the Stargazer court martial and the zeal she had on him then, this makes for some potentially amusing questions about a fair trial... But all of these questions are thankfully sidelined because of an electrical appliance, a "toaster" as she describes in one scene, then later admitting she can't tell if he is alive anymore than she can for herself (talk about self-confidence issues too!). Also, when Phillipa described her Ensign as "little" earlier in the episode, was that a double entendre? (Obviously, for a multitude of reasons, this episode isn't my first go-to cup of tea.)

Picard's past catches up with him and Amanda McBroom is excellent as Phillipa. A mature actress who is Picard's match. Love that.

Ditto. For all my nitpickings, the cast chemistry is genuinely wonderful, adding a lot.

Riker taking the adversarial position is also a lovely, if TV convenient, touch. Frakes is wonderful as he smiles when he discovers his ace in the hole and then realizes what that means. All done with facial expressions.

Phillipa almost relished playing this little game as it borders yet another use of "the evil admiral in Starfleet" trope (or "don't get back with your ex"), which Roddenberry must have noticed during TOS because, for TNG, he wanted his vision of humanity to be shiny happy perfect with no conflict. This scene is almost as brazen in trying to push the notion of distancing former series edicts as Data's "No sir, there is nothing even remotely like this big opaque void in space, not even in that TOS episode where they encountered a big opaque void" from "Where Silence Has Lease".

Stewart plays so many emotions in this one and he nails them. He's on edge around Phillipa, caught with his own prejudice by Data early on and then resolute after his talk with Guinan.

And yes! That's how you use Guinan. Whoopi's delivery of her dialog is friendly where Marina would have sounded haughty. It's a lovely way to deliver a hard hit. She lets Picard come to the realization.

Of all people, Guinan saying "that description is too harsh" because she knows as much about computers as much as when the timeline feels out of sync, as she's confirming that emotionless beings are sentient and thus have self-aware emotions, even though Data does not do this and keeps reciting how he is an android every time he's accused of being other or more. It's interesting how they wrap this discussion around what amounts to a programmed mobile computer who even acts like a computer the moment it asks where it is. Why only for Data and not the ship they're in, as the ship talks to them all the time as well? (Even ship told Data it could comprehend Data's reactions in season 1...) There's another season 2 episode that loosely hinges on unique identity being special versus making a bunch of "disposable slaves" (even if it's not as well-handled) and yet that one, hokum and all, actually feels easier to roll with.



Maddox is not a villain but still unlikeable. Yet redeemed in the end by Data's kindness.

Can't have him being a person, either. At least Maalox is written perfectly to be disliked. Just like the guest doctor from "Ethics", though - from what I remember - "Measure" isn't as sledgehammery, even if it's still on the path to being one note over the benefits of multiple Datas would do more for the needs of the many. At least "Ultimate" conveniently had the M5 losing its marbles, as most computers in TOS often did on cue.

It's a shame Maddox wasn't around when Lore was. Would have made for a more fun episode to contrive both of them instead of what "Brothers" put out or what "Descent" devolved into. Seriously, Picard having to prevent Maddox, et al, from getting Lore just feels like it's got a lot more potential, and not quite as small universe syndrome as Lore finding and uniting the splintered Borg (which also had potential but this was well into the latter half of the show's run toward the end and so many episodes just became stale or bland...).

Also as expected, just as quickly as with most episodes of 'The Brady Bunch", the end of "Measure" is wrapped up very neatly, and I doubt audiences in 1988 were stroking the tops of their Commodore Amiga, Atari ST, Apple Macintosh, IBM PC, generic IBM PC clone brand home computers thanks to Compaq sufficiently reverse engineered the proprietary BIOS module after cobbling all the off-the-shelf gear the PC otherwise used, etc brand computers, cases out of anthropomorphized sympathy after this episode ended either.

Or to be almost as melodramatic in fewer words, write and run the program "Hello world" and then pat it on its chassis?

Spiner also gets to shine some. It's a testament to this script that a "Data episode" doesn't rely on 45 minutes of Brent Spiner. Everyone does some heavy lifting here. The goodbye party is so great and I use the "with the application of a little care, the paper can be utilized again" line every Christmas.

The Data/Riker scene at the end are phenomenal. The goodbye scene, which is charming, needed far more Pulaski, what with her character arc doing far more for making a case for Data's sentience this season than this story had.

Riker apologizing to Data before removing his arm really touched me. And then shutting him off is a kick in the balls. But....Picard is right....all of that is irrelevant. Nobody denied Data is a machine. Picard runs with that. His closing argument is gripping and more exciting than any space battle.

The episode definitely addressed it at the end, which was not bad. But Picard's speech is a little too narrow, the moment one watches "The Ultimate Computer" where I'm far more inclined to believe that Dr. Daystrom's M5 was sentient. Which is still questionable because sentience involves not just self-awareness but reacting to emotional stimuli, something Data continually stated he did not have (no emotions, nor an emotions chip add-on*. Thankfully he let Yar assault him in "The Naked Now" for him to mistake as being a genuine moment of affection or else there'd be no inkling to the contrary as keeping a hologram generator of Yar looking demure is clearly counter to that.

There's also Rayna, who was, in "Requiem for Methuselah"... TOS had a ton of android-themed episodes yet never explored them like TNG's initial foray into the trope.

* Is it now a little scary that Lore qualifies as being sentient more than Data?​


And then the end, with Riker and Data talking it out, is another reminder at how much I love spending time with these folks.

This is the perfect episode. A bottle show which probably cost next to nothing comparatively, but the writing and performances make this one of the franchise's best outings. No space battles, spinning cameras, shouting, crying, holodecks or goofiness. A compelling character story touching on the rights of an individual and the question of sentience. THIS is how you make great Star Trek.

If I were running a class on how to make a Star Trek show, this is one of the episodes I'd put on the list for study.

5/5

It's better than a lot of morality plays later in the series' run, and as with the poker and warp core breach and others, now we can add Data's story here being the first in a lengthy list of episodes that feel increasingly dull. IMHO, of course...

Combining what I remember of what I did like and what seemed off, and the fact there've been plenty of times I enjoyed it:

3/5

It's still far better than the worst of season 2, but the TOSisms, questionable conflicts, and a couple other things drag it down.
 
I just found this thread and I agree with Ssosmcin's descriptions and ratings of the episodes.

It was Loud As A Whisper which finally sold me on TNG despite the uneven script quality. I was studying ASL in college (my folks raised me 'hearing', as the Deaf community calls people who were raised to speak by their folks rather than learn sign) then and it was just so cool to really understand what was someone was saying without cranking the volume to 11. You see, back then, TV shows were not routinely captioned like they are now, (thank you George Bush for signing the American's With Disabilities Act) and the device you attached to the TV to decode the few that were was clunky and expensive. My folks just paid someone to put a headphone jack on the TV. So I was now in for the duration. I missed only a few episodes until All Good Things.

I have that visual awareness like Howie.
 
The Dauphin

Wesley find's lovvvvve on the next episode of Starrrr Trek TheNextGenration!

This one is kinda fun. I wish they spent more time with Wes courting Salia and getting to know each other and doing more teen stuff. Especially since Geordi picks this damned moment to do cleaning of the warp pipes so they have to begin the journey on impulse. It wasn't an emergency, this couldn't wait for the diplomatic ferry handoff?

The chocolate mousse thing was a little corny, and Wil Wheaton has a manner about him that's too damned "aw shucks" for my taste. But when he urgently calls security, Wil finds his balls.

The Space: 1999 style morphing creature scenes are good fun. They looked like ass in 1989 and they still do. Worf is really all talk now. He's choked by creaturized Anya and does nothing. He literally waits until she's in old lady form before starting to take a swing. You'll never get to sto'vo'kor with that habit.

Meanwhile, Anya is so shitty at her job, she continually allows Salia to sneak out. It;s not like she's going out the window to the driveway, there's like on door that goes "pssssshhhhh!" when it opens.

The "this is how you woo a person Wes" scenes are funny.

Once Salia is outed, Wes has a fit but comes around and brings her more ice cream at the transporter. The reveal of her true form is 100% Roddenberry and Riker allowing Wes to give the "energize" order was nice.

Mixed bag. Some fun stuff, campy creatures and smart performances. But they don't add up to a significant whole. Still, props for giving me Space: 1999 vibes at a time when the show wasn't so easy to watch.

It's fine. 2.5/5
 
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Contagion

Here's a perfect example of snatching defeat from the jaws of victory. We get a kick ass teaser when we get to see the horrifying result of a catastrophic warp core breach on a Galaxy Class starship. I mean, this is a really breathtaking scene; watching the saucer rapidly disintegrating after the star drive section blows up was just a gut punch. Especially since Picard's friend was the captain and he apparently had no idea this was seconds from happening. The music is amazing here, which shows that the underscore really helps and Dennis McCarthy is in good form.

Having them give us an extra hook of an approaching Romulan ship was gilding the lily and lets the air out of the moment. I get the Romulans were a tension point, but they weren't necessary. The idea that an Iconian probe was fighting with the Enterprise computer and knowing they were facing the same fate as the Yamato should have been more than enough jeopardy. The rest of the episode should have been about the Iconians. Tell us more about the legends. Let's see some of them.

What we end up with is a less goofy and brightly lit version of The Arsenal of Freedom.

There is one really good scene of Picard and Wes talking about the destruction of the Yamato and dealing with the deaths of over 1000 people. But it ends abruptly to make way for the jeopardy plot. The story winds up being episodic, going from sequence to sequence - all entertaining but also disjointed.

Geordi being bounced around the turbolift was fun, but after tapping the console comms and failing to get through, he should have at least tapped his comm badge. Even Kirk resorted to communicators with the intercoms were down in Wink of an Eye.

Pulaski get like one scene where she actually has to explain what a splint is to one of her staff. Come on....

Picard gets to say "time is something we do not have in abundance" which I am sure Spock said in the original series, but for the life of me, I cannot remember which episode.

Carolyn Seymour is one-note as the first female Romulan we've seen since The Enterprise Incident. And it looks as if Romulans have gone for a unisex look for their people. She gets the same old bangs and stiff uniform as the two dudes we saw in The Neutral Zone. I'm gonna say this often, I hate this look for them. Romulans and Vulcans are supposed to be virtually identical, so there shouldn't be thick forehead appliances here. And in TOS, while Spock had bangs, all other Vulcans had individual hairstyles - except Surak. But you can rationalize that Spock was inspired by his hairstyle since he revered him so. Yet from TNG onward, Vulcans and Romulans all had the damned bangs. I get that they didn't want to shave the eyebrows of a one time guest actor, but there's makeup they could have used and just style their hair.

Anyway, Data has some good moments (his accidentally throwing Geordi is a fun if pointless scene). He gets to do a reboot and give Geordi the solution. Which is cool. I wish my computer did a restart and restore as fast ad the entire computer system of the Enterprise. Picard escaping onto the Romulan ship was also fun, but again, pointless.

I feel badly about this one, it's got such a great opening and a fascinating premise. But the need to inject Romulans instead of fleshing out the Iconians knocks this down to a merely decent episode.

3/5 - that 3 is for the Yamato and the continuing idea that space is freaking dangerous.
 
She's a natural as a Vulcan but, hell, K'ehleyr is far more fun... until season 4 where she comes with Cousin Oliver Alexander and is quickly killed off.
Once Alexander appeared, Wesley wasn't quite as annoying as you thought, was he?

Brian did get to bathe with Majel and Marina, so there's that.
 
The Dauphin

Wesley find's lovvvvve on the next episode of Starrrr Trek TheNextGenration!

This one is kinda fun. I wish they spent more time with Wes courting Salia and getting to know each other and doing more teen stuff. Especially since Geordi picks this damned moment to do cleaning of the warp pipes so they have to begin the journey on impulse. It wasn't an emergency, this couldn't wait for the diplomatic ferry handoff?

The chocolate mousse thing was a little corny, and Wil Wheaton has a manner about him that's too damned "aw shucks" for my taste. But when he urgently calls security, Wil finds his balls.

The Space: 1999 style morphing creature scenes are good fun. They looked like ass in 1989 and they still do. Worf is really all talk now. He's choked by creaturized Anya and does nothing. He literally waits until she's in old lady form before starting to take a swing. You'll never get to sto'vo'kor with that habit.

Meanwhile, Anya is so shitty at her job, she continually allows Salia to sneak out. It;s not like she's going out the window to the driveway, there's like on door that goes "pssssshhhhh!" when it opens.

The "this is how you woo a person Wes" scenes are funny.

Once Salia is outed, Wes has a fit but comes around and brings her more ice cream at the transporter. The reveal of her true form is 100% Roddenberry and Riker allowing Wes to give the "energize" order was nice.

Mixed bag. Some fun stuff, campy creatures and smart performances. But they don't add up to a significant whole. Still, props for giving me Space: 1999 vibes at a time when the show wasn't so easy to watch.

It's fine. 2.5/5

A fun but not perfect episode, great points all around.

I recall liking how it was Salia who set the stage for Wesley violating orders rather than him hounding her. Ditto for when Salia revealing herself and Wesley was annoyed. Which led, of course, to this lovely moment:

ANYA: I would not have harmed the boy, I only wanted to frighten him.

The Guinan/Wesley scene was poignant as well, especially the ending culminating with:

GUINAN: There'll be others, but every time you feel love it'll will be different. Every time, it's different.

There's also the Anya/Worf subplot that sadly amounts to little, except hints and promises and exposition. The acting, and both actors excel with their dialogue, definitely elevated some often-generic dialogue, including but not limited to:
ANYA: The third moon is within range of this ship's transporter, I shall go there. It was my home before we went away.
SALIA: I'm going to miss you.
ANYA: I know.
(Salia goes to the door, and it opens)
SALIA: I am ready now.
(Salia leaves and Worf enters)
WORF: I will escort you to transporter room six.
ANYA: You will be happy to see me leave.
WORF: No. You are a worthy opponent.
ANYA: Thank you. At heart, we are very much alike.
WORF: Yes, we are.
ANYA: Perhaps we shall fight again. On the same side.
WORF: It would be an honour. Shall we go?


But "leave the audience wanting more" prevailing, if they had somehow followed up, would it be a letdown? Not sure, though the acting would have lifted it up regardless.

The story does feel less than the sum of its parts and it's got some good parts. Even the opening had a nice bit of sci-fi flair:

SALIA: That's a superconducting magnet, isn't it?
WESLEY: Yes It's an SCM model. How did you know that?
SALIA: Study, for the last sixteen years it is all I could
ANYA: Please, Salia, walk ahead with me.
SALIA: Better be careful. Those can rip the iron right out of your blood cells.

A terrific reminder that outer space is not a nice place, whether it's about a magnet, or... magnetic attraction. Probably 3/5 in my book, it depends on how I feel. It's almost an underrated gem at times, yet doesn't quite make it there.

Contagion

Here's a perfect example of snatching defeat from the jaws of victory. We get a kick ass teaser when we get to see the horrifying result of a catastrophic warp core breach on a Galaxy Class starship. I mean, this is a really breathtaking scene; watching the saucer rapidly disintegrating after the star drive section blows up was just a gut punch. Especially since Picard's friend was the captain and he apparently had no idea this was seconds from happening. The music is amazing here, which shows that the underscore really helps and Dennis McCarthy is in good form.

^^this.

The opener was a belter and despite limited screentime, Thalmus Rasulala conveys an engaging screen presence that always makes you wish he had more screen time and, indeed, an episode or two prior to this to help build up their friendship more. The use of captain's logs helps immensely as well.

If anything, given this is (checks wristwatch laid broken on my second-favorite wrist) late season 2, it's not entirely likely that it's due to a design flaw in the first place. Arguably not impossible, but the story's attempt to deflect by adding emphasis on a design flaw is just a tad too much. That said, Geordi's exposition accompanying a screen diagram of what needs to take place for a warp core breach is perfectly detailed, even if this becomes a trope or meme a dozen or more times during the remainder of the series' run, turning something deemed 'improbable' into plot checklist items for the draaaaaaaaaama, on Staaaaaaaaaar Trek the Next Generation,

Having them give us an extra hook of an approaching Romulan ship was gilding the lily and lets the air out of the moment. I get the Romulans were a tension point, but they weren't necessary. The idea that an Iconian probe was fighting with the Enterprise computer and knowing they were facing the same fate as the Yamato should have been more than enough jeopardy. The rest of the episode should have been about the Iconians. Tell us more about the legends. Let's see some of them.

^^this

Excellent points!

As much as I love the Romulans, they weren't really needed in this episode - but not feeling like an afterthought either, oddly. There's an attempt at tension, but all we get is Troi doing a fourth joke worthy of "The Simpsons" where the only thing she doesn't do is mug the camera while drily stating "In another time and place, this could be funny" (Even though I can't think of too many in the audience genuinely giggling over the exchange that ends up with Riker lamely demanding some rocks to hurl at the Romulans, which rendered the scene blowing chunks - if I got the 80s slang vernacular correct.)

That said, Carolyn Seymour is interesting casting (considering she was also the evil leaper's entertaingly wonderful sidekick in "Quantum Leap"), yet elevating the role into someone more memorable despite the stoic nature. Shame the character isn't used again to be built upon, even with the actress returning - as a Romulan - with similar sounding name, and only because Joanne Linville wasn't available to reprise her Commander role from "The Enterprise Incident".

Also, having Picard sit in the room, smell some stale air, and decide from that that the Iconians weren't aggressors by that alone seems almost dubious, given Picard's other intellectual abilities in other episodes.

What we end up with is a less goofy and brightly lit version of The Arsenal of Freedom.

Oh shliiiiiiiiiiiizz, I never made the comparison until now - thank you! :) (Seriously!) On my next rewatch, I wonder if I'll like it less as a result. One season in and they're already redoing plot tropes - with just enough differences and idea juggling so that it doesn't seem so obvious. Better to do it with TNG stories than reaching back to TOS seemingly every third week, though.

There is one really good scene of Picard and Wes talking about the destruction of the Yamato and dealing with the deaths of over 1000 people. But it ends abruptly to make way for the jeopardy plot. The story winds up being episodic, going from sequence to sequence - all entertaining but also disjointed.

It was a poignant moment, about how Wes would be trained to put the emotions aside. It also begs the question "Picard? Or Yoda?"

Geordi being bounced around the turbolift was fun, but after tapping the console comms and failing to get through, he should have at least tapped his comm badge. Even Kirk resorted to communicators with the intercoms were down in Wink of an Eye.

"Mirror, Mirror" too from what I recall, to prevent the evil mirror crew from being readily picked up (but they were, anyhow.)

Really can't disagree, and I had to sit and spin to think of even a devil's advocate no matter how unconvincing so here it is: 80 years ago, cursive writing was the norm. Nobody uses it now, so get them to read a manuscript written in cursive and it's not necessarily recognizable. Or, better yet, clocks with hands as opposed to more modern digital numeric readout clock displays. Or, for whatever reason, Geordi wasn't thinking laterally during this emergency with the answer literally and right under his nose (that, or both comms systems were channeled through the same transceiver system - which seems unlikely.)

But then we'd have no action scene and that was a good one as it's another reminder that outer space is a dangerous place. Compared to later seasons where the ship is just a tame taxi service, even the subspace fabric being splodied and requiring the warp 5 limitation that was never adhered to anyway just didn't begin to convey the sense of isolation that even "Where No Man Has Gone Before" managed to do.


Pulaski get like one scene where she actually has to explain what a splint is to one of her staff. Come on....

Corny, but I found it fun nonetheless. I've had to explain jumpering DMA and IRQ channels when Plug'n'Play failed to someone younger and new to PCs even though we don't have to diddle with those anymore. That's the closest approximation and mostly for historical chuckles as it's a poor analogue to describing an archaic method of healing that still remains relevant as a contingency by comparison as Plug'n'Play works 100% (though if you switch USB ports on a printer, I recall it still has to reinitialize the port and you get a new numerical reference, so maybe it's 99%... I recall netowkr adapter #14 on my virtualbox session too... but it's not a direct parallel, nor can I think of any...)

Picard gets to say "time is something we do not have in abundance" which I am sure Spock said in the original series, but for the life of me, I cannot remember which episode.

:)

I think Kirk had said it once or twice as well (Doomsday Machine and/or Paradise Syndrome?)

Carolyn Seymour is one-note as the first female Romulan we've seen since The Enterprise Incident. And it looks as if Romulans have gone for a unisex look for their people. She gets the same old bangs and stiff uniform as the two dudes we saw in The Neutral Zone. I'm gonna say this often, I hate this look for them. Romulans and Vulcans are supposed to be virtually identical, so there shouldn't be thick forehead appliances here. And in TOS, while Spock had bangs, all other Vulcans had individual hairstyles - except Surak. But you can rationalize that Spock was inspired by his hairstyle since he revered him so. Yet from TNG onward, Vulcans and Romulans all had the damned bangs. I get that they didn't want to shave the eyebrows of a one time guest actor, but there's makeup they could have used and just style their hair.

She was definitely better in "Face of the Enemy" with a meatier role. Still, from what I recall of the Evil Leaper episodes I'd swear she had more fun there...

Didn't Spock and Sarek both get this forehead treatment as well?

I'm amazed they didn't go all Cesar Romero and cake up the makeup to hide the eyebrows a la his mustache then line up some fake hair angled upward...

Anyway, Data has some good moments (his accidentally throwing Geordi is a fun if pointless scene). He gets to do a reboot and give Geordi the solution. Which is cool. I wish my computer did a restart and restore as fast ad the entire computer system of the Enterprise. Picard escaping onto the Romulan ship was also fun, but again, pointless.

Yeah, the ending quickly washes clean everything. And destructive computer viruses were more or less new for home computers, so it didn't come off as cliché as it might otherwise could have.

I feel badly about this one, it's got such a great opening and a fascinating premise. But the need to inject Romulans instead of fleshing out the Iconians knocks this down to a merely decent episode.

3/5 - that 3 is for the Yamato and the continuing idea that space is freaking dangerous.

I wish it was better, it clearly was on the right track but using the neutral zone to add tension really didn't do much of anything. 4/5 for me, only because of how strong the story overall is, despite its foibles. It's oddly very-rewatchable and the "space is a dangerous place" was a perfect theme to use with all the unknowns. This episode definitely explored exploration, just not as much as it could have. It's almost been TOS-like if it had explored the Iconians more.
 

Great catch, thanks! (I'm not going back to edit my freshly made post, though! :D )

Once Alexander appeared, Wesley wasn't quite as annoying as you thought, was he?

In about 99% of the episodes Alexander is in, I can't disagree. Only a couple season 1 outings has Wesley worse, but in his defense it's down to season 1 writing. By season 5, it's all so dull and navel-gazing that even Wesley being the stick figure saving the ship is genuinely more enthralling. :o

Brian did get to bathe with Majel and Marina, so there's that.

Oh geez, LOL. Didn't that story also take place in season 5? (I don't remember much from seasons 5-7 off the top of my head, apart from Pegasus, Power Play, Next Phase, All Good Things, Relics, and both Q stories...)
 
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