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Yesterdays Enterprise @ 30

Ironically YE and GEN were both directed by David Carson
That would explain the very similar camera framing for when Geordi slams the warp core circuitry door. A few years ago I watched “Yesterday’s Enterprise” and Generations close to each other and I noticed that scene and thought that Generations had maybe just lifted the film from YE, but then I noticed the uniforms were different.

But with YE, it’s too bad that it hadn’t been made into a 2-parter or made-for-TV movie.
 
I seen somebody on Facebook comment yesterday that this episode is "a little too much like the Mirror Universe" for their liking, which to me feels like it's completely missing the point. Visually, yes, the episode suggests a darker, grim take. But these are not evil versions of the crew we know. In fact, what makes the episode so perfect is that the characters are spot on. Everyone is recognisably themselves, just 'for want of a nail'. Underneath his brusque realism of the horrors of the war, Picard still has his optimism, it's just been buried. Indeed, I like to believe it's this idealism that things could be better that is what drives him to send the past Enterprise back.

One of my favourite things about the episode is the way it suggests a completely different paradigm, not with big massive things, but with subtle ones: the noticeable friction between Riker and Picard, or the obs lounge being a 'war room' with tactical maps instead of a conference room with plush chairs (symbolically, replacing the regular TNG's method of 'we can always talk it out' with 'standing to fight is our only option'). Or the subversion of light: the usually bright bridge, ready room, etc are ominously dark, claustrophobic command centres, evoking a utilitarian war ship, while Ten Forward, typically a place with relaxed mood lighting, is instead floodlit and looks more like a mess hall. This isn't the mirror universe, with cartoon-like replacements of the regular characters, it's just a recognisably inside-out version of the Star Trek we know. The episode masterfully sketches out a whole alternative series of history in broad strokes, which is why I think it's still compelling 30 years later. I've never tired of hypothesizing how things came to be so different, and yet still so much the same.

If I have one criticism, it's that I've always felt Denise Crosby's character is still... stuck in Season One, somehow. While the rest of the actors have had three years to get the feel of their characters and there has been some degrees of character growth in all of them, Crosby unfortunately comes back into the ensemble without that benefit. Yes, she's undeniably better written, but her presence doesn't feel like it "gells" with where all the other actors have come in three seasons in the development of their characters, and their bond as a team. She comes back as something of an outsider, although, perhaps I'm being a little harsh, as that degree of her being somewhat outside of things helps to underline just how 'wrong' (to paraphrase Guinan) it is that Tasha is even here at all.
^Agreed with all of that. I think part of the problem is trying to shoehorn it all in 43 minutes. I don't know that I'm in the camp with the people who think it should've been a full on theatrical movie, (Two different mediums entirely) but it certainly deserved 2 episodes to flesh out much more of what's being presented. Maybe even THREE. It's one of the best concepts they ever hatched.

Frankly, I always thought Yar & Geordi had something of an emotional connection, & if instead of rushing a superficial romance of the week plot, they'd had Geordi IN a longstanding relationship with her, that was never meant to be, it would've added a totally different spin on her choosing to leave at the end, & THEN given Geordi a real tragic turn to his later absence of romance, without him knowing why, having people pay the price in real consequences

That would've given the actors more to dig their teeth into, & would've been a stellar B plot, & with more than one episode to spell it all out, there'd have been room for much conflict about it, & much more explanation of the full historical implication, as well as maybe adding a bit more to Guinan's influence, than just being a half-assed catalyst.
 
I seen somebody on Facebook comment yesterday that this episode is "a little too much like the Mirror Universe" for their liking, which to me feels like it's completely missing the point. Visually, yes, the episode suggests a darker, grim take. But these are not evil versions of the crew we know.
funny you mention that but id always considered YE to be TNGs unofficial version of Mirror Mirror almost like a companion piece to that...yes I know its nothing to do with the mirror universe and is more to do with time travel but its the way it merges into the alt universe in the teaser, the look of the federation/uniforms/bridge, battle dates, the more aggressive manner of the crew (well Riker anyway), the way the main characters are trying to get back to their 'own' timeline,
 
funny you mention that but id always considered YE to be TNGs unofficial version of Mirror Mirror almost like a companion piece to that...yes I know its nothing to do with the mirror universe and is more to do with time travel but its the way it merges into the alt universe in the teaser, the look of the federation/uniforms/bridge, battle dates, the more aggressive manner of the crew (well Riker anyway), the way the main characters are trying to get back to their 'own' timeline,

Don't get me wrong, I do get the comparisons, and the episode employs many of the same kinds of techniques that "Mirror, Mirror" did to infer the differences: subtle alterations to the sets, lighting, costumes etc. And it's definitely more militaristic, which in light of Roddenberry's utopia, might as well be the mirror universe.

But... my take has always been that the regular TNG universe is actually the changed universe, the result of the time travel, and that the heavily military universe is a natural progression of the Original Series movies if history isn't changed. I especially like small details like more military style protocol and the use of the original series door-swishing sound effect instead of the Next Generation one. ;)

I have more thoughts but my lunch break here at work is up so I gotta run. :D :techman:
 
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