Wednesday, September 2, 2015

We'll Always Have Paris (S1 ep 24)

So, remember when I was doing these quickly? Those days are gone.

I’ve been thinking about just how much of Star Trek there actually is out there. I’m a bit daunted by my task for watching (and recording my thoughts) on all of it. I mean, there is an awful lot of “it” to get through.

I think the count, according to the internet, is that there are 546 hours of television and movies combined across everything produced to date (everything official, that is, so no fan-films are counted here) which totals around 737 individual installments.

And I think I’ve been spending about 3 hours per post (remember, I watch each episode twice, then spend some time actually writing my thoughts down. So I’m figuring I’m looking at a minimum investment of 2211 hours – which is over 13 WEEKS of time in order to get Star Trek done. That’s working 24 hours a day, 7 days per week, by the way.

If I put up a post per day it would be a year and a half before I got through them. At my previous pace of 3 per week it would have taken me almost 5 years.

And at my more realistic pace of a single post per week?

14 years

It’s going to take me a significant portion of my life to get through these. I mean, damn. Did I do my arithmetic wrong? Lessee – 737 episodes at 1 per week = 737 weeks. 737/52 weeks is 14.2 years.

So, I’ll quite possibly be doing this series until late 2029 – as long as I don’t keep taking weeks off because I don’t feel like it.

So, I’ll take a deep breath and ponder my place in the universe and if it’s worth my effort. Even if I want to have these for myself, it’s still daunting. I could accomplish a lot of stuff in 14 years if I dedicate some time and energy into it.

So, we’ll just have to see where that leads me.

But regardless, it’s episode 23 I’m up to now, right?

We’ll Always Have Paris. Funny, it wasn’t until last winter that I saw Casablanca for the first time. I enjoyed it so much that I stayed up until 1 a.m. on a night when I had to get up for work the very next morning. I’m not a spring chicken anymore. I don’t tend to have many late nights like I did when I was a kid.

This was pretty obviously an homage to Casablanca. How sure of it am I? Well, Picard goes so far as to mention the Blue Parrot Café as some great bar when he and Riker are talking. That is the name of the bar most of Casablanca takes place in, if I recall correctly.

And it’s close to the same plot. And not surprisingly, it’s one of the better episodes of a pretty dismal season of television.

And it’s funny, I’ve recently found out that there have been many episodes of Star Trek that were adaptations of other works of fiction, the one that comes to mind is the TOS episode, Journey to Babel, which I recently found out was a remake of an early 50’s movie about submarine battles in WWII.

And apparently, there were others. So, like I said, go figure. Can’t figure out how they get away with that. Don’t know if they obtain the rights, or if it’s considered an homage if the details are different enough. I know in fiction if I want to write fan fiction I can, but if I want to sell it I have to change the names of the characters and alter their descriptions slightly – I’ve been told that the 50 Shades of Grey phenomena was originally Twilight fan-fic.

But then again, George Lucas famously became very litigious regarding things he regarded as capitalizing on the success of Star Wars, and I heard he once tried to sue the creaters of Star Blazers for that very reason – despite Star Blazers pre-dating Star Wars. That might be an apocryphal story though, I’m not that into fact-checking at the moment. Mostly I’m just typing to see what I’m going to talk about next. It’s a somewhat surreal experience.

Boogers.

So, what is this episode about? Well, like every other episode this season, I’m not really sure. Picard is fencing in the, uh, fencing gym on the ship. When time sorta hiccups (according to Data, it’s a different body function, but he never elaborated, so it’s going to stay as a hiccup) and Picard then gets a call from his ex-girlfriend saying that her genius husband is ill.

Picard rushes in a short, pointless, scavenger hunt to track down the distress call. Once there he beams them up to the Enterprise.

So, false drama seems to be all over the place here. The scientist guy is ranting about being in another dimension and transporting the away team down to the scientist guy’s lab results in ‘some sort of bouncing effect’ and so they have to bypass a bunch of booby traps first. I guess.

So Data goes down to the planetoid, um, Picard says reality is falling apart due to the time science running amok, and his ex-girlfriend flirts a lot with Picard while her husband struggles to not be a multi-dimensional being.

Time distortions continue to plague the galaxy, apparently, and Picard’s ex-girlfriend’s husband calls Picard to his bed to ask Picard to take care of his wife if he should die, or something, and Data goes back to the planetoid. The professor gives them the secret code so they don’t ‘bounce back’ or whatever.

Data arrives, dodges more lasers, and then goes into the lab. Seriously, why is this guy creating a villain’s lair for his studies? He doesn’t just have a vault, the facility actively tries to kill everyone that stops by. And again, the scientist guy doesn’t even remember what security measures he has in place - what? ‘Sorry guys, I forgot to mention the killer lasers that will shoot you as soon as you land.’

So dumb.

Anyway, Data goes to the lab, drops a metal thing in the mirror thingy at a specific time - which is hard for him for about one second because the time-thingy makes three Datas, or something, but he doesn’t really have a problem with it, he just drops the thing and it’s all fine.

Makes no sense.

So, some thoughts.

  • Vacation time for the Enterprise! Picard starts by fencing. Actually pretty cool scene. 
  • Deja vu
  • Music in the teaser is very synth heavy. Dates the episode a bit. 
  • Up until the teaser - nothing has put me off regarding this episode. I know that’s not high praise, but for season 1 - well, I think it is.
  • Have I ever mentioned how amazing the final shot of the Enterprise looks in the introduction each week? You can actually see people walking around the in the observation deck, or ready room, whatever. 
  • Troi says she’s not interested in Picard’s personal life, but then proceeds to ask about his personal relationships. 
  • I’m trying not to talk about future episodes while I’m watching these early ones, but seeing Picard program and then use the Holodeck makes me think that it was more advanced in season 1 than it was later in the show’s run. 
  • Data comparing the time disruption to bodily functions is funny. 
  • So, the Enterprise gets a distress call, then arrives at the coordinates and it’s a buoy telling them to go somewhere else. I don’t know, that seems pretty stupid to me. 
  • The scientist guy’s wife’s explanation of what his work on ‘time’ is about it almost as new agey as Troi’s mom explaining how telepathy works. It’s complete gibberish. Seriously, I’m looking forward to the technobabble to come, this early stuff is laughably bad. 
  • I just realized how dark Picard’s uniform was in season 1. I mean, it’s barely even red. It’s very dark. 
  • Picard’s moment with his ex in the conference room is actually an almost genuine moment. With almost real emotions. Again, for this first season, this is beyond great thing to see. 
  • The scientist guy appears to be attempting a Sigmund Freud impression. 

I’m not going to pretend this episode is good. It’s pretty bad, the difference between this one and the bulk of the first season episodes is that this one is at least semi-competently done. The story makes very little sense on a technical sense, but I can at least get the love triangle part. Picard and his lost love from his youth is nicely attempted. The Casablanca thing is pretty cool. All in all, it’s bad, but not irredeemably so.




My rating?






2 out of 5

Monday, August 10, 2015

Skin of Evil (S1 ep 23)

Hey everyone, it’s been a long week. Nothing bad happened. Just couldn’t post. I’d written so many of these episode reviews so far in advance that I didn’t think there was any way to have the posts catch up to me during the first season of the show.

Turns out, I can’t write these anywhere near fast enough. I may shake up the format a bit in the second season to see if I can give a review that is more conducive to me getting them out in a timely manner.

But we’re not at season two yet. So I’m trying to keep this up.

And good god, these recaps are getting harder and harder for me to do. It’s like, I can’t figure out why I bother. I’m sure no one reads these, and if they do, they surely skip the recaps. And if they were interested in a recap, they’d probably prefer to read them at mission alpha or somewhere else that gives impartial recounts of the episodes.

But, whatever.



In this episode the Enterprise is having their dilithium crystals reconfigured, rather dramatically, when the shuttlecraft that has Troi on board has a random disaster while in space. And I don’t mean they were hit by an asteroid or sabotaged by a bad guy. Nope. They were just flying along and the whole thing fell apart on them.

Yes, the flagship of Starfleet, less than a year out of space dock, where the crew use teleporters for almost everything, and I think I see why. They don’t have a shuttlecraft that can make a routine flight without it descending into chaos. Could you imagine what it would be like if airplanes just fell out of the sky about one out of ten flights? No one would fly. Ever.

Because I assumed the first time I saw this episode that Armus, the evil being we’re about to meet on the planet Troi crashes into, caused the accident, or at least influenced it. But after rewatching, I don’t think so. It just crashed on it’s own because a new shuttle on a new ship can’t be expected to work in the 24th century, I guess it’s another of those things that people just ‘sign up for’ when they join Starfleet. Who designed that shuttle? They should  be on trial. 

Jesus. The lack of respect of people’s lives is bizarre.

So, I’m not even a little bit sure about what I was talking about here. The shuttle crashed and at least the radio worked well enough to call the Enterprise for help. Of course, remember the drama of the routine dilithium crystal maintenance that is going on. So the Enterprise can’t get there until Lynch pushes a button. He does, but they can only go minimum warp, so Picard immediately orders the ship to Warp 8. Lynch protests, and Picard has them do it anyway.

Again, it’s weird because A) Warp 8 is not ‘minimal’ and B) nothing goes wrong, even a little bit. A perfectly normal shuttle however, it may just explode for no reason (now that I think of it, something about the shuttle craft incident in the episode where Wesley took his Starfleet entrance exams was weird too).

Seriously,  I’m so angry at the poor quality of this show. No one thinks about this stuff. Apparently. 

The ship goes into orbit of the planet where Troi crashed and the Enterprise quickly finds the wreckage.

What proceeds from there is the most bizarre 30 minutes of television history. I’ll try to summarize in one run-on sentence: Riker and away team beams down, an oil slick won’t let them get to the shuttle until an oil monster rises up and kills Tasha and tries to torment the crew with name-calling (Data is Tin Man!) and occasional pranks (stealing Geordi’s visor and moving it around so he can’t get it back or covering Riker in oil) until Picard shows up and acts smug until the oil alien gives up.

There, done. Also, the hologram of Yar has an excruciatingly long scene at the end where she says goodbye to the entire crew. It was uncomfortable for me to watch.

Some thoughts I had while watching:

  • Yar’s exchange with Worf in the episode’s teaser is the best Yar moment of the entire series to date. 
  • Shuttle had a total malfunction in space. I know it’s TV and stuff like that has to happen, but I just find the whole idea that this sort of stuff happens, and not commented on, disturbing. 
  • Chief Engineer Lynch… Jesus. How many have their been so far? I honestly miss Argyle.
  • When the oil monster first starts coming out of the slick it actually appears to be scary. 
  • Once it’s actually out of the oil - not so much. 
  • The Phasers they use, they seem to be poorly designed ergonomically. I mean, wouldn’t that seriously hurt your wrist if you were forced to use it that way for prolonged periods of time. 
  • So, Yar died. The splotch on her face while they had her up in the medical bay looked weird. What was that supposed to be? Blood? A bruise?
  • Wesley continues to rock that rainbow sweater
  • I just realized that Armus - the evil oil alien - sounds just like the College Humor Batman. 
  • So, there were aliens that, uh, took all their evil and poured it into some sort of conscious entity and then left. They really had to know an entity of pure evil - which has a great deal of power - would eventually cause trouble for someone. Seriously. That is really dumb.
  • Troi is crying again. I’m not sure how many times she’s done it this season, maybe only a couple, but it feels like way too many. 
  • Worf's rationale for staying on the Enterprise after Yar dies is really weird. I don't get it. 
  • Armus rises dramatically out of the oil four times in this episode. That’s too many. Once was enough.
  • The moral dilemma Armus tries to put the crew in would have played a bit better if someone, anyone, acted like they cared. Armus is like, ‘I’ll make the robot kill one of you, but you get to chose who it is’ and the crew are like, ‘we don’t care, whatever.’ Armus gets frustrated. Honestly, I do to. This isn’t how human beings conduct themselves, ever. 
  • Data says Armus should be destroyed when analyzing him. I guess the ‘we believe in all life’ stuff isn’t really across the board. I know Armus is 100% evil, but it’s still surprising to see Data’s cold assessment. 
  • Per Troi - Armus acknowledging his feelings makes him weak. Uh, what?
  • Picard’s solution to Armus’ demands - seriously - is to moralize for a bit and then quote poetry. Is there any situation that moralizing and poetry doesn’t solve? 
  • That Picard didn’t melt the face of the planet from orbit is possibly a criminal act. However, he mentioned that the shuttle where Armus had been keeping Troi a hostage in was destroyed, I’d like to think they destroyed it by slagging the entire hemisphere Armus was on into molten rock. So technically, they wouldn't be murdering Armus, they'd be destroying a shuttlecraft. If Armus happened to be on the planet at the time, well, oops. 
  • Troi is crying again through Yar’s farewell speech to the crew from beyond the grave. 
  • And speaking of Yar’s speech. It goes on for a very long time. It’s cornball in the extreme. 
  • Data’s self-loathing at the end of Yar’s funeral is not as well done as I’d have liked. He’s an android that feels he missed the point of the funeral because he’s so darn focused on how sad he’s going to be. 

I’m of the personal opinion that this was an awful hour of television. Yar was killed off in an all but offhand manner (I know this is explored in a later episode quite well, but I’m only talking about this episode, not what may happen in the future) and the production values of the set is comically bad.

In all, this was hard to watch, and despite being a seminal moment of the series, the episode itself is poorly executed. It did have Yar’s best moment of season one, but it’s still an awful display of drama.

My rating?

1 out of 5

Monday, August 3, 2015

Symbiosis (S1 ep 22)

Oh boy - just when I’m starting to think we’re starting to turn a corner something like this comes along. Good god. What a mess.

Seriously, what a disaster.

But first, I’ve been continuing to figure out the muddy timeline of when, exactly, I watched Star Trek, The Next Generation for the first time. After really racking my brain over this, I’m pretty sure I never saw an episode before I moved into the new house we’d built. A house I didn’t move in to until the summer before my senior year in high school. I think.

I say, ‘I think’ because it’s a very fuzzy memory for me. I honestly don’t remember exactly when it was that I moved into the house. It’s possible that we moved when I was off in Texas visiting with my father (my real father, not the fake one I was living with most of the year).

Except, well, I’m not sure. I remember bits and pieces of that time. I remember waking up at a friends house, probably near noon, to a knock at the door. It was my mother telling me that my father was waiting for me at the airport, in TEXAS and I wasn’t there.

Turns out I had the dates wrong for when my trip was. So I shot out of there like a bullet, with my mom, threw some stuff in a bag and was at the airport in less than a couple of hours.

So strange, my dad just told the airline what happened and they moved me to another flight. They just did it. I’m not sure, but I seriously doubt they would do anything like that now. They’d just apologize and ask me to pay for another flight.

But then again, flying commercially before 9/11 was a radically different experience than it is today. Back in the 80’s it was about like taking a bus. If that.

But, my point, which I’m pretty sure I didn’t have when I started, is that that was the summer I moved into the new house, I think. I’ll be damned if I know. It’s just that I lived in the house when I worked at Taco Bell, but that was before I went to my father’s. So that isn’t right.

Wait. I worked as a construction worker on Saturdays before I worked at Taco Bell, and I lived at the new house then too.

Goddammit. I have no idea. It’s frustrating to me because trying to reconstruct a memory is a tricky thing. The mind really loves order, and it will create a narrative for me if I don’t remember the real one. So I’m trying my best to piece together things I know about that time frame and put it all together into one cohesive timeline that is actually accurate.

So I may not have even seen Encounter at Farpoint before ’89, which is two years after it actually premiered. I do remember something quite clearly about that time though. First, I remember reading about the premiere episode in the paper just before it came out. I recall because I was very excited about it. And second, I didn’t see any of TNG before I lived in the new house.

Which means either the my local station didn’t carry TNG until two years after it premiered, or that I’ve gone crazy. Seriously, I’ve been thinking about this a lot over the past month or two (since whenever I started this blog, I’m on the verge of having nightmares about it) and I just can't piece it together.

So, getting back to this particular episode. Yeah, it reeks of the worst kind of shit. The big problem, I believe, is that it isn’t really a metaphor for anything, it’s just a straight up drug addiction episode. How bad was it? Well.. Check this out -

>


- So, yeah, that’s an actual clip from the actual episode I watched, in its entirety. On purpose. For the sake of continuity with my other posts, I’ll try to do a recap anyway. Here goes:

Picard and the crew are really into watching these solar flares in this solar system. It’s dangerous, but they’ve never seen anything like it (weird, as it looks a whole lot like stock footage of solar flares as seen from earth, but whatever) when they get a distress call from a ship that’s in big trouble.

Picard and the gang try to help talk them through the repairs, but the crew aboard the alien vessel all seem a bit moronic. Or, to be specific, they sound like Chong from the old Cheech and Chong movies from the early 80’s - “Heeeyyyy maaaaannnnn. That’s not cool.”

After some frustration, they beam aboard a canister of stuff before finally getting the crew of the vessel aboard just as the alien craft explodes. Turns out that it isn’t Cheech or Chong, but the cast of Star Trek II. Which is really weird. I can understand the one dude (the dealer who played as one of Khan's genetically superior underlings in the movie) but not Kirk’s son, he was clearly noticeable as David Marcus, so I had to wonder, at first, how Kirk’s son ended up so far in his future as a drug addict.

But quite quickly I realized he was an alien, not Kirk’s son, mere coincidence. So, the crew of the Enterprise believe for much too long that they are dealing with morons instead of drug addicts. If that was supposed to be a plot twist it was the worst one in the history of storytelling.

Eventually, Picard and Crusher figure out what’s going on, then Picard trots out the Prime Directive as an excuse to just drop the people off and leave, he and Beverly argue a bit, Picard moralizes (good god, will he ever stop with that?) and eventually, it was might be a slightly clever, if very contrived, twist, Picard refuses to help the drug addicted aliens obtain any future supplies of their drugs through a technicality of the Prime Directive.

The end.

I’m sure that the writing staff eagerly awaited their Emmy for best dramatic series after that baby. Sigh.

Some thoughts on the episode:
  • Tasha waved goodbye to the fans in one of the final scenes of the episode. I actually think that was pretty cool 
  • Picard and his nonsensical Prime Directive talk. Seriously, considering he was already knee deep in with those aliens, I’m not sure how he can be so hands off while he’s in the middle of interfering with them anyway. 
  • Wesley and Yar’s drug talk was difficult to watch. At least if I’m trying to take this show seriously. 
  • Riker has gotten zapped by an alien two weeks in a row. Poor guy has become a punching bag for whatever happens to be going on. 
  • Speaking of aliens with zappy powers, so, two races, from two different worlds in the same solar system, supposedly have evolved to look identical and have identical powers of zappiness and nobody thinks that's a bit weird. I only bring it up because Tasha said she'd like to know how zappy powers evolved. From there it's a black hole into how ridiculous the whole concept of these people even existing are. She really should have just kept her mouth shut about it.

So, in the end, I don’t know much about the behind the scenes with this, writing wise, like who wrote it, conceived it, or ok’d it. But I feel like I’m watching a 75 year-old man trying to connect with kids in a way that’s cool. Or something. It’s just 45 minutes of being preached at by something that’s supposed to be entertainment. It’s pretty hard to watch. I hated it.

My rating?

1 out of 5

Thursday, July 30, 2015

The Arsenal of Freedom (S1 ep 21)

It's funny, when I think of Season 1 of Star Trek: TNG, I can't help but think of sitting in my living room, in our house, across from the haunted cemetery, with a ouija board that brought demons into my home at night.

And my step-father, always him.

But it's really only a handful of episodes that I distinctly remember from that time. I can't tell you why I remember some episodes so clearly and others not at all, and others are associated with times years later.

But from that time at home: Encounter at Farpoint, Code of Honor, Justice, Arsenal of Freedom, Skin of Evil, Conspiracy, the Neutral Zone...

So, yeah, this is one of those episodes I remember from that time. I mean, specifically. Now that doesn't mean I have some sort of extra affection for the shows I recall seeing - just that I remember watching them.

And I do remember enjoying these episodes back then. Not in any sort of meaningful way. This episode, I've got a fondness for that belies any sort of rational explanation. But all counts, this isn't very good. And again, not much of anything from season one is good.

I think it's a pretty easy story to tell. Three stories this week all rolled into a single larger plot. That in and of itself is a big deal, as there are episodes in the first season where the storylines aren't connected in any meaningful way.


The three stories can be summed up like this: A) Picard and Dr Crusher bond while she's injured and they're lost. B) Riker, Yar, and Data spend time dodging laser shooting floating thingies on the planet's surface and C) Geordi learns to be a captain while everyone else with any authority has left the ship.

A couple of thing happened in this episode that I thought were… well… interesting. First, the Enterprise shows up after hunting for a missing Federation vessel at a world filled with the remains of a long destroyed advanced civilization.

I think this is something that Star Trek did a lot over the course of its run that I really enjoyed, and that’s the idea that all these space-faring civilizations that pepper the cosmos aren’t a new thing. Instead, the galaxy is teeming with the rubble of fallen empires that spanned the stars long ago. Even this early in the Next Generation’s run, we’ve had the, uh, whoever it was in that episode that introduced us to the Ferengi, and these guys, and of course we’ll be introduced to the Iconians later, the alien trap the almost destroyed the Enterprise in the ‘Booby Trap’ episode, as well as the progenitors that seeded the galaxy with humanoid life, and the builders’ of the Dyson Sphere… I’m sure there are others too that I’m forgetting.

Look, my point with all that is that I don’t really remember that much. I think I’ve decided to start a spreadsheet that logs every time Worf gets his ass kicked, every time an alien is just a guy or girl (no makeup at all), every time an alien has a bumpy head, or funny nose, or if the alien is really weird (like, not humanoid at all), or, in this case, the menace is from an artifact of a long dead civilization.

Seems like it would be fun, after the fact, and be able to say, ‘Oh yeah, Picard tugged on the bottom of his tunic 134 times over the course of the series, but only did it twice in episodes where Romulans were the antagonist.’

Whatever. It seems fun to me. Don’t judge me. I don’t judge you. Sheesh.

Where was I? Oh yeah, so there is this planet, full of abandoned tech and weapons, all in ruins, and a missing starship. Once there, Riker and Yar and Data beam down, and Riker gets zapped by an alien thingy and is frozen in some sort of energy cocoon.

Of course, Picard has to come down to save Riker. So he and Dr Crusher visit. Data figures out how to release Riker but then that alien thingy shows up and starts up with its zapper. The away teams get separated and Picard and Crusher fall down a well.

Meanwhile, on the Enterprise, something actually kinda interesting happens. Geordi is left in charge and is immediately told to surrender his command to the Chief Engineer… LOGAN!

So, McDougal, Argyle, Singh… now Logan is the main man in Engineering. But he wants it all, so demands Geordi let him play as boss. In what is typical in first season writing, Logan dismisses Geordi’s rationale for staying in orbit as stupid, so a bit later when Geordi is forced to leave orbit, Logan dismisses Geordi’s rationale for leaving orbit as stupid.

Also typical of writing in this first season, Geordi is the perfect leader, he encourages the crew under him and is great at being inspirational. Then Troi pulls him aside into Picard’s ready-room and admonishes him – telling him that he needs to be encouraging and inspirational.

Uh, okay, that made no sense at all, but Geordi, being the good sport he is, acts like he’s received the best instructions ever on how to be a good leader, so he goes back out and acts exactly the same as he was already and leads the team to victory against the thing in orbit that is trying to destroy the Enterprise.

And on the planet, Picard and Dr Crusher flirt at the bottom of the well, while Data and Riker and Yar wander around shooting the thingies that keep attacking them. Eventually Picard turns on a TV and it’s a salesman that says they have the best weapons ever.

Picard realizes that it’s an automated sales pitch that will only end once the prospective buyers are destroyed, or they agree to purchase the weapons. So Picard agrees to purchase. Everything shuts down.

And justice prevails.

So, super very much of the nature of being quick... some thoughts:


  • Behind the scenes, I read that they actually had to shut production down on the series because the script was unfilmable. Everyone took a few days whilst the production staff tried to fix the story. Odd, because this is probably one of the better episodes in this season. Don't get carried away with that statement... this ain't great.
  • Chief Engineer Logan is comically Machiavellian in his attempt to usurp authority in this episode. And also, who the hell is he?
  • Counselor Troi was not watching the same episode I was when she decided she had to talk Geordi through how to be a leader. He was doing great on his own.
  • The floating thingy that shot Riker and chased everyone all over the surface of the planet... I was going to say that the CG was pretty not great on it, then I saw that it was a practical effect, done on set with a guy working that prop like it was a puppet. I was suddenly impressed that they could make a practical effect look like cartoony CG. God, my brain is so confused right now.


So, as much as I have an affinity for this episode, it's no one's finest hour. Parts of it make no sense, and there isn't much here to praise. So I feel really odd saying that it kind of worked for me. not a lot, but kinda sorta. If I gave half stars, it'd get two and a half.

But I don't. So I won't.

My rating?

2 out of 5

Monday, July 27, 2015

Heart of Glory (S1 ep 20)

I remember, way back in the early 90’s, probably during seasons five or six, again, when I was really into TNG, that I really didn’t like the first couple of seasons of the show. I also remember thinking that this episode, the one I’m supposedly reviewing now, was perhaps the best episode of the first season.

I’ll drag out the drama of whether or not I still feel that way until later, but I’m glad that I at least understood that the early episodes were pretty awful. I tended to be pretty uncritical of whatever it was I consumed, media-wise. I liked it or I didn’t. I thought that perhaps the only reason I didn’t like the first season was simply because the combination of spandex jumpsuits and a Riker without a beard.

Well, that and some pretty awful production values, something I hope to talk about a bit at a later date.

But it’s also weird for me now because, much to my surprise, the missus has been joining me for watching these episodes. It’s made it hard to do this reviews the way I’d intended because she wants to consume these way faster than I can write a review, so I’m well into season 3 as of this writing, and going back to a season one episode feels like I’m going back to something I watched a very long time ago. And even though I still am going back to watch these episodes a second time when I review them, that first impression is already gone, I’ve lost that sense of continuity from what happened the previous episodes. I’m not sure what to do about that, but I’ll figure out something.

Anyhoo - So, this is the ep where Worf gets to finally be the focus. I saw in an interview with Michael Dorn that the character was supposed to have only been a reoccurring role in the beginning, but an 11th hour decision was made to make him a regular. I really liked his stoicism over the course of the first season, and Worf has been one of the few characters I’ve not wanted to punch in the face in frustration this season. He’s not been written stupid, unlike Yar, Wesley, and to a lesser extent Troi, and at times, Geordi.

So, what happened in this episode? Well, I’m glad you asked. The Enterprise is called to the Neutral Zone where there has been a battle, the stumble upon a freighter that has taken on a lot of damage. After guessing about who it could have been that fought with the freighter for a bit, Data says it was probably Romulans. Then they beam over.

They away team finds a ship falling apart. They find three survivors, who happen to be Klingons. After some tense moments, they’re all beamed back to the Enterprise as the damaged ship explodes.

On the Enterprise, the Klingons are polite to Picard and tell a story about how they were passengers on that ship when it was attacked. Apparently, whatever it was they said had enough holes in it that Picard and Riker both believe them to be liars.

Then the Klingons and Worf go off to hang out. They all eat and make fun of Worf.

In sickbay, a third Klingon that I hadn’t previously mentioned died from injuries received while battling the attacking vessel. The Klingons (and Worf) come back to sickbay because they know how badly hurt he is. They scream as he dies and say the body is disposable, then stalk off like cool guys walking away from an explosion in an action movie.
Like fish begging for food pellets


Worf bonds with the Klingons to the point that when they confess to him that they’ve been lying to the captain about what they were doing on that damaged vessel he barely even shrugs at it. They also sorta pity him for not really being raised a Klingon. He seems to be susceptible to peer pressure.

So, after confessing to Worf that they’re full of lies and they’d taken the previous vessel by force, and then destroyed the Klingon vessel that came to take them back, Worf happily agrees to take them on a tour of the Enterprise.

Meanwhile, a Klingon vessel approaches the Enterprise. The commander of that vessel fills Picard and the bridge crew in on what Worf has also discovered and says he wants them as prisoners. Picard sends Yar and a security team to arrest the Klingons that Worf is showing around the vessel. A little girl wonders up to he Klingons just as Yar tries to arrest them. She calls the bridge and says the Klingons have taken hostages. Then the girl wonders away and Yar calls the bridge as says, ‘never mind.’

Ugh.

The Klingons are arrested and Worf goes back to the bridge, he begs the captain of the Klingon vessel to find a way for the guys they’ve arrested to die with some honor.

In the brig, the Klingons assemble a disrupter out of all the lumpy stuff that was sticking out of their clothing and escape, they also kill a security officer that clearly has never even considered the tactics of facing armed combatants.

So, the main dude escapes, the other dude dies (No one yells for him) and Picard tells the Klingon vessel that whatshisname is loose on the Enterprise, killing people willy-nilly. The Klingon says he’ll send over a team to capture him, no big deal, but Picard says he’s got it.

So whatshisname goes to Engineering and points his hodgepodge disruptor at the Dilthium crystals, which I assume is bad, and so Worf and Picard go to see what’s up.

Worf goes and meets the terrorist Klingon guy and he seems unable to understand why Worf doesn’t also want to take over the Enterprise and the two of them go off and terrorize the galaxy. Worf tries to speak some wisdom before he shoots the dude in the chest.

Worf yells for this guy.

Then everyone praises Worf, show over.

Oh boy, there is a lot to unpack here. Ah, so, real quickly, some of my thoughts during the episode.

  • Riker is anxious to separate the saucer section after just hearing about something in the Neutral Zone. Sheesh. 
  • Haven’t heard the name ‘Romulans’ in ‘some time.’ Weird, as they were talking about them a few episodes earlier (in Angel One, maybe - see what I mean about forgetting continuity?)
  • Klingons used Romulan technology, right? Disrupters and cloaking tech both? I forget. 
  • Geordi has a ‘visual acuity transmitter’ thingy, which apparently means he can transmit whatever it is that he sees to the Enterprise. 
  • Geordi’s visor lets him see things like the color controls are screwed up on a television. It seems weird that they say the visual data is so complex that they can’t easily transmit it. It’s the EM spectrum they’re looking at, not sure what the problem is in filtering it down to something close to what a normal human would use to see, if that’s what they wanted. Or if it’s something Geordi would prefer for himself. 
  • Speaking of which, it’s like no one in the future has ever considered using cameras for anything more that talking on the phone. I would think live-streaming every away mission would be standard. Even if I go back 27 years, or whenever, to when this was written - the recording of away missions wasn’t a new idea then, either. Didn’t anyone on the writing staff see any of the Alien movies?
  • Don’t know why, but Picard interrupting the away team to ask them what they’re doing seems really distracting. There should be some sort of protocol about constantly doing that sort of thing. 
  • Merculite rockets! Don’t know what those are, but I dig the name.
  • To date, Worf has been the least insane character on the show. I liked the tidbits of his backstory they’d included here. How he was orphaned and raised on a farming colony by a foster parent human and Starfleet officer. Good stuff. 
  • I question Worf’s handling of the Klingons. I feel like he should have reported something up the chain of command.
  • The howling that the Klingons did when one of their own died was a warning to the afterworld that a Warrior is coming. That’s cool. 
  • The Klingon vessel that comes after the guys Worf is happily showing the Enterprise to has a big Federation stamp right next to their Klingon coat of arms, or whatever that thing is called. That’s interesting. Q said a few episodes ago, rather offhandedly, that the Federation had defeated the Klingons. My Federation history is fuzzy, was that ret-conned away, or did the Federation kick their ass and force them to be vassals?
  • Just been noticing the pips on everyone’s collar. Looks like Lieutenant Worf is really only a Lieutenant Junior Grade. No biggie, just something I noticed.
  • People are dodging phaser fire. How fast do those things travel? The beam looks like it’s about as fast as a moderately thrown baseball. 
  • Worf decides to talk to the Klingon threatening to blow up the Enterprise and for some reason Yar thinks that ‘talking’ is a stupid idea. What they need to do is wait until… um, he gets tired? I’m not sure she thought that out. 
  • When Worf shoots the bad Klingon in engineering the Klingon falls over and crashes
    Who designed these floors?
    THROUGH the floor. So that means that the floor has barely enough strength to hold someone up that is standing there. That is the dumbest design I’ve ever heard of for anything. Glass flew everywhere and everything. Seriously, whomever designed the Enterprise made a death trap. What if someone tripped or something? They’d fall through several floors, shattering glass all the way, before landing a few stories below on the ground. 
  • Something I noticed is that when someone is speaking Klingon… it doesn’t sound exactly Klingon-y. At least not in the way I remember it. I took a few minutes and looked into it, turns out that the whole Klingon language had been worked out, but the staff of TNG, for whatever reason, ignored it and just threw a bunch of sounds out there. That seems pretty dumb. 

So, here’s the thing, this story, like virtually every other in this first season, has ‘dumb’ written all over it. Worf is committing what has to be court martial level of offenses in his dealings with the Klingons. And to say that Tasha Yar runs an incompetent security team is an understatement. It makes me strongly suspect that life in the Federation is really so cushy that while Starfleet might appear to be an organization ran with military efficiency, in reality, it’s a bunch of people figuring out stuff as they go along.

That’s why every race that has a run in with a Federation ship is stunned when they win a battle, or survive an encounter, with anyone. They clearly don’t know what they’re doing. Ever.

But given all that, this episode stands out like a single rose in a sea of sand. Yes, it may be struggling to survive, and it may be a bit malnourished, but you can still see some beauty there.

In all, this is up there with The Big Goodbye as one of my favorites of this first season.

It’s just that it’s really not saying a lot. This is an episode that still has a lot of problems.




My rating?






3 out of 5

Friday, July 24, 2015

Coming of Age (S1 ep 19)



You know, sometimes I lose myself in the minutia of Star Trek and sort of forget where I’m at in the bigger scheme of things. I’m sitting here, watching all these shows and by now I’m so ramped up and ready to hate what I’m watching that I sorta forget to try to enjoy the show.

So, this time, I tried.

How did it go? Well, by any reasonable standard, it sucked. However, and I don’t know if it was because I was actually trying to enjoy it, or if it had something to do with the actual product itself. But whatever the reason, I found this one… well, tolerable.

Not great, not as good as The Big Goodbye, which is far and away the highlight of the season to date, but certainly watchable if one is willing to slum it for a bit.

What happened? Well, Wesley scored high enough on some sort of exam to allow him to officially test for Starfleet Academy, he was overjoyed, and had to work hard to be sympathetic to his friend (I guess) that fell short and wouldn’t even get a chance to try for real along side of Wesley.

I get that, I had a friend that was obsessed with intelligence. I mean, really obsessed. He spent all this time and energy reading about IQ and differences in intelligence between people and correlations between income and wealth… I think he thought that if he was smart that he’d just get money handed to him or something, I’m not sure. But whatever it was, he was always taking these online IQ tests.

‘I scored a 136 on this one, but a 155 over here. And on this one I hit a 160! I’m a genius!’

We argued about it. A lot. Not angry arguing, but the way friends do. You know, when you know the other person is being a little weird but you also want to take their points seriously because they’re a friend and you want them to not feel bad about being weird (because I feel like it’s important that a friend should be able to tell me things that are weird without them having to worry that I’ll call them a moron about it, even if I think they’re being a bit nuts on whatever the topic is).

So, anyway, I was on the side of stating that taking online IQ tests until you find one that tells you you’re a genius (and subsequently wants to sell you a membership to their high IQ society) might not be a great idea… but then I remembered that Mensa was a real thing. And they had a pre-test you could take online to see if you could possibly join their high IQ society (I can see how there could be some irony here, but I’d point out that Mensa has known standards for admission, and it’s pre-test doesn’t pretend that it’s an IQ exam).

So, Mensa requires that your IQ put you in the top 1% of society before you can join. If you use an IQ test, it must be administered by a professional (like a psychologist) and be normalized. In other words, they don’t dick you around.

This pre-test though, it was just meant to say whether or not you should even bother making the attempt to join. He talked me into taking it. So, we talked over the phone, went to the website and took the pre-test at the same time so we could compare results when finished.

We did. And ‘lo and behold, they told me I was a pretty good candidate for their club. I was pretty surprised, that didn’t mean I could get in, just that they felt like I was swift enough of mind that it’s not ridiculous for me to attempt to join.

Cool. I could take the real test. My friend, he was very nicely told that while he’s more than welcome to try to take the real test, they advise against it. He just didn’t quite make the scores on the pre-test that indicates that he’d do well enough to become a member.

That told me a couple of things, 1) they weren’t so full of shit that they’d take anyone willing to take the test, and 2) I was invited and he wasn’t.

That second part made me feel weird. I was unexpectedly excited (what if I really am a super-genius?) and it also made me feel bad for my friend, who had wanted it much more badly than I did (my worry didn’t last long though, he was fine).

So, yeah, I got where Wesley was coming from here. And believe it or not, that whole long story of mine flashed through my head when Wesley and his buddy were having their conversation. I get Wesley’s issue.

So – like I was saying, I was excited that I was invited to move on up to the next level of Mensa membership, but I did feel bad for my friend, just like Wesley was excited to moving on up to Starfleet training but knowing that his friend won’t be joining him.

So, yay, I’m on board with this. And to be honest, they’ve really toned down Wesley’s awfulness in the back half of the first season. So much so that I think almost all of the Wesley hate was centered around that first half-season of the show. He got way less annoying.

That isn’t to say he’s in any danger of becoming my favorite character on the show, but he and Tasha both seemed to have quit with the crazy behavior that made me hate them both so much early in the show’s run.

Huh, I just remembered I was supposed to be doing a recap here. I know it’s tough to read this stuff, my eyes glaze over when I see a recap coming, even though that seems to be the new sexy thing to do on the internet these day. Goofy kids and their episode recaps.

So, uh, Wesley goes planetside and begins his Starfleet exams, meanwhile, Captain Picard gets a visit from an Admiral that orders Picard’s full cooperation in an investigation that his assistant, Commander Remmick, is to conduct about the short history of the Enterprise-D.

So, Remmick begins being a dick, Riker gets pissed, gets very petulant, complains to Picard, is told to quit being a baby, and then we get back to Wesley.

Wesley is competing with three other applicants for a single position in Starfleet Academy. It makes me think right away that they are being way too selective. Granted, Wesley is 15 years old, so I wouldn’t be jumping up and down to let him into Starfleet either, but they’ll only be admitting one (that’s 1!) person from that sector (or quadrant, whatever) to go to the Academy that year.

That’s pretty selective, right? How big is Starfleet? I remember that the Federation has something like 150 worlds, give or take, so that’s a lot of people. Seems like from a pool of, I guess, in the ballpark of at least a trillion people (150 worlds x 10 billion per planet = 1.5 Trillion. I rounded down in case 10 billion per planet is too high, but even if I’m off by an order of magnitude, and it’s 100 billion, that’s still a lot of people) they can come up with more than just a handful of applicants.

Which means that there is a lot of folks out there that might be exceptional people that don’t make the grade.

Actually, let me think this through a bit more carefully, we’ll keep the 1 trillion number for the sake of easy arithmetic, if the average lifespan of an individual in the Federation is 100 years, and we assume a more or less even distribution of age in societies, then we’d probably have 10 billion souls, on average, at any given age you might pick. So if the prime age for applying to Starfleet is 17 – 20 then that means you’d have 40 billion people of the right age.

Let’s take the Mensa percentage of that, 1%, and say that’s our best and brightest, the ones that actually have the mental fortitude to learn Warp Theory and Klingon Poetry and all that, that still means you’ve got 400 million folks to deal with.

I mean, we can really do whatever we want to cut the numbers more. It’s ridiculous to think the top 1% will all apply (although it’s made clear that this is the single best thing to do in the 24th century and just about everyone wants to be in Starfleet, so I’d guess the application rate is pretty high). So let’s say of that top 1% that’s eligible, only 1% actually apply.

One percent of one percent means 4 million applicants per year to Starfleet Academy.

Remember, Wesley is in a group of only four people at this facility that will represent their quadrant (whatever) that year, and only one of them will actually make it. Unless there are a million quadrants (if there are, then future people don’t know what that word means, or I should pay attention to what word they actually used in the episode) or there has been a pretty intensive weeding out process.

But why?

I don’t know how big Starfleet is, but I get the impression that they’ve got ships scattered all across the explored portions of the galaxy, and terraforming projects, and starbases, and colonies, and science stations, etc. You need a large number of recruits to maintain that presence. I think we’ve decided that they can be as selective as they want to be and still have more people than they know what to do with at the end of the day. So what’s the deal with only one person making it? Do they plan on having a graduating class of 30 or something? They probably need to graduate 100,000 people per year to maintain all the infrastructure already in place (I pulled that number out of my ass, but now that it’s out there I might as well stick to it).

So, the whole thing here is pretty stupid.

Unless – all the people here are applying as an exception. Wesley is too young, the Benzite is too… um, blue, the Vulcan is too old, I don’t know. Maybe this is some sort of special case application to Starfleet. In which case it sorta might make some sense.

I don’t think so, but if I’m going to watch this episode, I have to come up with some rationale that doesn’t end with me throwing my own feces at the Television like an enraged monkey.

Where was I? Oh, Remmick continues to be a dick, Riker realizes that it’s Picard that’s under investigation, and then he and the crew all say how awesome Picard is, despite the fact that almost every week since they’ve taken the ship out of space dock they’ve all just about died. Often due to decisions that Picard is making.

Wesley bonds with another applicant, not he girl that won’t shut up about how unfair it is that Wesley is on a ship already, or that he’s smart already (she’s out, no complainers in Starfleet) and Wesley and his friend are clearly are the only two candidates for the only spot.

The psych test is the final part. It’s meant to show you your greatest fear. Wesley is scared it will reveal he’s a coward. No one will talk about it, but everyone says it’s pretty brutal. Turns out Wesley’s is just a big thing about having to choose who to save in a triage sort of situation (If it were me, it would be getting eaten by a shark, whilst drowning, in an underwater cave, in the dark… shudder).

Wesley kicks the test’s ass.

So that kid that Wesley beat out to get to take the actual Mensa test? Sorry, Starfleet exam? He steals a shuttle with plans of joining a space circus or something. Then immediately remembers that he can't actually fly a shuttlecraft. As he's plummeting to his death above the planet, Picard calmly saves the day by talking the shuttle out of crashing, not really, he talks the kid into a daring maneuver that keeps him from dying and Remmick, who saw the whole thing, is stunned by how great Picard is.

Remmick decides that Picard and his crew are the most awesome people in Starfleet and wants to be transferred under Picard asap. Picard and Riker roll their eyes and then the Admiral confides in Picard that he had to be sure – that something evil has invaded Starfleet at the highest levels of command and he doesn’t know what, nor can he provide any proof, but Picard better keep his ear to the grindstone… wait, maybe it’s his nose to the ground. Dammit. I can’t remember.

Wesley ends up not getting into Starfleet. It appears it’s because that it’s because the Benzite guy won the math completion, which he wouldn’t have except when the Benzite guy had a meltdown in the middle of the test, Wesley just gave him the gentle coddling he needed so he could finish.

Except that wasn’t it at all. Wesley just flat out wasn’t good enough. Despite the Traveler saying he’s a genius among morons. Everyone gets back aboard the Enterprise, confused, and they all leave.

I didn't really take notes during this episode, I was gonna, but I didn't. So I don't have much more to point out specifically, but for what it's worth, my thoughts:


  • Why the Admiral continued to be so coy after the Enterprise checked out as a-ok is beyond me. Of course, knowing what's coming later I understand, but still, it bugs me.
  • That Remmick berated the crew for some of the adventures they had over the course of season one seemed weird. Especially about the Traveller incident. Starfleet DEMANDED he be allowed to conduct his experiments, it was over the protestations of the crew that he was allowed to run his tests. 
  • Wesley drug a man through liquid hydrogen? Holy Geebus, he's going to have some skin damage.
  • Speaking of that test. Wesley was in room 101. I'm pretty sure that's a 1984 reference
  • Still speaking of that test. What the hell? That's a very elaborate scheme for seeing how Wesley would react. 


I'm on the fence about this episode, it's not good, but it's not awful either. And for season 1, not being awful is actually a pretty big step in the right direction. I may put together a season 1 summary post ofter I'm done with it, and if I do, this one might be in a top 5 list of the season's best episodes. Maybe. I'm at least thinking that it could be, I don't know. Stop with all the pressure.

My rating?

2 out of 5

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Home Soil (S1 ep 18)

Back in the day, you know, when things were cool - and not lame like they are now – I was pretty big into TNG. I’ll go out on a limb and say my peak obsession with the franchise was probably around 1993. It was a pretty great time for me, I think. But here’s the thing. There were aspects of this otherwise perfect show that bothered me.

I think I’ve credited Star Trek novels for getting me into proper science-fiction literature and it was around this time that I first started picking up the books to read. And the books lead me into other areas because they explored the more science-fictional aspects of the show.

But what was on television, well, it always seemed like there was part of Star Trek that was more interested in reframing current events-related social issues and commenting on them (‘Hey, let’s not be so racist!’ Or, ‘hey, let’s not shoot each other over a disagreement, let’s talk about it instead’). 

But the thing is, I wanted to know why they could travel a thousand light-years, discover a previously unknown race of aliens, and no one think to question that it was weird that those aliens were clearly just a bunch of white dudes that dress slightly differently than the crew of the Enterprise did. I mean, that’s the sort of thing I’d be freaking out about. That isn’t to mention the weirdness in that almost any humanoid species could have children with any other, or that they can make each other sick (Thelosian-Flu? I’m not saying that’s unlikely, I’ll just point out that you and I aren’t at a great risk for catching Dutch Elm Disease – and that particular bug evolved right here on earth with us humans around the whole time. It seems unlikely a bug evolved completely independently many light-years away would give someone the flu, or whatever).

It eventually dawned on me that most episodes were metaphors for people who deal with other people. They weren’t about ‘exploring strange new worlds,’ they were about confronting slightly different versions of ourselves… they are about looking inward and trying to be better people. Um, more like a socially sensitive James Cook than a Neil Armstrong.

And as great as all that is, I fell in love with the science-fictional aspects of the show. I had to tolerate all the melodrama in order to get to that.

If there happens to anyone who doesn’t understand what the hell I’m talking about, the melodrama is the Riker-loves-Troi-and-she-loves-him-but-he’s-a-Starfleet-man-first-and-can’t-have-a-family-so-they-can-never-be-together sort of story, or even a story about Klingons are warriors… that’s all melodrama. Not what I’m in to.

But this week’s episode actually had a legitimate science-fiction premise. Up until now I don’t think that’s happened. This is exactly the kind of thing that gave me the willies, in a good way, when I was watching the show all those years ago.

Too bad they went and f#¢k*d it all up.

This episode was an unmitigated disaster in storytelling that had me so bent out of shape I went looking around the interwebs for some explanation for how it could have gone so horribly wrong. I didn’t look long, or hard, for answers, but I did find out that there were unnamed script problems that led to delays in production. Based on other things I’ve heard about this first season on TNG I really want to say that Gene Roddenbery was busily rewriting the script and it became such a mess they had to give up on having it make sense and instead just film what they had. 

And what did they have, well, I’m glad you asked. Here we go:


A terraforming project team on a lonely, uninhabited planet, has stopped communicating with Starfleet and so the Enterprise goes to investigate. They show up and the Director of the project there says everything is fine and for the Enterprise to move along. Troi immediately freaks out and says he’s hiding something… the Director is panicking even. 

Picard forces the guy to let them come down and it turns out the staff is pretty nice. They get a weirdly long and detailed overview of terraforming (I enjoyed it, it was just really long). Then the Director shows up and is pretty charming, then he orders one of the staff to leave and go stand in front of a laser, the dude acts like it’s an odd request, but goes anyway. Dude immediately gets shot by that laser and dies. The director looks like he’s just as flabbergasted as anyone.

Data goes into the room where dude was killed after everyone leaves and has them turn the laser back on. It immediately starts shooting at Data, but Data dodges the laser blasts and destroys it. Then everyone comes in and the terraformer guy runs into the room and gets mad at Data for wrecking his awesome laser.   

Aboard the Enterprise, Picard and Data and Geordi realize that dude was murdered and start to investigate. About 10 seconds later they discover something small and glowy on the planet. They go back to debate for a long time with the computer before deciding that the glowy thing they found is alive. 

Picard sorta accuses the Director of murdering one of his underlings – Troi just psychically reads him and says he didn’t do it (the murder) but he knew the glowy things were alive.

Later, in the medical lab, everyone gathers around and watches the glowy thing have a glowy baby. Then they decide that it might just be alive… again. Also, it’s intelligent. Picard confronts the terraforming team and they admit that something on the planet was making attempts to contact them… patterns in the sand. You know, geometric shapes appearing and disappearing in the sand. No one thought it was the product of a lifeform.

Later, on the bridge, the debate, now led by Worf, continues on whether or not the glowy things are alive. Sigh.

In the medical lab, the glowy things are addressing the crew as ‘ugly bags of mostly water’ and declare war on humanity. They start making the ship shake violently. Somehow. Picard, remembering how awesome of a thing it was when Q referred to Worf as a ‘microbrain’ decides to name the new living thing they found as a ‘microbrain.’

The ‘microbrain’ succeeds in taking over the ship. The terraformers are grilled about what they did on the planet to piss the aliens off so much. They have no idea. Someone figures out that light is their food. So despite having almost no control over the ship at all, they do have the ability to turn off the lights because the switch for the lights in the medical lab, where the micro brain is being kept, apparently, is located outside of the medical bay.

Riker cuts the lights, the glowy things immediately start begging for help. Then accuse the crew of the Enterprise of proving they are murders if they don’t turn the lights back on. Oh god. Picard forces them to surrender and turns the lights back up a tad, with the dimmer switch I guess. Then the glowy things call Picard too primitive or something and to come back in a few centuries.

Whew, that was hard to write. So, here are some notes I took while watching, you know, my thoughts:

  • When the Enterprise crew beams to the planet there are a lot of introductions 
  • And mullets, there is a noticeable mullet to be seen here.
    "See, in the front it's like I'm all business. But in the back... "
  • I really like the exposition on how terraforming works… and it’s a great prop they use
  • It seems like we hear the sound effect for an opening door about two seconds before the doors open… just seemed odd.
  • Data just glances at the laser and deduces that it was shooting on purpose.  I’m impressed, but also confused.
  • Tasha and Wesley both were fine
  • Data can dodge lasers. He can’t move fast enough to take action when Lore was trying to kill Dr Crusher a few episodes before, but he can dodge lasers, over and over and over.
  • It took them a year to build a laser. I dunno, seems strangely long, just strap a phaser to a stick and it can work just as well as that laser did.
  • Given that in this short season that the Enterprise have already encountered some pretty unusual life, like the Crystalline Entity, that Geordi doesn’t believe the glowy thing they found could possibly be alive because it’s ‘inorganic’ seems weird.
  • Seriously, that ‘is it alive?’ thing is really overplayed. It’s stupid
  • Later, after they’ve all decided that the glowy thing is alive, Riker tells whatshername that it’s still up for debate. It’s like he’s a global warming denier or something.
  • Wesley really needs to stop with the Rainbow sweater. I mean, it is better than that stuff he was wearing early in the season, but he needs to change clothes sometimes.
  • The glowy things have taken over the medical lab. 
  • The terraforming crew says they knew something really weird was happening, but seem to really not believe it was life… so what where they hiding from the Enterprise?
  • They call it a microbrain. Goddammit. They stole that from Q


In all, this episode is a mess, and not a hot one. I can almost see where this was going to be a murder mystery and then half way through someone stepped in and said, 'Waitaminute, people don't murder each other in the future, aliens did it.' Then they just ripped up the last 20 pages, ignored the obvious clues they laid into the episode to indicate it was supposed to be a murder, and made up this mircrobrain stuff and shoehorned it in. 

I hated it. It was so poorly executed, poorly paced (very long, yet still inconsequential scenes early in the episode and the near endless debate over whether or not the aliens were alive or not that kept getting resolved, I thought, then reopened again a few minutes later) and poorly written. Data dodging lasers was comical. The behaviors of the terraformers made zero sense as they came clean and admitted they were covering up... something, but they didn't know what. And given that they knew nothing about the aliens, the Director ordering whatshisname to go get murdered by the laser thing makes even less sense. So unforgivably dumb.

My rating?

1 out of 5

It could have been entertaining, it could have been watchable. But instead we get this POS instead of the beloved Science-Fiction show I should have gotten to see.