Yesterday being the 25th anniversary of
the debut of Star Trek: The Next Generation, there’s been a spate of “name your
favorite TNG episodes” invitations around the Internet. You can search Twitter
on #tng, or start here
to find some of them, if you like.
I have to say that I much preferred TNG to the
original ST. For one thing, in the roughly 20 years between the two series,
production values improved considerably. Also, I suspect that, on account of
the raging success of the Star Trek: The Many
Motion Pictures franchise, exec producer Gene Roddenberry probably had much
bigger budgets to put together the episodes. And these gave him scope to
explore a lot of issues.
Plus—it became a hip place for “larger” stars to
show up. I mean—when Whoopi Goldberg begs to be the ship’s tavern keeper in a
recurring role, you’ve arrived.
Anyway—while I have to say that I recall very few
clunkers in the whole seven year run, here are several that stand out in my
mind:
“First Contact”: Commander Riker is in deep
undercover (so as to obey the Prime Directive) on a planet that doesn’t yet
have official relations with the Federation, and is in fact highly suspicious
of anything alien. (Look, if I have to explain Riker, the Federation or the
Prime Directive to you, we may as well stop now. Just go back into your cave,
pick up your macramé and pour yourself another Fresca.) There’s a lot of
hoo-ha about the whole thing, but what captured my attention was a very
nerdy-looking Malcorian, played by Bebe Neuwirth, who agrees to help Riker
escape the 24th century equivalent of the Minute Men—on a particular
condition—because, “I’ve always wanted to make love to an alien.” The look on
Riker’s face as he evaluates his options imprinted in my cortex.
“Darmok”: Captain Picard (who frankly wipes the
floor with Captain Kirk in every competition except carpet-chewing OTT
melodramatic testosterone-spewing bluster) finds himself alone on an empty
planet with the armed leader of a people whose method of communication is completely
incomprehensible to anyone from the Federation. There is a combat challenge, and the efforts of the Enterprise
crew to extricate Picard result in the serious injury to the Tamarian
commander. As night falls, the two warriors exchange heroic tales. And what I
recall is Picard relating the story of Gilgamesh, which resonates deeply with
the Tamarian. Gilgamesh, if you please!
“Disaster”: There’s this gigantic quantum filament,
see, and it renders the Enterprise dead
in the, er, quadrant, with crew clustered in isolated areas of the ship. Picard
is stuck in the turbo-lift with three, gasp, kids (who’ve won a captain-led
tour of the ship in a science competition), Counselor Troi is the
highest-ranking officer on the bridge trying to figure out what’s going on with
the power, Geordi and Dr. Crusher are in a cargo bay with some toxic chemicals, and Keiko O’Brien goes into labor in the 10-Forward bar, with Lt.
Worf assisting the birth. Everyone is, in effect, a fish out of water. And everyone approaches the challenges of what actions to take that will be best
for all, without being able to consult with everyone else. Besides—a Klingon
midwife? Talk about must-see TV!
“Rascals”: A captain, a botanist, a discipline
problem and a bartender walk into a…well, returning from some planet on the
shuttle they get zapped with something that reverts their bodies to
childhood/adolescence, but with their minds intact in adulthood. Plus—Picard gets
his hair back. The Bajoran Ensign Ro is affronted by being a sullen little child,
since she’s worked so hard at becoming a sullen big child; but Guinan (Whoopi)
just thinks it’s a lark. Things are complicated when renegade Ferengis (okay, I’m
repeating myself there) hijack the Enterprise, and the fantastic four enlist the rest of the Romper Room set to take back
the ship. It’s the scene where Young Picard hugs “dad” Riker in front of a
Ferengi that got me.
“Relics”: Scotty from original ST and Geordi prove
that engineers rule, no matter what the century or the environment.
“Schisms”: A complete nightmare world of alien
abductions, creepy experiments, where everything was cold, hard, sharp and menacing. Seriously creepy episode.
The thing that I really liked about TNG was that no
matter what, the crew did their best to support and encourage one another.
There was a character arc with a very awkward, pathologically shy crewmember
named Barclay. While at first referred to as Broccoli, during a single episode,
his crewmates made the effort to understand and accept him. Over the course
of several, he became recognized as a valuable contributor, stuttering and clumsiness and all.
Ah, time to find a TNG marathon and sit back with the remote on stun.