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A new generation well worth exploring

Posted : 2 years, 1 month ago on 19 March 2022 04:31

The original 'Star Trek' series had its flaws but was a ground-breaking and ahead of its time show with many things that made it hugely impressive. Expectations were high for 'The New Generation', with big shoes to fill but also worries as to how it would fare in correlation with the original show.

Good news is that 'The Next Generation' is a very worthy follow up, that will please fans of the original series and also stand very well on its own two feet. There are improvements here as well as a couple of weaknesses. It is agreed that Season 1 is iffy and sees the show struggling to settle, it was Season 3 when the show properly hit its stride. Even for a character meant to be annoying, Wil Wheaton is very annoying.

Production values however are a major improvement in 'The Next Generation' over the original series. The sets give more of a sense of awe and the special effects are slicker and more expansive. It is stylishly and beautifully shot too. The music has a lot of energy and atmosphere.

Writing is every bit as great as that of the original show. It is entertaining, intelligent, thought-provoking and rich in humanity. The stories, when the show hit its stride, are every bit as high in imagination and just as suspenseful, intriguing and fun. Not quite as ground-breaking as the original series but just as influential and with many of that show's strong points, and actually with a lesser amount of contrived and lacking-in-logic episodes.

Character interaction and development, in what is essentially a character-driven show, is one of 'The Next Generation's' best points and where the show particularly excels. Worf and Riker's relationship is particularly interesting, and Picard is just as memorable as Spock. Which is not an easy feat considering Spock's iconic status in the 'Star Trek' universe.

Acting is every bit as fine, with the role of Picard containing some of the best acting Patrick Stewart has ever given and he has always been a highly dependable actor. Likewise with Brent Spiner, and Jonathan Frakes proves to be just as good an actor as he is a director. Michael Dorn is also strong. Only Wheaton is lacking here, but there is no acting here that reaches overacting depths like William Shatner in the original series.

In summary, well worth exploring and just as good as the original series. 9/10 Bethany Cox


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Star Trek: The Next Generation

Posted : 9 years, 7 months ago on 24 September 2014 08:50

After a rocky first two seasons, Star Trek: The Next Generation eventually emerges as a smartly acted ensemble piece. It’s a giant science-fiction space opera which is happier to let characters talk and explore their moral quagmires than it is to have them shooting lasers at each other. I welcome this change of pace, and by the end had grown very attached to this motley crew.

The first season is an unsettled affair with many of the actors unclear on their characters and trying to find them. The various plot strands feel messier than they would in later seasons, but this does mark the first appearance of Q’s many guest roles as an antagonist and helper of the Enterprise crew. The death of Tasha Yar, a character I never warmed up to or cared much about (mostly thank to Denise Crosby’s poor performance), sets up what would become a major conflict later on in the series.

And the second season doesn’t offer much better. Gates McFadden left for the second season only to return in the third. During this interim she was replaced by Diana Muldaur, a perfectly fine actress who never seemed to find her groove with the rest of the cast. Both seasons had a bad habit of wrapping up an episode with boy genius Wesley Crusher (Wil Wheaton) coming up with some crazy scientific solution to the conflict. Mercifully this became less prominent as the series went before jettisoning the character off to the academy towards the end of the run.

But by the time the series had entered its third season everything was beginning to come together properly. The ratio of good, some even great, episodes to mediocre or bad ones tips largely on the positive side by this time, and the cast finally found their specific voices. Patrick Stewart’s academic and pacifistic Picard is a complicated man, and a two-part episode where he is kidnapped and tortured for information is a highlight. It’s the kind of work and material that would win an actor an Emmy in a straight drama, but this being a space opera, he went woefully ignored. Jonathan Frakes as the randy, roguish Riker plays like an infinitely more mature and complex variation on Captain Kirk. But no two actors shined brighter throughout the series than Michael Dorn as Worf and Brent Spiner as Data.

Data’s a fascinating character, occupying the Spock-like role as a more human-than-human other in the series. And his season two episode “Measure of a Man” is a highlight. It presents every issue and reaction to the android that the series had brought up to that point, and a few interesting debates and moments which the series would then go on to explore in greater detail. And Dorn’s Worf transitions from more ferocious warrior to softer father figure and lover by the end, forming a strange familial unit with his son and Deanna Troi.

Deanna Troi, however, was always a problematic aspect of the show for me. She’s an interesting enough character, but the show constantly made her the object of sexual harassment, mind-control, and the repeated victim of kidnapping. This problematic aspect stood out very brightly whenever an episode would feature her in a leading role. Not all of her episode dripped with such casual misogyny, but more than enough of them did to wonder why the writer kept forcing Marina Sirtis to act this stuff out.

But by the seventh, and final, season everything on the Enterprise was running smoothly. The chemistry between the characters was what kept the series engaging and fresh. Various guest stars kept things interesting, and some like Whoopi Goldberg and Jennifer Jones were incredibly successful characters adding interesting dynamics in their episodes. But The Next Generation is beloved for that core group, and the creators knew this. They managed to craft the perfect finale which looked to the past, a possible future, and the present at the same time.

It’s another dynamite showcase for Stewart’s great talents as an actor. I swear, he can take any material thrown at him and give it a gravitas and meaning well beyond the worth of the words. But The Next Generation frequently gave him chances to give intelligent, hopeful monologues about numerous topics disguised as a fun action/adventure science-fiction series. And everything that was great about the series is located in the two hour finale. It’s a large time investment, at 45 minutes each and 176 episodes to get through I think that may qualify as an understatement, but if you can manage to ride out the flabby first two seasons then you’ll be in the perfect spot to enjoy what may just be one of the finest shows of its kind, ever.


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Star Trek: The Next Generation review

Posted : 12 years, 2 months ago on 16 February 2012 11:33

Ahh yes the pajama clad people; exploring space and spreading diplomacy in the biggest ship around. I am a fan.


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Captain Jean-Luc Picard....

Posted : 12 years, 7 months ago on 27 September 2011 11:05

Techno-babble happy. And goofy. But entertaining.

"This is becoming a speech."

"You're the Captain, sir, you're entitled."

"Hmmm. I'm entitled to ramble on about something everyone knows."

....

"Make it so."

......

I mean, I don't know what else to say-- that's more or less what it is, and that's about what I think about it. (It's mediocre, not less or more-- I'm not changing the rating now, because it's right.) {I actually shortened the title because it was too long and it was running into that sidebar, but I guess it would have been fine either way....}

But if you read some of my other reviews of things you might be able to pick up what I really think of Patrick Stewart; I don't know how else to explain it.

.....

Okay, I'll do it anyway--

".... because, the sky is blue, it makes me cry...."

Patrick Stewart: What is that strange noise? (Did someone steal my copy of Bach's Requiem?) .... It sounds like some strange, Justin Bieber-like, gay band!

John Lennon (disguised): Actually, it's a song, Because, by The Beatles.

Patrick Stewart: *bullshitting mode: on* Oh, well, they're pretty good too. ("Almost nothing like a stock-broker.")

John Lennon (disguised): All you need is love.

Patrick Stewart: *still bullshitting* Of course! Just like in the, I mean, in Hamlet, where the Prince says--

John Lennon (not disguised): I am so much such a better propagandist than you.

Patrick Stewart: *doesn't even notice* No, that's not what he said....

John Lennon: *sighs* You're 'right'; Paul and I are a little different.

Paul wouldn't have even bothered, lol.

Patrick is mediocre.... that's all.

(7/10)


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Star Trek: The Next Generation review

Posted : 13 years, 1 month ago on 24 March 2011 06:24

if you start from the beginning of 'Star Trek: The Next Generation', you will find the effects and costumes look like they are from the 1950's, but after the first season you will find the effects and plot get better and better, until the third season is very watchable. In this series you will see the a transition from old to new video effect, in one of the best mind stimulating and learning shows I have ever seen. This movie taught me things and gave me a better appreciation of .... life?


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