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- Data and Jenna enjoy a drink and each other's company in Ten Forward.
Synopsis:
Data experiments with love by pursuing a romantic relationship with a fellow crew member.
Ensign Jenna
D'Sora, "on the rebound" after breaking up with her boyfriend, suddenly begins relating to her friend Data as something more than a friend. After the young woman kisses him passionately on the lips, the confused android asks his friends for advice on what to do, and decides to pursue the relationship.
Since he has no real emotions or feelings, Data creates a special program to guide him through the intricacies of love. However, as his relationship with Jenna progresses, he discovers that in romance, the logical course is not always the most appropriate. With this in mind, he picks a fight with
Jenna, later explaining that he did it because his study of interpersonal dynamics suggested that conflict often strengthens the bond between two people. When Jenna points out that there is something artificial about his behavior, he concurs, reminding her that all of his behavior is based on a program and is therefore artificial.
Meanwhile, the U.S.S. Enterprise explores a nebula whose properties have never before been encountered. In order to investigate what effects those properties may have had on life in the region, the crew sets course for a nearby planet. As they travel toward their destination, random objects throughout the starship begin mysteriously dropping to the floor, but no one suggests any correlation between the strange occurrences and the nebula.
When the U.S.S. Enterprise arrives at the coordinates of the planet, the crew discovers only empty space, suggesting that the planet has disappeared. Moments later, however, the planet shimmers into view. Data's research suggests the nebula may be causing small gaps in the fabric of the immediate space, which cause the deformation of any matter that comes in contact with them. When parts of the starship begin disappearing, Picard realizes the ship is in grave danger and orders the immediate evacuation of the region. However, Data points out to him that the Enterprise is too large to maneuver through the sea of gaps, and Picard takes on the dangerous task of piloting a shuttlecraft through the nebula and guiding the ship to safety.
Following the ordeal, Jenna arrives at Data's quarters for a date and tells him that she cannot see him anymore. She recognizes that her previous boyfriend was unemotional, and feels that her choice of Data, a man completely incapable of emotion, indicates a pattern. Data sees the validity of her point and agrees to discontinue his program without a second thought.
Timothy Lynch's Star Trek: The Next Generation
Episode Reviews
Review Date: 6/1/91
WARNING: The following article contains spoiler information about this
week's
TNG episode, "In Theory". You should know the scoop by
now: don't go any
further if you don't know or want to know what happens.
Hmm. Hardly thrilling, but a decent way to spend an hour. Quite
watchable.
I have a feeling that if you boil the whole review down to a sentence or
two,
that's gonna be it. It could've been better, but it was pretty good.
At any
rate, here's a patented Tim Lynch Plot Synopsis :-) :
The Enterprise is exploring the Mare Oscurum, a "dark matter nebula,"
and Data
is working extensively with his friend Jenna DeSora. Jenna's just come out
of
a lousy relationship, and Data appears to be everything she wants:
kind,
attentive, solicitous, handsome..."perfect," despite his lack of
emotions.
During one work session, she kisses him right before she leaves, leaving
Data
quite puzzled.
As the Enterprise heads into the nebula (which is of much higher density
than
past examples they've seen) to examine a class-M planet they've detected,
Data
asks many people for advice on whether to pursue a relationship with Jenna.
Guinan says she doesn't like to give advice on first relationships.
Geordi
says his advice is "find someone else to give you advice." Troi
cautions him
to be _very_ careful, as Jenna could really get hurt, but then says that if
he
tries, he'll have to be more than the sum of his programming. Worf tells
him
to "conquer", not "pursue", but cautions that he doesn't
want Jenna (who's in
his section) mistreated. Riker tells him of wonderful rewards, and tells
him
to go for it. After all that, Data appears at Jenna's door with
flowers. His
initial attempts are somewhat...unsubtle...but Jenna realizes he's trying
his
best and lets herself be drawn in.
While Jenna tutors Data in the finer points of a relationship, the
Enterprise
crew begins to discover a few problems. At first, they're minor:
Data's cat
got out of his quarters and shouldn't have been able to, and Picard finds
his
ready room's computer console under his desk and in pieces. Things
get
stranger still when they finally reach the location of the class-M planet,
and
find nothing at all--especially when moments later, it's there
again.
Suddenly, there's a brief bout of atmospheric decompression in the
observation
lounge, but no apparent hull breach. Once standard pressure is restored,
they
go have a look and find no trace of what caused the damage, except for a
few
tiny electric current in the windows, which are often evidence of a
subspace
distortion.
After Jenna gets a little unnerved by Data's precisely calculated
solicitousness, and then his forced and deliberate "lovers' quarrel,"
Picard
decides enough is enough with these incidents (since more have occurred,
but
none causing any injuries yet), and decides to analyze them from outside
the
nebula. Unfortunately, before they can leave, a few more problems
occur: a
science station blows out, then an engineering station. A structural
failure
is detected between two decks, but when Geordi sends out a team, he
quickly
finds that one of the members fell halfway through the deck, which then
resolidified, killing her instantly.
Data's figured out the problem: the high density of dark matter has
caused
minor gaps in space, which are drifting randomly and causing major havoc
whenever they "blip" into this space. Sensors can be tuned to
detect them,
but only at ranges close enough that the ship could never get out of the
way
in time. Picard, in a shuttle, flies ahead to do so. The shuttle
is
eventually destroyed, but Picard is rescued and they got far enough out
that
they make a successful run out of the nebula. Finally, Jenna realizes
that
she's just repeating her old patterns (breaking up with one unemotional
man
only to get together with another), and severs her and Data's relationship.
Hmm. Well, I guess that'll do. Anyway, on to some commentary.
This was...okay. Not fantastic, but okay. I'm starting to think
that
TNG should really steer clear of shows with two main, unlinked plots,
though,
'cos they're really inferior compared to most of the single-plot shows
(like
last week's "The Mind's Eye", for example). Granted, I'm coming
off of the
high of "The Mind's Eye," and gearing up for "Redemption" in
two weeks, so
this is easily falling into the trap of being something to look at while
waiting for the "good stuff", but I think there's more to it than
that.
First, the good stuff. Both plots were probably a bit better than they
had
any right to be. The "Data tries romance" plot is something that
could have
been absolutely AWFUL, and much of it really wasn't. The "dark matter
rifts
from hell" plot also managed to evoke shades of "Clues" in the
early parts,
and of "Booby Trap" at the end. Both are good things to remind
one of in my
opinion.
First, the dark matter plot. I just know that all the scientific
sticklers
will be blasting the whole concept to smithereens this week, and to be
honest
I'm a little less tolerant of this idea than many of the others TNG has
used.
Granted, dark matter is one of these nifty astronomical concepts that at
the
moment can be almost anything (trust me...I'm in cosmology; I hear about
it
all the time...:-) ); but somehow I have problems believing that causing
spatial ripples of THAT form is one of them. (It's the drifting in and out
of
this reality that gave me the trouble, actually; if they were talking about
a
bunch of mini-black holes drifting around and causing havoc, that might
make
perfect sense.)
But if you can get around that and accept it, much of the rest works. I
was
happy to see that the damage was being caused by something that was simply
a
natural effect of unexplored space, and NOT some sentient being for once.
I
thought that putting Picard in the shuttle was an incredibly contrived idea
(I
mean, neither Picard NOR Riker is all that expendable--put someone in
there
whose primary training has been as a shuttle pilot! They do have
some,
right?), but once he was in the actual escape sequence itself was pretty
gripping. Something of a mixed bag.
It was, however, handled very nicely once you steered around the plot holes
I
mentioned. For a rookie director, Stewart did pretty well, particularly
in
that escape sequence I mentioned. ("Now would be a good time,
Mr.
O'Brien"...:-) ) I don't think he quite did as good a job on this
outing as
Frakes did with his debut in "The Offspring", and he certainly didn't
pull the
masterful job that David Livingston did last week, but he certainly showed
some promise. (One shot in particular stood out, but it was in the
other
plot, so I'll get to it later.)
Now, for the Data/romance plot. The plot itself was tight, in that I
don't
think it really had any holes to speak of, but I don't think this one was
handled all that well in a few places. Two of the longer scenes in
this
plotline, the initial seduction and the "lovers' quarrel" scene,
were
extraordinarily awkward to watch. I realize that they were supposed to
be
uncomfortable (that was, after all, the point), but this time I'm on the
other
side of the fence I was on in "Galaxy's Child": I couldn't get
past my
discomfort enough to get into theirs. This was especially true for the
whole
"lovers' tiff" bit; I realize that a lot of the show was somewhat
lighthearted
(and pleasantly so after last week's white-knuckler), but Brent did a
little
too much schtick there and not enough Data. (The most interesting part
of
that was that he sounded and acted a bit like Lore, right down to the
singing.
Hmm...are we seeing a slight progression of character, or simply a limit
to
Brent Spiner's range? Hopefully the former.)
Some of that storyline was quite wonderful, however. The sequence of
Data
asking for advice from everyone was wonderful--it reminded me of Wes doing
the
same in "The Dauphin", which was just about the only part of that show
I
really enjoyed. Everyone seemed to work pretty well and in character in
this;
okay, who else was shouting "Lech! Lech!" at Riker by the end of
that
sequence? Time for Bev to surgically remove that smirk. :-)
And the one
shot I absolutely loved of that whole sequence was Picard's little "oh,
Lord,
he's finally found me" look when Data comes to ask him for advice; that
whole
sequence was probably the highlight of the show. ("Captain, I would
like to
ask--" "Yes, I've heard, Data. And I will be delighted to offer
any advice I
can on understanding women. [disgruntled look] When I have some,
I'll let
you know." Hee-hee!)
Characterization was actually the best part of the whole show. Jenna
seemed
fairly well done (at least, she certainly got across to me that she'd just
finished a bad relationship), and this was the first time I've really
enjoyed
a scene with Keiko and O'Brien as a married couple. Picard's bit above
was
not just good direction--it was also very proper Picard. The only
character
whom I thought was a little overdone (apart from Data in one or two
scenes)
was Worf, in Picard's ready room. His not agreeing with or
understanding
Picard's lightheartedness about the "perhaps we have a poltergeist!"
was fine,
but I thought he was just a bit too paranoid. Ah, well.
Effects- and music-wise, I have virtually no complaints. In fact, the
shots
of the Enterprise in the nebula (particularly of it swooping along behind
the
shuttle) were among the best shots of the _ship_ I've seen in a long
time.
The music was again done by Jay Chattaway, who did the rather nice music
for
"The Host", which was a little more attention-grabbing than
most. (The music
when Picard first discovers his ready room problems in particular made me
sit
up and take notice, but most of it was actually pretty decent.)
A few small comments:
--The return of Data's cat. Spot the Kitty--sounds like the sort of game
show
you'd find on Monty Python. :-) Seriously, I'm always glad to see
the cat.
And the small "hello, Spot!" at the end of the show was actually a
nice sad
little finish. (Data clearly doesn't know enough about cats, though, if
he
seriously expects such a little thing as a locked door to keep Spot
inside.
Doesn't he realize that cats really run the universe? :-) )
--Only a few seconds of Bev, and that only down to a little past
shoulder-level. Guess Gates is really starting to show. That's a
pity,
because I think she'd have some interesting words on love and
relationships
for Data, between Jack and Odan.
--"Honey, I'm home!" ??? Between this and "Dinosaurs",
that phrase is
suddenly getting a new surge.
--Before anyone goes crying that Geordi seemed way too cheerful for
someone
who was just conditioned in the last show, check the stardate. If 1 SD =
1
day, we are talking a month here, so it shouldn't be weighing on his mind
every minute any more. (If he ran across some Romulans and didn't
react
accordingly, however, that's a far different story, of course.)
Well, that should just about finish that up. In sum, it wasn't a bad way
to
spend an hour. It was hardly one of the best shows of the season, but it
was
pleasant, usually humorous, and only had a couple of scenes which made me
cringe. (Why do I suspect, though, that the opinions on this show are
going
to run the entire spectrum?)
The numbers:
Plot: 6. Data gets 8, the dark matter gets 4.
Plot Handling: 6. That's what both get.
Characterization: 9. Pretty good.
TOTAL: 7.5, with a half-point for good visuals and music. Could be a
lot
worse.
NEXT WEEK: A rerun of Devil's Due. I think I'll just tune in for the
preview
for "Redemption", thank you very much.
Tim Lynch (Cornell's first Astronomy B.A.; one of many Caltech grad students)
BITNET: tlynch@citjuliet
INTERNET: tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
UUCP: ...!ucbvax!tlynch%juliet.caltech.edu@hamlet.caltech.edu
"The cat's out of the bag."
"Spot?"
--
Copyright 1991, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to
ask...
This article is explicitly prohibited from being used in any off-net
compilation without due attribution and *express written consent of the
author*. Walnut Creek and other CD-ROM distributors, take note.
Related Links:
Where
to Watch - Local channels and airtimes.
VHS, Laserdisc and DVD availability.
Cast:
Patrick Stewart as Jean-Luc Picard
Jonathan Frakes as William Thomas Riker
Brent Spiner as Data
LeVar Burton as Geordi La Forge
Michael Dorn as Worf
Gates McFadden as Beverly Crusher
Marina Sirtis as Deanna Troi
Guest Cast:
Colm Meaney as O'Brien
Rosalind Chao as Keiko
Michele Scarabelli as Jenna
Whoopi Goldberg as Guinan
Pamela Winslow as Ensign
Creative staff:
Director: Patrick Stewart
Written By: Joe Menosky and Ronald D. Moore