Media Archives:
- 30-second episode preview (AVI, 2Mb)
- Barclay takes over the ship's computer from the holodeck.
Synopsis:
A crew member is endowed with super human intelligence by an alien probe and threatens the fate of the U.S.S. Enterprise.
When the U.S.S. Enterprise sets out to repair the Argus Array, a telescope that has stopped relaying data for two months, the crew discovers an alien probe near the telescope. Geordi takes Barclay, a notoriously shy crew member, to investigate. As they near the probe, it emits an energy surge that knocks Barclay unconscious, and he and Geordi are transported to Sickbay. Meanwhile, the probe begins to follow the Starship, emitting a dangerously high energy level. When the crew is unable to evade it, Barclay amazes everyone by taking charge of the situation and eliminating the probe, saving the ship from destruction.
Turning back to the task of repairing the telescope, Geordi estimates the job will take three weeks. But Barclay, whose confidence and intelligence are continuing to grow, claims he can complete the job in two days. Geordi's pride in Barclay turns to concern, however, when he discovers his crewmate in the Holodeck arguing scientific theory with a simulated Einstein. Geordi insists to Barclay that the encounter with the probe must have precipitated the change and drags him to Sickbay, where Beverly's examination reveals an astounding change in Barclay's brain tissue that has rendered him the most advanced human being who ever lived.
Although the crew is frightened by the change in Barclay, the fact that they need him to repair the Array convinces them to leave him alone. As the repairs progress, however, the ship's computer is unable to work fast enough, creating the danger of a reactor failure in the telescope that could cause a deadly explosion. Picard orders an immediate retreat, but is informed that the Bridge has lost control of the computer. However, before panic can set in, the computer comes back on line and the crew learns the telescope has been saved. When Picard asks the computer to tell him how the disaster was averted, he is shocked when Barclay's voice answers.
Barclay explains that since the computer was too slow, he connected his brain to the computer to save the Array. Picard demands the engineer disconnect himself, but Barclay replies that this will cause his death. As the crew tries to devise a plan to regain control of the ship, Barclay propels the U.S.S. Enterprise to a point thirty thousand miles away.
Before the crew can stop Barclay an alien suddenly appears on the Bridge, admitting that the probe transformed Barclay so he would bring the starship to him. The alien goes on to explain that this is his civilization's method of researching new races. Picard agrees to let him scan the brains of crew members if the aliens will transfer their knowledge of tens of thousands of civilizations into the starship's computer. As they talk, Barclay arrives on the Bridge, having been returned to normal by the aliens, but retaining a bit of the confidence and intelligence his experience gave him.
Timothy Lynch's Star Trek: The Next Generation
Episode Reviews
Review Date: 3/30/91
WARNING: The following article contains critical plot information relative
to
this week's TNG episode, "The Nth Degree". Those not wishing to
be privy to
said information ahead of viewing should therefore forbear.
This one was AWFULLY nice. A slightly disappointing ending, but the rest
may
make up for it.
Bringing Barclay back was definitely a plus. But before I go into a lot
of
details, here's a synopsis of "Flowers for HALgernon"...no wait,
that's not
the title...
The Enterprise has come to fix the Argus Array, a cluster of subspace
telescopes at the edge of Federation territory. After they find a small
probe
that is presumably responsible for the Array's computer shutdown, Geordi
and
a much improved Barclay head out in a shuttle to check it over. While
they're
doing this, it flares up: Geordi is unharmed, but Reg is knocked
unconscious.
He seems to be fine once they get back to sickbay. The situation, however,
is
not: the probe starts moving towards them, they're too close to use
photon
torpedoes, they can't outrun it, and phasers don't seem to have any effect
on
it. (It's also sending out some kind of energy field which is in all
probability threatening.) The day ends up being saved by Barclay,
who
channels warp power into shields in a previously unknown way, and
strengthens
the shields enough for the ship to be able to fire photon torpedoes safely
and
destroy the probe.
But Barclay's intuition, intelligence and confidence don't stop there.
A
short time later, he proposes reprogramming the Argus central computer
virtually singlehandedly in two days, rather than fixing each reactor
individually (a task of at least 2-3 weeks' length). He gives a
virtuoso
acting performance, wowing both Beverly and Deanna, and later makes a pass
at
Deanna in 10-Forward. Finally, Geordi finds him arguing grand
unification
theories with Albert Einstein in the holodeck (and holding his own, at the
very least). This is enough to set him worrying, and he takes Barclay
to
sickbay, where Beverly finds that his brainpower has increased incredibly,
making him "the most advanced human being who has ever lived."
Since Barclay's hardly done anything that could be considered menacing, Picard
decides to let him do his work. This only changes when Barclay decides
the
normal computer interface is too slow to let him stabilize the array
properly
(which is true, as the reactors are about to all go critical), and hastily
constructs in the holodeck a device which allows him to directly patch
into
the computer. In effect, he becomes the Enterprise computer--and by the
time
it's clear what has happened, his mind has expanded enough that forcing
him
back into his own body would be fatal.
Geordi, after hurried consultations with the bridge crew, gets to work on
rigging a bypass that would at least let them move the ship to a starbase.
Barclay, however, decides to use his newfound knowledge of speed and
distance
to manipulate subspace, creating a never before seen disturbance. He
ignores
Deanna's pleas to stop, and blocks Geordi's attempts just in time. He
then
manages to repel the attempt by Worf and a security team to forcibly
remove
him, and sends the Enterprise hurtling smack into the center of the
disturbance he's created.
After a major shake-up, the Enterprise emerges right by the center of the
Galaxy. The face of an alien appears, babbling nonsense, but a
reconstituted
Barclay explains: their race, the Cytherians, also explore the Galaxy,
but
they do it by bringing other civilizations to them, rather than traveling
themselves. In effect, they "reprogrammed" Barclay in such a
manner as to let
him bring the Enterprise here--but they're benevolent, and only want to
exchange information for a while. Several days later, the Enterprise
returns
to its own space intact, and Barclay settles down to being "plain old
Barclay
again", with Deanna's and Geordi's help.
Well, I guess that should do. Now for my usual random ramblings.
As many times as I've said that I don't think action is obligatory for
good
Trek, it was nice to see some here. I think that by not overusing it, the
TNG
powers-that-be make it more pleasing when it shows up, at least when it's
done
correctly. And they certainly did so here: this had at least
one
edge-of-your-seat commercial break, namely the last one. To be
honest,
though, the next-to-last one ("Yes, Commander. It's me.") had me
riveted as
well.
It also had possibly the LONGEST teaser I've ever seen in TNG--a full 7+
minutes, not counting opening credits. Even more surprisingly than that,
it
was made up of two long scenes. Most long teasers have one fairly long
scene
(e.g. "First Contact"), often coupled with a very short one (e.g.
"The
Defector"). This had two long ones: Barclay as Cyrano, and then
the
probe/shuttle bit. This isn't really a good or a bad point, but just
an
observation. I think it's interesting, anyway.
Oh, and about Cyrano. After the debacle that was the Scrooge bit in
"Devil's
Due", it was nice to see something else of this nature used properly, and
with
a strong connection to the remainder of the show. Mainly, the fact
that
this was all the theater and not the holodeck was important to show
Barclay's
growth (both at the start, and then later once he's been altered), and was
also VERY interesting on its own merits. (Beverly running an acting
workshop?
Well, now we know what she does with her off-duty time; and given her
dancing
past, I think it makes a lot of sense. Fun, too. :-) ) It
also, as little
more than an observation, had Marina Sirtis looking the most appealing I
think
I've ever seen her on TNG. That blue dress (not the usual off-center
cleavage
model, but a little more like what she wears to bed) is just stunning.
Mmph.
Anyway, back to the show...
It was an absolute pleasure to see Dwight Schultz back. A-Team or no, he's
a
fine actor (anyone here actually go see "The Long Walk Home"? I
haven't, but
in the clips I've seen of it, Schultz is magnificent.), and Barclay is an
equally interesting character. Again, he got to essentially be two
different
people: himself, and the altered Barclay (as opposed to the real vs. holo
Barclay in "Hollow Pursuits"). And his computer-Barclay was
magnificent.
Whoever did the voice of HAL 9000 should be very, very proud--and
flattered,
too.
Yes, there were a bunch of 2001 similarities once Barclay had become the
computer, from the "I'm afraid I can't do that, sir" [just missing
the
Jean-Luc there :-) ] to Geordi carefully removing the video and audio
pickups
from the conference room to avoid Barclay overhearing them. Suits me
just
fine, that. Those who loathed 2001 may object to all of this, but I
think
that it stood up nicely on its own, and was a great tip of the hat for
those
who picked up on it (namely, most viewers, I suspect).
There were also, as I alluded in my alternate title, some similarities to
Daniel Keyes' wonderful _Flowers for Algernon_. For anyone who's read it,
the
similarities are obvious. For those who haven't, I won't spoil it, aside
from
saying that it too deals with a sudden, exponential leap in intelligence,
and
is among the most touching SF novels I've ever read. Go read
it.
The direction was pretty good--surprising, considering that the only other
episode Robert Legato's directed was "Menage a Tripe...er...Troi".
One shot
in particular which stood out was during the probe chase sequence:
after
phasers have been made as powerful as possible, we see a shot which looks
like
it was shot from about a foot to Worf's left and a few feet above his
head,
cutting from Picard's "Fire" over to Worf's hand (not all of him, just
his
hand) firing the phasers. I liked it a lot. Many of the shots of
Barclay in
the holodeck were terrific as well.
The visuals were stunning, but that isn't a surprise. Robert Legato,
the
aforementioned director, is also the Visual Effects Supervisor for about
half
of TNG's shows to date, so it's a given that he'd play to his strengths
while
directing. In particular, the entire "Enterprise going through
the
disturbance" sequence was, to quote Zaphod Beeblebrox,
"Wild". 'nuff said.
(The music during many of these sequences seemed well above par as well,
at
least to me.)
The plot was fine, although I do have a slight bone to pick with the
ending.
Not with what actually happened (superbeings or no, by the time Barclay
had
gotten that far we needed something like that), but it seemed rushed.
Oh,
well. But Barclay's growth and the crew's growing wariness of it was
very
well put together, and had me engrossed.
One splendid bit of characterization beyond Barclay, and Bev's theatrical
leanings (and the Troi bit which I mention below): Geordi's
off-the-cuff
comment to Barclay in the shuttle about this kind of thing being the reason
he
joined Starfleet in the first place. Now THAT's the sort of thing I like
to
see.
Some random thoughts:
--Barclay's argument with Einstein was interesting, and I'm willing to
ignore
Geordi's statement that most of the blackboard's stuff was well over his
head
despite the fact that it was elementary quantum mechanics because we only
saw
about a tenth of the board, and because the elementary QM that was there
was
100% correct, at least from my standpoint.
--A rare treat was getting to see Troi's slightly evil streak. After
she
mentioned Barclay making a pass at her at the conference (something which
did
seem a bit out of place, though not much), Riker later asks, "You said he
made
a pass at you, but you failed to mention whether he was successful."
(Note to
those who are reading this w/o having seen the episode: he wasn't.)
Deanna
just smiles a bit and walks away. Confusing Riker is such a fun
pastime. :-)
--We get to see the Enterprise going in reverse, something I don't believe
we've ever seen before. So much for "Star Trekking". ;-)
--Did you notice that Barclay's supposedly messianic belief that his powers
were given to him for some great purpose actually turned out to be right?
--It's a good thing this week's show was good, 'cos I'm right in the middle
of
Eddings's _The Seeress of Kell_ and highly resented being dragged away
from
it. At least the interruption was worth my while. :-)
And finally, a bunch of quotes, since this episode had a plethora of them.
[Riker asks how Barclay managed to do that to the shields}
"Well, I...[about 2-4 lines of complete technobabble]..."
"Mmm-hmm, I can see that..."
[Barclay's orders while creating the interface, verbatim. God, I loved
this
scene.]
"...Create a standard alphanumeric console positioned for the left
hand. Now,
an iconic display console positioned for the right hand. Tie both
consoles
into the Enterprise main computer core utilizing neural scan interface."
"There is no such device on file."
[looking mildly annoyed] "No problem--here's how you BUILD it..."
[I just love that one...]
[Barclay's said that there are no limits to the ship's speed, and he'll
take
them to all sorts of new places]
"Oh, shit...we've created an artificial Traveller..." --me
Barclay, when asked how he feels after it's all over:
"Smaller."
Gee, I guess I enjoyed this one, huh? :-) The ending seemed a
tad
disappointing, but the rest of it was just so damned good that I'll
forgive
nearly all of it.
Anyway, here are the numbers:
Plot: 9.5. A tick off for the ending.
Plot Handling: 9.5. See above--the former for the superbeing, here
for the
rushed nature of it.
Characterization: 10, but it should be higher.
Technical: 10.
TOTAL: 10. Certainly the best one since "First
Contact". Very nice.
NEXT WEEK: A rerun of "The Loss". No, thank you.
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
"Yes, Commander...it's me."
--Reginald Barclay
--
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
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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:
Dwight Schultz as Barclay
Saxon Trainor as Lt. Linda Larson
Page Leong as Ensign April Anaya
Jim Norton as Albert Einstein
David Coburn as Ensign Brower
Creative staff:
Director: Robert Legato
Written By: Joe Menosky