}); The Road to Episode Infinity

Sunday, June 7, 2020

Who is Valance the Hunter?





Valance the Hunter is a character who should be long forgotten. Dead and buried deep in a toxic acid lake. But Valance is a character who won't stay dead. He's a character who rose from obscurity and now has his own ongoing series of comics.  But let's start from the beginning.

A long time ago... (1978)


Life #1

In the comic Star Wars #16, Beilert Valance was born on planet Shinebone, a mining world somewhere in Wild Space. As a child his parents suffered death from plague (which is ironic since Valance will be plagued by death). When Valance was old enough he enlisted in the Empire and became a stormtrooper. Valance through the ranks and became a Sergeant Major. On planet Doniphon, Valance's platoon was attacked by Rebel starfighters. Proton torpedoes took out 16 of Valance's men and the Sergeant was left for dead, abandoned by a Empire that did not spend time or resources on the injured. Imperial Records indicate that Valance did not survive the assault on Doniphon. Just one more casualty in an endless war.

Life #2

But Beilert Valance did not die, not technically. His body was so ravaged that the medical droids would not even use bacta (too precious in wartime) to heal him. But after a 271-hour surgery the droids had replaced his left arm and left-side of his face with cybernetic parts. Valance, to his horror, was now a cyborg. 

Valance had no love for droids. The galaxy had developed a prejudice against  cybernetic life forms during the Imperial era and Valance had a particular hate for cybernetics (including himself). Valance could not return to the Empire for this reason, so he became a bounty hunter instead.

After saving a princess from the Death Star, Luke Skywalker had a price on his head. And what was worse, Luke's two closest associates were a pair of droids that he considered friends. Valance began to hate Skywalker, nicknaming the boy "Droid Lover". 

Valance's quest for Skywalker took him from Telos IV to Aduba-3 to the Jungles of Ultaar. In his wake he left death and destruction. Finally, on the trade world of Feriae Junction, Valance encountered his target. Even with a lightsaber, the Jedi-in-training was not much of a match for the bounty hunter. Valance had Skywalker pinned in a few moments, his blaster aimed to kill.

Then Skywalker's droid C-3PO moved himself between the hunter and his master. The protocol droid was ready to sacrifice himself so that his master might live. Something changed in Valance in that moment. Seeing that droids were capable of compassion, he found some compassion himself. Perhaps his heart grew three sizes. The hunter let Luke and his droid go.

Valance decided he owed a debt to Skywalker and thereafter focussed his life on protecting the boy. This would ultimately bring his face to face with Darth Vader. On planet Centares the two fought on the shores of Rubyflame Lake, a body of water corrupt with acid and toxic chemicals. The hunter was not much of a match for the Sith Lord. Vader had Valance beaten in a few moments. Valance was offered the chance to serve Vader, but he refused. Valance told Vader that the boy who blew up the Death Star was growing and someday would be Vader's equal.

Valance plunged into the lake where his body was instantly melted away.

Valance's encounter with Vader and subsequent death was featured in Star Wars #29. It was only his fourth appearance. The year was 1979 and his short reign in the Star Wars franchise was at an end...

Right?

Life #3

The year is 2019 and Marvel comics has resurrected the original Star Wars comic series which had been cancelled since 1986. The special issue "Star Wars 108" featured a return of some deep-cut characters including Beilert Valance.  Valance's robot corpse sat at the bottom of Rubyflame Lake for years. Eventually a salvage crew looking for old parts accidentally recovered his body. 

Awakened from his stasis, Valance set out on a new mission, to locate the Great Life Jewels of the Red Nebula. The twin jewels were said to have the power to preserve life by one who carried them, however they also carried a fatal disease known as the Crimson Forever.


After arriving in the Red Nebula, Valance reconnected with Skyw
alker and located the twin jewels, but he is not the only one who seeks them. As Valance is about to use the gems to restore his organic body, Domina Tagge arrived on the scene and shot the hunter in the back. Domina threw one of the jewels into the fiery heart of the Red Nebula, hoping that the separation of the gems would bring back the “Crimson Forever” plague, but Valance, still holding one jewel, jumped into the nebula himself. 


Before Valance was burned alive by the fiery core of the Nebula, he joined the Life Jewels finally restoring his organic form. Valance the Hunter, in the last moments of his life, finally enjoyed peace. 



Life #4

In an alternate universe (The Disney Universe), Beilert Valance is still a child.  On the planet Chorin he works with his father in the mines. They are slaves, but not for long. The Empire soon liberates the planet and Valance is free to travel the stars and make his own destiny.

The year is 2018. The comic is "Han Solo: Imperial Cadet #1".  The character is Cadet 404-913. The audience doesn't know that this cadet is the Legends character, Valance the Hunter. They will find out in a few issues. 

Valance has no love for his fellow cadet Han Solo. The kid was a scrumrat from Corellia. I suspect what Valance actually saw in Solo was himself. After all, Valance was a former slave and Valance has a well-established characteristic of self-hate.  So the two did not get along. 


The squad of Valance and Solo were assigned to planet Qhulosk,  where the Empire was engaged with the Qhuloskian army. Valance's TIE fighter was shot down during a battle and Solo lead his squadmates to rescue their fallen comrade. Valance was part of a system where the injured were not rescued and therefore could not believe his eyes when his squad recovered him from the battlefield. Valance was sent to the medical bay, but the Empire declined to spend the credits to fix his eye or leg. Valance was removed from the navy and into the infantry.

On planet Mimban, Valance would be further injured. He was gunned down by enemy fire and then caught in an explosion. His body burned. His flesh melted. Valance's life serving the Empire had come to an end.

Life #5


Yurib Nakan, Valance's flight instructor, must have pulled some strings to revive Beilert Valance. Valance was given cybernetic arms and legs. The left side of his face was reconstructed. Nakan informed Valance that he had lost enough flesh in service to the Empire and would be discharged. Valance returned home to find his village in ruins. The Empire had reconstructed Valance, but had not taken care of his childhood home. Valance would take up a new career. He would become a hunter.

The year is 2019. The comic is "Target Vader #1". Valance has been given his own limited series. Valance has been given a mission by the crime syndicate "Hidden Hand". The mission is to take down Darth Vader. If history is to repeat itself (as it often does) then in a few issues Valance will encounter the Dark Lord of Sith and Valance will be killed once more.

Valance takes up the "Hidden Hands" mission even though it includes working on a team (Valance despises teams). The team includes the bounty hunter Dengar, who is a bitter rival. 

On planet Heva, the team attempts to capture Vader.  They shoot down his TIE fighter and try to get close enough to utilize an EMP device that they hope will immobilize Vader . But the team of bounty hunters are no match for the Dark Lord of Sith. One by one he cuts through them. As his team falls Valance attempts to use the EMP on Vader, but it's too late. It's Valance's turn to die.

But that isn't what happens. It turns out Dengar betrayed the team of bounty hunters to The Empire. Valance is captured and interrogated by Vader himself. Vader wants to take down the "Hidden Hand" and Valance is just the cyborg for the job. It turns out that the "Hidden Hand" are the ones who destroyed Chorin, his childhood home. Valance infiltrates the crime syndicate and leads Vader right to them. However, Valance manages to slip away during the firefight, escaping Vader's clutches. Valance does not die at the hands of the Sith. Valance, against all odds, survives.

Life #6

The year is 2020 and Beilert Valance has risen from obscurity. He has been featured in the limited comic series "Han Solo: Imperial Cadet". He frontlined the limited comic series "Target: Vader". And now he is the lead character in an ongoing comic series "Star Wars: Bounty Hunters". The future seems bright for Valance the Hunter, except that one threat could end all his success: COVID-19.


The events of "Star Wars: Bounty Hunters" takes place between "The Empire Strikes Back" and "Return of the Jedi". Valance is a notorious bounty hunter working alongside of hunters such as Boba Fett and Bossk. Valance has since acquired a droid, Nine-Four-El, that aids him in his bounties.

Though two issues of the comic were released in March of 2020, much of the comic industry halted publishing in the first few months of the crisis. Though a third issue is set to release in June, there has been no dates announced for the continuation of this comic line.



"Who Is?" Series


Who is Valance the Hunter?


Who is Vuffi Raa?

Who is Doctor Aphra?

Who is Willrow Hood?


Who is Agent Naare?

Who is Quinlan Vos?

Who is Asajj Ventress?

Who is Gerris Shrike?






Monday, May 4, 2020

40 Ways to Strike Back

May the 4th Be With You!

This year for May 4th I want to acknowledge the 40th anniversary of "The Empire Strikes Back". Many fans hold this film up as the greatest Star Wars film ever made. So to honor the anniversary of my favorite movie ever, I present to you "40 Ways to Strike Back" which examines 40 times "Empire" has been adapted to various mediums.



Comics are a great way to digest any Star Wars story and there are many adaptions of the film "The Empire Strikes Back". Most adaptions stick pretty close to the film's storyline, but Star Wars "Infinites" imagines a world where Han is not able to save Luke from the cold and Luke freezes to death. Yet right before he dies Luke tells Han to go to Dagobah and find Yoda. In this version of the tale, it is Leia who trains to be a Jedi.

The Battle of Hoth is one of those fictitious historical events that has been played out over and over again. Little kids reenact it with their micro-machines. Older kids reenact it with card games and RPG tabletops. And who among us has not played through the Battle of Hoth in the form of video games? I spent my youth playing "The Empire Strikes Back" NES game over and over again as well as "Shadows of the Empire". I have experienced The Battle of Hoth countless times- After all, in a world without save states you always have to start at the very beginning of the story every single time. 


When the Star Wars Customizable Card game released in the mid-90s I was a preteen and just the right age to become obsessed with collecting those cards. I'm not sure I ever figured out how to play the game, but I did become a collector. I even shelled out $20 for one particular card (Captain Han Solo) depicting the smuggler's face in the moments before being plunged into carbonite. 

I have to admit that I have never consumed a Novelization adaption of any Star Wars film. Nor have I delved into the William Shakespeare adaptions of the Saga. However, I know that there are fans of these novels and someday I might even get around to it.

I was born during the Audio Cassette era, and some of my first cassettes were John Williams albums including the soundtrack to Star Wars. By my early teens I had graduated to CDs and Star Wars was still an important part of my collection. What would Star Wars even be without John William's epic score? That music might be the one ingredient that holds the whole thing together- an audio manifestation of the living Force. 

"The Empire Strikes Back" Radio drama is also a nice listen. It features Mark Hamill, Anthony Daniels, and Billy Dee Williams reprising their roles from the film and (interestingly) John Lithgow voices Yoda.


Who doesn't like a good source book. Even in the age of Wookieepedia, there are some physical source books worth perusing. One of my favorite Christmas presents as a child was "A Guide to the Star Wars Universe" (2nd edition). Whether you are looking for encyclopedic entries, scripts, storyboards, or production notes, there are books out there. May the Source Be With You!



Children's books help bring the Galaxy to life for young fans: from pop-ups, to panoramas, to Little Golden Books. There's even a board book series called  "Epic Yarns" that simplifies each Original Trilogy film to just 12 words and 12 pictures. Who knew Star Wars could be so concise? 


Animation has always been a powerful tool to draw people in to the Star Wars universe. The very first Star Wars animation was a short cartoon shown in the middle of the 1978 Star Wars Holiday Special. That cartoon actually introduced Boba Fett to Star Wars fans for the first time. Today, of course, there is so much animated Star Wars that you can hardly keep track of it all.

"Forces of Destiny" is a very cool series of shorts because it jumps all over the Star Wars timeline. "Beasts of Echo Base" adapts a "deleted scene" from the original "Empire Strikes Back" script. "The Path Ahead" features Luke Skywalker training on Dagobah (and voiced by a much older Mark Hamill).

Meanwhile, the series "Galaxy of Adventures" adapts scenes from Star Wars films while retaining the original soundtrack and dialogue. The snippets are great for kids who might not be able to focus on a 2-hour film but want to digest the Saga's most important scenes anyway.



There are at least half-a-dozen official versions of the original Star Wars trilogy floating around out there. Even though "The Empire Strikes Back" is the OT film that is the least changed throughout these many versions there are some notable differences. 

The 1997 Special Edition adds an extended version of the Wampa Ice Creature scene. The Wampa is more present and a bit more massive than in the original film. The 1997 edition also updates Cloud City with special effects shots and larger crowd sequences.

The most notable change in the 2004 DVD & 2011 Blu-ray release is that both Palpatine and Boba Fett are played by different actors. The scene where Vader talks to Palpatine looks completely different and includes new dialogue. Boba Fett delivers the same dialogue, but with a New Zealand accent.


You know that something has become a pop-culture success when the parodies start coming out. The first "Star Wars" parody was "Hardware Wars" in 1978 and the parodies have never stopped coming.

Weird Al has done a couple of songs about the galaxy far, far away but "Yoda" is the most iconic. I am willing to bet that the song is now far more recognizable than the original Kinks hit "Lola".

The "Family Guy" Star Wars specials are a real treat, and I sometimes watch them instead of the Original Trilogy because it is a much shorter way to consume the trilogy.

Robot Chicken Star Wars is also a blast. For "Empire Strikes Back" related sketches check out the one armed Wampa bit or "The Empire On Ice!" 



May the 4th Specials

2020 - 40 Ways to Strike Back
https://roadto7.blogspot.com/2020/05/40-ways-to-strike-back.html

2019 - 151 Star Wars Aliens
https://roadto7.blogspot.com/2019/05/151-aliens-how-many-do-you-know.html

2018 - Star Wars Polls
Movie Polls -https://roadto7.blogspot.com/2018/05/star-wars-polls.html
Character Polls - https://roadto7.blogspot.com/2018/05/more-polls-characters.html
Expanded Universe Polls- https://roadto7.blogspot.com/2018/05/the-polls-that-define-us.html

2017 -  40 Years of Fandom https://roadto7.blogspot.com/2017/05/40-years-of-fandom.html

2015 -Genre-Bending the Original Trilogy
Samurai New Hope- http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2015/05/a-new-hope-as-samurai-film.html
Western Empire Strikes Back - http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2015/05/the-empire-strikes-west.html
Pirate Return of the Jedi - http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2015/05/return-of-jedi-as-pirate-film.html

2014 - Recasting Star Wars
Prequel Trilogy 70s Casting - http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2014/05/recasting-trilogy.html
Original Trilogy 90s Casting - http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2014/05/recasting-star-wars-original-trilogy.html
Sequel Trilogy Casting- http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2014/05/recasting-trilogy.html

2013 -  The Prequels Rewritten: A Fanfic
Episode I - The Saga Begins - http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2013/05/may-fourth-trilogy-re-written.html
Episode II - The Clone War - http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2013/05/may-mayo-be-with-you-episode-ii.html
Episode III - Rise of the Sith - http://roadto7.blogspot.com/2013/05/episode-iii-remake-rise-of-sith.html

Thursday, April 2, 2020

The Best of Trek



I don’t normally watch Star Trek, but this past month I decided to watch the best episode of each Star Trek series. I did not choose episodes from any current Star Trek series (Discovery and Picard) because in those cases the verdict is still out and perhaps the best is yet to come.

What does it take to be the Best Episode of a TV series? Many times it means a break in formula. Like the LOST episode “Flashes Before Your Eyes” or Doctor Who’s “Blink”, there’s a certain amount of risk-taking to be had- a certain amount of challenging the audience. Sometimes a break from formula ends up being a miss or an outright disaster. Sometimes risks can completely divide a fan base. But, in rare cases, risks pay off and the result is an episode that people think of as being “The Best”.

Every fan has their favorite episode that’s very personal to them, so sometimes it takes an outsider to really judge a franchise fairly. I am that outsider. An outsider because I know just enough about Star Trek to squeak by, but not enough to be a “fan”. I’ve seen every Star Trek film, many of them I’ve seen twice. But considering how many Trek episodes there are, I really haven’t seen many. I could easily be labelled a Star Wars expert and I know quite a lot about Doctor Who. But for Trek, I’ve never had the time or interest to become a real connoisseur. Which is why I embarked on this project. I don’t need to be a Trek completist. What I really want is to consume the best of what Trek has to offer.

So I did.

And here are the results:


 The Original Series

 


Series:          Star Trek (The Original Series)

Episode:       Season 1 Episode 28 "The City on the Edge of Forever"

Broadcast:  April 1967

The Plot:
Dr. McCoy accidentally injects himself with crazy juice and he teleports down to a weird planet. There’s this sentient time-gate on the weird planet but the time gate is only sentient so that it can explain itself to the characters and the audience, otherwise it seems pretty powerless. McCoy jumps through the time-gate and winds up in the 1930s where he accidently helps Nazi’s win WWII. Jim and Spock try to fix things, but Jim winds up in love with a girl doomed to die.

What Critics Say:
TV Guide, Entertainment Weekly, and others have ranked “The City on the Edge of Forever” as the best episode of the original series. In his final interview, Gene Roddenbury claimed that it was his favorite as well.

What I Say:
All great time travel stories are pretty much the same. Time is accidently broken and the heroes have to rush in to fix it. In the good ones there is always a morally-ambiguous decision to be made. Should Doc Brown save the doomed Clara Clayton? Can Donna convince The Doctor to save a family of Romans from Pompeii? Should James Tiberius Kirk save his 1930s girlfriend from dying if it means that Nazis inherit the Earth? These binary choices often simplifies the complications of Time Travel for audiences… in a good way.

This episode breaks formula by taking Trek off of the starship and putting Kirk and Spock in street clothes. The stakes are understandable to a broad audience and many have cited the fact that this episode works for both fans and non-fans. Add in a Twilight Zone twist and you have TV gold.


The Animated Series


Series:          Star Trek: The Animated Series

Episode:       Season 1 Episode 2 "Yesteryear"

Broadcast:  September 1973

The Plot:
Kirk and Spock have returned to the sentient time-gate causing time to go arry again! This time they have accidently erased Spock from history. More specifically Spock will die as a young boy unless adult Spock can go back and save himself. Adult Spock claims he is a cousin of the family named Selek in order to keep tabs on his younger self. Meanwhile Young Spock must make a tough decision about whether to euthanize a much loved family pet.

Who Wrote It?
D.C. Fontana (or Dorothy Fantana) was responsible for writing an eighth of the episodes in The Original Series and she went on to write several 90s era episodes as well.

What Critics Say:
In 2013, The Guardian labeled this as one of the six best Star Trek episodes, out of the entire franchise. It was also nominated for an Emmy. Not bad for a Saturday Morning Cartoon.

What I Say:
The episode “Yesteryear” is not only a spiritual sequel to "The City on the Edge of Forever", it is possible that this episode is actually far better than its predecessor. The morally ambiguous decision this time round is placed on the shoulders of young Spock and it is heartbreaking. Like any good Pixar film, this episode had me on the verge of tears. And yet the themes and tones of this episode are much more adult than a Pixar film, leaving me to wonder what further treasures Star Trek: The Animated Series might be hiding in its vaults. Maybe someday I will find out.


  The Next Generation

 

Series:          Star Trek: The Next Generation

Episode:       Season 5 Episode 25 “The Inner Light”

Broadcast:  June 1992
  
The Plot:
When the Enterprise encounters an unknown probe, Captain Jean-Luc Picard suddenly wakes up on a planet, Kataan. The inhabitants of this planet tell him that his name is Kamin. He has a house and a wife. Picard is initially restless to escape this new life, but over time he begins to accept it. He sires two children and grows old with his wife. He learns to play a flute.

What Critics Say:
Finding the quintessential “Best” episode of TNG was difficult. It seems that people can’t agree on which episode is the “Best”. Yet this episode does appear near the top of most “Best of TNG” lists and (most importantly) the episode is Patrick Stewart’s favorite. Also, the episode won a Hugo in 1993.

What I Say:
The Inner Light’s title is taken from a Beatles song written by George Harrison. The theme of this episode (and that of the song) is that you can experience all the mysteries of the universe without actually going anywhere. Picard is a starship captain, devoted to his crew, but has no wife or children. He explores the infinite reaches of space, but has not fully explored the infinite reaches of his soul. The life he experiences on Kataan is slow and often uneventful. Yet Picard learns to appreciate the slowness and the quiet times. He picks up a hobby in his flute.

In this world so full of instant messages and instant gratification, I think it’s a good lesson for all of us. Slow down. Be bored. Take a breath. Find your Inner Light.

Deep Space Nine


Series:          Star Trek: Deep Space Nine

Episode:       Season 4 Episode 3: “The Visitor”

Broadcast:  October 1995

The Plot: 
Captain Benjamin Sisko is hit by an energy discharge from a wormhole. Sisko disappears right in front of his son Jake, apparently meeting his demise. Years pass and Jake has become a famous author, but when his father periodically reappears and disappears, Jake devotes his life to finding how to save his father.

What Critics Say:
"The Visitor" was nominated for a Hugo Award in 1996. Also in 1996, TV guide ranked it as the tenth best episode of any Star Trek series. In 2012, Den of Geek ranked it the best episode of Deep Space Nine.

It wasn’t easy to pick the best episode of DS9. Many sites also note that “Far Beyond The Stars” could be considered the best. I have included “Far Beyond The Stars” as a bonus at the end of this list.

What I Say:
Captain Benjamin Sisko jumps through time and each time he reappears his son is just a little older. This is reminiscent of the song “Cats in the Cradle” and perhaps a metaphor for what all parents go through. Blink and you’ll miss everything. Of course this story is not told through the eyes of Benjamin, it is told through the eyes of Jake. Jake becomes a successful writer and a married man for a time, but ultimately his obsession with getting his father back consumes him. In the end he succeeds in rescuing his father but only at the cost of tanking his own life and happiness. In the end he goes so far as to take his own life to give his father and his younger self another chance. Who wouldn’t.


 Voyager


Series:          Star Trek: Voyager

Episode:       Season 4 Episodes 8 & 9: “Year of Hell”

Broadcast:  November 1997

The Plot:
As Voyager cruises through the Delta quadrant, they find themselves attacked by a Krenim destroyer. This Krenim ship can not only penetrate their shields but also has a weapon that can change time itself. For the next several months the crew of the Voyager must fend off Warships, until Janeway orders the crew to abandon ship, leaving only the senior staff behind.

What Critics Say:
Digital Trends and Den of Geek have ranked "Year of Hell" the best episodes of Star Trek: Voyager. In 2020, SyFy Wire also ranked the two part episode as the best of the series and praised the film level quality.

What I Say:
Watching Voyager was a little like coming home. It is the Star Trek show I am most comfortable with. “Year of Hell” is a lot like watching all four seasons of Battlestar Galactica in the span of an hour and a half- a decade before the reimagined Battlestar hit the airwaves. Voyager is a show ahead of its time where the two most interesting characters are women who take shit from no one. My only complaint about “Year of Hell” was that the ending was a reset, when it didn’t have to be. I know Voyager was a bit early for serialized TV, but imagine how powerful these episodes would be if the consequences of the “Year of Hell” were reflected in subsequent episodes of the show.


 Enterprise



Series:          Star Trek: Enterprise

Episode:       Season 4 Episodes 18 & 19: "In a Mirror, Darkly"

Broadcast:  April 2005


The Plot:
In the Mirror Universe first officer Jonathan Archer has high ambitions. He lives in a world where the Terran Empire has dominated space and where rank is taken by force. Archer stages a mutiny and declares himself captain of The Enterprise. Soon, Archer learns that the Tholians have captured an Earth ship from the future and from another timeline, the USS Defiant. As the Tholians destroy The Enterprise, Archer captures The Defiant and uses its futuristic weapons and capabilities to establish himself as a powerful Captain with his sights on becoming Emperor.

What Critics Say:
Den of Geek ranked “In a Mirror Darkly” as the strongest of the franchise noting that the revised theme music was inventive. It has also been praised by W.I.R.E.D, Empire, and Vulture.com.

What I Say:
The Mirror Universe has been explored in the Original Star Trek Series, as well as episodes of Deep Space Nine, Enterprise, and Discovery. It represents the polar opposite of Gene Roddenbury’s utopian vision of the future. In a world where Donald Trump is president of the United States we have to question where this is all going. If we ever make “first contact” with alien races, would the human race enter an age of peace or an age of conquest? In the Star Trek universe our future either goes one direction or the other, but in the real world things are more complicated than that.

In the fall of 2001, life in America changed. As we entered a new century we discovered a new type of fear, which altered the course of events. Roddenbury’s hopeful vision of the future had accompanied America through the economic boom of the 90s in the form of The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager. But by 2001, America’s appetite for Star Trek began to flag. Star Trek Enterprise was not received well by critics, its campy plotlines and dopey theme song did not please critics or fans. When the final TNG film “Nemesis” bombed in cinemas in 2002, it became obvious that the Golden Age of Star Trek was dead- America’s hope for the future was lost.

Perhaps “In a Mirror, Darkly” was seen as a rare success among Enterprise episodes because it actually reflected that darkness and fear felt at the time of its release. America was fighting a war on two fronts. It felt like we were living in a Mirror Universe… a Dark Universe. It’s too bad that it took the show’s creators so long to figure this chemistry out. If the show had lasted a fifth season, more Mirror Universe episodes would have been produced. But perhaps it is better the series was cancelled after all.


BONUS

Series:          Star Trek: The Next Generation

Episode:       Season 3 Episode 26 “The Best of Both Worlds” Part 1
                        Season 4 Episode 1   “The Best of Both Worlds” Part 2

Broadcast:  June 1990 & September 1990


The Plot:
Captain Picard is captured by the Borg and assimilated in the Season 3 finale of “The Next Generation”. Fans have to wait all summer long for the series to return in the Fall.

What Critics Say:
WhatCulture and The Washington Post have called the episodes, the best of the entire Star Trek franchise. In 1996 TV guide ranked the episode #50 out of 100 for TV’s most memorable moments. In 2009 they also ranked in the 36th best TV episode of all time. Some have called this episode better than most Star Trek films.

What I Say:
Captain Picard’s brief time as a Borg is key to his character. The event is known to a wide audience and has been referenced in “First Contact” and the CBS series “Picard”. I was five years old when these episodes broadcast and my family did not watch Trek, but watching these episodes years later does not dull the gravitas of the event. It’s like watching video footage of the Hindenburg or the Moon Landing. It’s a piece of television history that is still felt in stories being told today.


BONUS


Series:          Star Trek: Deep Space Nine

Episode:       Season 6 Episode 13: “Far Beyond the Stars”

Broadcast:  February 1998

The Plot:
Benjamin Sisko is having visions of 1950s New York where he is a Benny Russell, an African-American writer who works for a Sci-Fi magazine. Other principal DS9 cast members portray the various people in the life of Benny. Benny is inspired by a pencil sketch and creates the character of Benjamin Sisko, a black starfleet captain. He convinces his boss to let him publish the work, but the owner of the magazine decides to pulp the issue due to concerns over the nature of Benny’s story. Benny is also fired.

What Critics Say:
In 2016, Empire Magazine ranked this the 4th best episode of any Star Trek series. In 2018 Vulture ranked it as the best episode of DS9.

What I Say:
The story begs the question, is Benny Russell living in the real world dreaming of Voyager or is Benjamin Sisko living on Voyager and dreaming of Benny. Perhaps both? Avery Brook's acting is very strong in this episode and it sheds light on the racism that has defined every decade of our country. If broadcast in today’s world “Far Beyond the Stars” would be labelled as PC libtard propaganda- which begs the question, has society become more enlightened since 1998, or have we taken several steps backwards?


BONUS

Series:          Short Treks

Episode:       Season 2 Episode 1 “Q&A”

Broadcast:  October 2019

The Plot: 
Ensign Spock spends his first day on the Enterprise trapped in an elevator with first officer “Number One”

What I say:
I wasn’t going to review any of the new CBS All Access Star Trek in this blog, but the Short Treks are too tempting. These short stories are able to take Star Trek to places that a normal TV series cannot go. Episodes such as “Runaway”, “The Escape Artist”, and “The Trouble with Edward” are better than 90% of all Star Trek episodes and they deserve to be listed among the other “best” episodes on this list. But “Q&A” is even better still.

Spock’s character for 50 years has struggled to sideline his emotions for the greater good. Yet often he uses those same emotions to fight for those he loves. The characters in Star Trek often must sacrifice their personal feelings, interests, and family ties to serve the universe as a whole. This is the DNA of the Star Trek franchise.


 BONUS

Series:          Star Trek: The Original Series

Episode:       Season 0 Episode 1 “The Cage”

The Plot: 
Enterprise Captain Christopher Pike are investigating a lost survey vessel (the SS Columbia) on Talos IV. But the ship and survivors are an illusion created by the Talosians in order to lure him into a prison cell.

What Critics Say:
NBC reportedly called the original pilot to Star Trek "too cerebral", "too intellectual", and "too slow" with "not enough action". The episode was first made available to fans through VHS in 1986. In 2010 SciFiNow ranked it as the third best episode of the Original Series.

What I say:
The original Star Trek pilot “The Cage” is void of much of the elements that made The Original Series a success. There is no international cast (such as Scotty, Sulu, or Chekov). There is no Nichelle Nicols as Nyoto Uhura (or any people of color). Leonard Nimoy plays Spock, but he is not quite the emotion-suppressed Vulcan that we know and love. The two elements that work the best in this pilot are Jeffrey Hunter as Christopher Pike and Majel Barrett as the female first officer “Number One”. Fortunately both of these characters are reclaimed in the second season of Star Trek: Discovery and get a proper chance to shine.

Afterword

I don’t normally watch Star Trek and that does usually bother me. There are almost 800 Star Trek episodes and 13 films. It’s a lot to explore. But watching a handful of episodes in the past month has been enough to at least peak my interest. It makes me want to continue to dabble in the franchise- to see what hidden treasures can be unearthed amidst the rigmarole of CGI Gorn and Vulcans playing baseball. The COVID-19 pandemic has given me time to dabble. Why not continue to… engage?