Encounter at Farpoint
From AwardAnnals
| Director(s) | Corey Allen |
|---|---|
| Subtitle | Episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation |
| Honors | |
| The two-hour pilot of The Next Generation holds up well after all these years and many, many subsequent episodes and four feature films. Gene Roddenberry’s second go-round with Star Trek on television boldly goes where no other soul had gone, overcoming Trekker skepticism at the time about new characters and a new cast. After introducing Captain Picard (Patrick Stewart) and the rest of the crew, the script by Roddenberry and former Star Trek story editor Dorothy Fontana plunges them into a familiar Trek confrontation with a superior… | |
Honors
Reviews
Amazon.com
The two-hour pilot of The Next Generation holds up well after all these years and many, many subsequent episodes and four feature films. Gene Roddenberry’s second go-round with Star Trek on television boldly goes where no other soul had gone, overcoming Trekker skepticism at the time about new characters and a new cast. After introducing Captain Picard (Patrick Stewart) and the rest of the crew, the script by Roddenberry and former Star Trek story editor Dorothy Fontana plunges them into a familiar Trek confrontation with a superior power, Q (John De Lancie), in a weirdly archaic setting drawn from Earth history (in this case, the bloody kangaroo courts of Robespierre’s day). Declaring mankind barbarous and unworthy of existence, Q gives Picard 24 hours to prove humans are not just a “grievously savage race.” The story is punctuated with various delights, particularly first meetings between the characters (watch for Riker’s houndish introduction to Dr. Crusher) and a surprise cameo from a Trek icon. There are bumps: originally shot as a 90-minute special, “Encounter” had to be padded a bit (ergo the ship separation scene) to make it two hours. —Tom Keogh
