Stardate: 41263.1
The
U.S.S Enterprise beams over two propulsion experts from the starship Fearless:
Kosinski (Stanley Kamel) and his assistant from Tau Alpha C, the Traveler (Eric
Menyuk).
These
visitors have been assigned the task of testing different intermix formulas and
different ways of entering warp speed.
The
only problem is that Chief Engineer Argyle (Biff Yeager) and Commander Riker
(Jonathan Frakes) have suspicions about Kosinki’s methods and results. His equations
and explanations appear to be nonsense.
On
the first warp speed test, however, the Enterprise surpasses warp ten and travels
through two galaxies; some two million light years in all. Unfortunately, it
would take over 300 years to get home after this “phenomenal surge of power.”
On
an attempt to get back under Kosinski’s stewardship, the Enterprise travels
even further, to a mysterious “place that
is uncharted and unknown” where the “world
of the physical universe and ideas are intermixed.”
Only
Acting Ensign Wesley Crusher (Wil Wheaton) realizes the truth, that the alien
assistant, the Traveler, has been manipulating time and energy to make these
great leaps in velocity. The Traveler did not intend to strand the Enterprise,
and must attempt to bring them all home safely. Unfortunately, he is very weak, and may not
survive the journey.
The
Traveler also reveals to Captain Picard (Patrick Stewart) that gifted
individuals such as Wesley are the reason that he travels the galaxy. He
compares Wesley to Mozart, only in the “intricacies
of time, energy and propulsion,” not music.
“Where
No One Has Gone Before,” by Diane Duane, and Michael Reaves may just qualify as
Star
Trek: The Next Generation’s (1987 – 1994) first (mostly) good episode.
The
story is certainly classic Star Trek in nature: one of pushing
boundaries, exploring the final frontier, and mankind learning something new
about himself and the nature of existence.
In
the final case, that knowledge is, as Wesley notes in Main Engineering that “space and time and thought aren’t the
separate things that they appear to be.”
Although
one might wish that it were an adult, fully-trained and highly-capable Starfleet
officer making this important recognition, at least there is an explanation in
this episode for Wesley’s precocious and genius nature.
He’s
a Mozart of Engineering, basically. He’s gifted and talented.
If
that is indeed the case, as the Traveler suggests, than there is no place Wesley
belongs more than the starship Enterprise, the flagship of the Federation and a
vehicle for galactic exploration.
On
the one hand, this idea of being “gifted” makes Wesley’s expertise (in stories
such as “The Naked Now”) easier to accept.
On the other hand, Star
Trek works best when it is not about superheroes, but normal human
beings facing difficult challenges. On Star Trek: The Next Generation, we
have a blind man with superior vision, a psychologist who can read emotional
states of others, a super-human android, and now a genius “Mozart.” character.
Much
of the episode’s drama arises from the Enterprise’s predicament at the end of
the universe, trapped in a realm where thoughts manifest as reality. Some of
the episode’s best moments arise from this situation. Worf remembers his pet
Targ with affection. Tasha relives a frightening moment on her failed colony,
and Picard nearly steps off a turbo lift into infinity.
All these little moments add, in quick visual ways, to our understanding of the series' main characters. We see Worf smile at the sight of a childhood pet, allowing us to understand he is not just a dour, humorless alien.
And though Tasha talks about her upbringing and the "rape gangs" in other stories, this episode shows us a visualization of what that dreadful life looks like.
My
favorite scene, however, is the one in which Picard encounters his
long-deceased mother, and she asks him about their location in space. Is this the end of the universe, or is it
the beginning of it?
The
scene with Picard’s mother succeeds on multiple levels.
First, we have Picard’s
surprise to see his mother, and the tenderness he feels for during the
encounter, which could not occur in normal space.
Secondly, we also have the
mother’s love for her son, and her apparent (deeper) knowledge of his current
predicament.
Patrick Stewart is
particularly strong in this scene, having many emotions to portray in a short
amount of time, from suspicion and sadness, to joy and regret. The most powerful
moment occurs when Picard is contacted/distracted by Riker, and Picard realizes his mother
(and her answers) are once more out of reach, forever, despite her comment that
they are always with one another.
The
Traveler returns in future episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation,
including “Remember Me” in the fourth season, though here he appears to be
dying from his travels. In his first tale, the Traveler has some wonderfully “Trekkian” moments in
“Where No One Has Gone Before” that make the character memorable.
For instance,
he notes that he travels because of curiosity (a trait he shares with humans), and
he even shows compassion for Kosinski, in the climax.
Kosinski
is a self-important loud-mouth, and yet, we sense, someone also deeply insecure
about himself and his abilities. In that climactic moment, the Travelers says
that he “needs” Kosinski’s help, and it is a moment of mercy and humanity which
suggests that all of us, even the most flawed, need respect, love and a feeling
of belonging.
Despite
all the strong character moments and fascinating plotting, this episode lapses
into some cheesiness at points. At one point, Captain Picard gets on the
intercom and tells his crew to think good thoughts for the Traveler. This edict
then requires Counselor Troi to comment on the surfeit of good feeling she is experiencing.
It’s all very sweet, but a bit schmaltzy too.
Finally,
it’s another round of musical chairs with Enterprise chief engineers this week.
In “Where No One Has Gone Before” we meet Biff Yeager’s Argyle, a character who
would return in “Datalore,” as our replacement for McDougal (“The Naked Now.”)
Intriguingly,
some of Riker’s dialogue in this episode suggests that many of the chief
engineer’s duties have been folded into the role of executive or first officer.
This shift in duties may account for the fact that the ship seems to have almost a half-dozen chief engineers or so (McDougal, Argyle, Logan, Leland T. Lynch), at least until
Geordi assumes the role on a permanent basis in season two.
Next
week: “Lonely Among Us.”
John,
ReplyDeleteI remember this episode as being very good as well. I also remember the backlash against Wesley Crusher, and how some felt that the series was trying to prop Wesley up as a sort of undeserved child prodigy. I think I've already mentioned that I never "got" that resentment. I never understood where it came from. Clearly, The Next Generation was trying to strike a chord with younger viewers by giving them a character with whom they could identify. This could be you! Intelligent enough to serve on the starship Enterprise! Was it jealousy that drove this overbearing angst? I never got caught up in it. However, the Traveler creeped me out a little. Everyone was talking about Wesley, but I was trying to figure out why this guy showed up to work wearing his pajamas. One of the great unsolved mysteries of the Universe, I think.
Steve