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Transfigurations
June 20 - Retro Review: Disaster
Troi must take command of the ship while Picard struggles to work with three children and Worf delivers Keiko's baby.

June 6 - Retro Review: Silicon Avatar
A scientist pursuing the Crystalline Entity discovers that Data's brain holds her son's memories.

May 30 - Retro Review: Ensign Ro
A court-martialed Starfleet officer from occupied Bajor is sent to help locate a terrorist leader.

May 23 - Retro Review: Darmok
Picard is exiled with the leader of an alien race who speaks in incomprehensible metaphors.

May 15 - Retro Review: Redemption, Part Two
Picard discovers that Tasha Yar's Romulan daughter is influencing the Klingon civil war.

May 9 - Retro Review: Redemption, Part One
When Picard is asked as Arbiter of Succession to oversee Gowron's installation, Worf resigns from Starfleet to fight against the Duras family.

May 2 - Retro Review: In Theory
Data creates a romantic subroutine to experiment with love.

Apr 24 - Retro Review: The Mind's Eye
LaForge is kidnapped and altered by Romulans to take part in an assassination plot against a Klingon governor.

Apr 17 - Retro Review: The Host
Crusher falls in love with a Trill, only to discover that his real personality exists in a small symbiont living inside his body.

Apr 11 - Retro Review: Half a Life
A visiting scientist falls in love with Lwaxana Troi, then reveals that he is expected to commit ritual suicide.

Mar 28 - Retro Review: The Drumhead
A famous Starfleet admiral leads a hunt for a traitor aboard the Enterprise.

Mar 20 - Retro Review: Qpid
In the middle of an archaeology conference, Q turns Picard and crew into Robin Hood and his merry men.

Mar 13 - Retro Review: The Nth Degree
After an encounter with an alien probe, Lieutenant Barclay develops super-human intelligence.

Mar 6 - Retro Review: Identity Crisis
LaForge learns that every officer on an away mission to Tarchannen Three years earlier has begun to transform.

Feb 28 - Retro Review: Night Terrors
The crew is trapped in a rift in space where lack of dreams causes psychosis.

 
By Michelle Erica Green
Posted at October 10, 2008 - 10:07 PM GMT

See Also: 'Transfigurations' Episode Guide

Plot Summary: While on a survey mission, an away team led by Riker finds a dying humanoid in a damaged escape pod. Crusher connects his nervous system to LaForge's to stabilize him for transport to the ship, where the patient proves to have remarkable powers of recuperation. However, the patient she dubs "John Doe" has no memory of who he is, nor of how his ship - which appears to have been in a battle - ended up on the planet. During the month in which he recuperates, LaForge experiences a newfound sense of confidence and well-being. Meanwhile, Data and the bridge crew are able to trace the path of the escape pod, but John believes that he was escaping his home planet and does not wish to return. He has panic attacks accompanied by surges of radiation in his body. When O'Brien comes into sickbay with an injured shoulder, John is able to heal it with a touch and a surge of the same radiation. But his cells are mutating, and a Zalkonian ship intercepts the Enterprise to tell them that the stranger is a dangerous prisoner who has been sentenced to death. John cannot remember whether this is the case, but he fears that he is a danger to the crew and tries to escape. He accidentally breaks Worf's neck in the process, but is able to heal the Klingon, too, with just a touch. When Picard refuses to turn the stranger over to the Zalkonians, the entire crew is rendered immobile. John goes to the bridge, from which he heals the crew, then announces that he remembers why he fled: his species is on the verge of an evolutionary development beyond the need for their current bodies, and his advanced development was perceived as a threat to the leaders. Before the eyes of the Enterprise officers and the Zalkonian leader, John transforms into an energy being and departs into space to tell his people of their coming evolution.


Analysis: "Transfigurations" poses interesting questions, wondering what it might be like when and if humans reach a point where our physical bodies are no longer necessary...what if we become like Organians, able to manipulate time and space with our thoughts? Yet in its execution, the storyline drags and ultimately throws away its potential for greatness. Because "John Doe" doesn't remember who he is or where he comes from, we witness his fear at his coming transformation as superficial panic at glowing uncontrollably. He doesn't experience the awesome dread of a physical change that must seem tantamount to annihilation - of course such a development would be scary, not only to backward world leaders with a political agenda, but to anyone experiencing that sort of evolution. But sadly, we don't get to hear from John Doe what it's like to face the loss of self inherent in such an experience, because he's busy dealing with a more mundane loss of self via the soap opera cliche of amnesia.

Really, at the core, this episode is pure daytime drama. It begins with LaForge's romantic woes, enlivened by Worf's attempts to coach him in Klingon dating technique - by far the most entertaining aspect of the story. Then LaForge comes in mental contact with John Doe via a mechanically-created Vulcan mind meld (and how come Beverly couldn't try that brain connection when Sarek was aboard?). Suddenly LaForge is having a month-long hot affair, while Riker wonders when Geordi started getting lucky with the girls and Worf boasts that his teaching must be responsible. Meanwhile, Crusher has a somewhat icky conversation with her son about her potential romantic involvement with John Doe, even though Beverly knows full well that the doctor-patient relationship creates a sense of intimacy that makes a sexual bond inadvisable...ugh, why is she sharing these musings with her son rather than with the ship's counselor, and why is Wesley so eager to hear all the details? I'd much rather see him demonstrating his newfound maturity on the bridge than hearing about his mom's lustful longings.

In the midst of all this personal drama, it's no surprise when John Doe - despite having lost his memory - starts having Bad Feelings about his planet of origin and then starts performing miracles. He's a Jesus in training! They want to crucify him back home, but he can't repress his compulsion to do good, even if he's still making clumsy mistakes like killing Worf before bringing the Klingon back from the dead. There's the germ of a really terrific drama here, a man discovering that he's becoming something greater than his parents and friends and everyone he's ever known, which should be the most awesome and terrifying thing imaginable. I'm reminded of a Richard Bach quote, "What the caterpillar calls the end of the world, the master calls a butterfly." But John has no idea the end of the world is coming because he can't even remember his real name. When he finally discovers it, he's already thinking like a super-being, not worrying about things like "Will I still be able to eat chocolate?" and "Do energy beings have sex?" In an episode where we're subjected to Beverly and Geordi's libidinal musings, that's a more honest question than "Is evolution ultimately a function of cellular development or vice versa?"

So it's hard to care very much about the crammed-into-the-final-minutes encounter with the Zalkonians, who exhibit signs of being a bigoted and backward species in need of a good talking-to about seeing out new life by Captain Kirk. Then they demonstrate their awesome paralysis power on the entire crew, but what use are their puny thundershock attacks when Caterpie evolves into a Butterfree! Sorry about the Pokemon reference, but it really is that simplistic, and so hurried that I couldn't figure out why so much time had been wasted on Crusher's romantic longings and LaForge's newfound confidence, for which John Doe refuses to take credit. I almost long for the esoteric sensibility of Next Gen's first season, when it was trying to hard to be about the wonder of it all.


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Find more episode info in the Episode Guide.


Michelle Erica Green is a former news writer for TrekToday. An archive of her reviews can be found at The Little Review.

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