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   rec.arts.startrek.misc      General discussions of Star Trek      11,202 messages   

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   Message 10,927 of 11,202   
   The Doctor to All   
   Ai/LLM reviews of STNG - Imaginary frien   
   24 Sep 25 15:30:24   
   
   XPost: rec.arts.startrek.fandom, rec.arts.sf.tv, rec.arts.tv   
   XPost: can.arts.sf   
   From: doctor@doctor.nl2k.ab.ca   
      
   AI/LLM Reviews of Star Trek The Next Generation - Imaginary Friend   
      
   Google Gemini   
      
   Plot Synopsis   
   The Enterprise welcomes Clara Sutter, a young girl whose father has just   
   joined the crew. Clara is a shy and solitary child who spends all her time   
   with her "imaginary friend," a being she calls Isabella. Concerned about her   
   social development, the crew,    
   particularly Deanna Troi, tries to help Clara integrate with the other   
   children on the ship. However, they soon discover that Isabella is not   
   imaginary at all but is a non-corporeal energy being from a nearby nebula.   
      
   Isabella's presence on the ship is initially harmless, but she quickly begins   
   to manifest strange and dangerous behaviors. Unfamiliar with human concepts   
   like boundaries and privacy, she mimics Clara's emotions and actions, causing   
   everything from minor    
   pranks to near-catastrophic events, like draining the ship's energy and almost   
   causing a warp core breach. The crew must find a way to return Isabella to her   
   home nebula without harming Clara, who has come to depend on her. The episode   
   culminates with    
   Clara saying a difficult but necessary goodbye to her friend, having learned   
   the importance of making real connections with others.   
      
   Strengths   
   Child's Perspective: The episode successfully explores the theme of loneliness   
   from a child's point of view. Clara's feelings are relatable and   
   well-portrayed, making her journey of self-discovery a central and moving   
   element of the story.   
      
   Deanna Troi's Role: This is a strong episode for Deanna, highlighting her   
   skills as a counselor. She is empathetic and patient with Clara, demonstrating   
   her ability to connect on a deeply emotional level.   
      
   Heartwarming Resolution: The final scene, where Clara tearfully says goodbye   
   to Isabella and then reaches out to another child, is a touching and earned   
   emotional moment. It provides a satisfying and hopeful conclusion to her arc.   
      
   Weaknesses   
   Predictable Trope: The central premise of the imaginary friend being a real   
   entity is a well-worn trope in sci-fi and lacks originality. The audience can   
   likely guess the twist early on.   
      
   Abrupt Shift in Tone: The episode begins as a gentle, character-driven story   
   about childhood loneliness and abruptly shifts into a life-threatening,   
   "A-plot" crisis when Isabella becomes dangerous. This change in tone can feel   
   a bit jarring.   
      
   Underdeveloped Alien: Isabella's character remains somewhat vague. Her   
   motivations for her increasingly dangerous actions are not fully explained   
   beyond a general lack of understanding, which makes her feel more like a plot   
   device than a fully realized    
   character.   
      
   Overall Impression   
   "Imaginary Friend" is a sweet and emotionally resonant episode that succeeds   
   on the strength of its character moments, particularly the bond between Clara   
   and Deanna Troi. While the central sci-fi premise is a bit generic and the   
   pacing can be uneven,    
   the episode's focus on friendship and the difficult journey of growing up   
   makes it a memorable and affecting watch. It may not be a series classic, but   
   it's a solid, character-driven story.   
      
   Rating: 6.0/10   
      
   ChatGPT   
      
   Here’s my review of **“Imaginary Friend”** (TNG Season 5, Episode 22),   
   including what succeeds, what falters, and my rating out of 10.   
      
   ---   
      
   ## Summary / What Happens   
      
   * Clara Sutter, a young girl who has recently come aboard the Enterprise with   
   her father, has an imaginary friend named **Isabella**. Counselor Troi   
   initially treats this as a normal coping mechanism. ([Memory Alpha][1])   
   * As the ship explores a nebula, an energy-being infiltrates the ship and   
   merges (or takes the form of) Isabella. The entity leads Clara into off-limits   
   areas, sometimes causing disturbances (e.g. in Engineering), all while the   
   ship experiences    
   unexplained drag and energy anomalies. ([TV Tropes][2])   
   * The creature eventually reveals itself: it is an energy-based lifeform from   
   the nebula that judged humanity harshly—especially regarding how adults   
   treat children. It threatens the ship and wants the crew to recognize their   
   “cruelty” toward Clara.   
    ([Wikipedia][3])   
   * Picard negotiates with the being: he argues that rules and protections exist   
   for the right reasons (especially in the eyes of children), that what seems   
   unfair to a child is often limitation for safety. He persuades Isabella not to   
   destroy the ship,    
   and sends energy to the nebula so the being can “survive.” In the end,   
   Isabella apologizes to Clara and departs peacefully. ([Wikipedia][3])   
      
   ---   
      
   ## What Works Well   
      
   1. **Strong Premise / Child’s Perspective**   
      The idea of an imaginary friend made “real” by an alien energy   
   being—blurring fantasy and reality—is compelling. The episode uses   
   Clara’s viewpoint to frame how rules appear unjust to children, which gives   
   emotional resonance. Jammer’s    
   Reviews notes the show treats the child’s perspective with respect (though   
   with a grain of caution). ([Jammer's Reviews][4])   
      
   2. **Creepy / Tense Atmosphere**   
      The shift from playful imaginary friend to potentially threatening presence   
   is handled with tension. Isabella’s transformations from benign to ominous   
   help give the episode suspense. The nebulous “drag on the ship” mystery   
   ties in nicely as a    
   sci-fi underpinning. ([TrekToday][5])   
      
   3. **Performance of the Child Actors**   
      Reviews mention that Clara’s actress performs credibly (especially given   
   her youth), and the actress playing Isabella is often singled out as doing a   
   good job in her eerie delivery. Doux Reviews says: “the child was   
   effectively creepy as Isabella    
    an amazing thing for a kid to pull off.” ([Doux Reviews][6])   
      
   4. **Moral / Philosophical Themes**   
      The conflict—how adults impose rules on children, how children see   
   limits, how “protection” can look like control—is meaningful. Picard’s   
   dialogue about rules, protection, and human parenting helps ground the sci-fi   
   threat in relational    
   ethics. ([TrekToday][5])   
      
   ---   
      
   ## Weaknesses / Criticisms   
      
   1. **Predictability & Familiar Structure**   
      As Trek fans might expect, the “alien causing ship trouble via hidden   
   presence → negotiation → peaceful resolution” arc is not especially   
   surprising. Some of the beats (e.g. hidden creature, manifesting, threatening,   
   Picard talking it out)    
   feel formulaic. ([Thoughts From the Mountain Top][7])   
      
   2. **Thin Character Depth Beyond the Core**   
      Many adult characters (besides Picard, Troi) have limited roles. The   
   emotional focus is strongly on Clara / Isabella, which is fine, but the rest   
   of the crew are mostly functional. Some critics note that the resolution—why   
   Isabella surrenders—   
   relies heavily on Picard’s moral appeal rather than a more deeply earned   
   change. ([Thoughts From the Mountain Top][7])   
      
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
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