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   rec.arts.sf.tv      Discussing general television SF      136,466 messages   

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   Message 135,343 of 136,466   
   The Doctor to All   
   AI Reviews of STNG - Schisms (1/2)   
   07 Oct 25 14:46:35   
   
   XPost: rec.arts.startrek.misc, rec.arts.startrek.fandom, rec.arts.tv   
   XPost: can.arts.sf   
   From: doctor@doctor.nl2k.ab.ca   
      
   AI / LLM reviews of Star Trek The Next Generation - Schisms   
      
   Google Gemini   
      
   The crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise begins to suffer   
   from inexplicable, fragmented memory loss and vivid   
   nightmares, all centered around a bizarre, repeating   
   metallic clanking sound. Commander Riker is the most   
   affected, experiencing disturbing visions of a surgical   
   table and strange alien figures. Dr. Crusher identifies   
   a correlating physical symptom—an allergic reaction   
   resembling an itch—shared by the affected crew members.   
      
   After the crew compares their fragmented memories   
   in the holodeck, they realize they are being   
   systematically abducted in their sleep by an unknown,   
   non-corporeal species. These aliens are transporting   
   the crew to a dimensional pocket of "non-space" where   
   they are performing experimental, intrusive procedures.   
      
   Using a recovered fragment of Riker's memory, the crew   
   sets a trap, luring the aliens back to the Enterprise.   
   The ship then uses a modified probe to enter   
   the aliens' dimension. A tense standoff ensues,   
   culminating in the Enterprise successfully reversing   
    the aliens' transporter signatures and escaping   
    their strange, unsettling operating room, leaving   
    the abductors stranded in their own space.   
      
   Strengths   
   Atmosphere and Suspense: "Schisms" successfully   
   creates a chilling, almost horror-movie atmosphere.   
   The mystery of the fragmented memories and the shared   
   sense of violation build genuine dread. The sequence   
   where the crew pieces together the puzzle in the holodeck,   
   realizing they are victims of alien abduction,   
   is brilliant and unsettling.   
      
   The Power of Sound Design: The repeated,   
   eerie "clank-clank" sound of the aliens' machinery   
   is one of the most effective sound cues in TNG.   
   It is simple, auditory horror that immediately signals   
   something is deeply wrong and helps ground the crew's   
   shared trauma.   
      
   Riker's Focus: Jonathan Frakes delivers   
   a strong performance, grounding the psychological terror   
   in Riker's distress and determination to understand what   
   is happening to him and his crewmates.   
      
   Weaknesses   
   Anticlimactic Explanation: The ultimate reveal   
   of the aliens' purpose—that they were experimenting   
   on the crew to find a better, more stable form of light   
   for their procedures—is often criticized as being weak.   
   The motivation doesn't fully justify the high   
   psychological horror stakes established   
   throughout the episode.   
      
   Sci-Fi Gimmickry: The introduction of "non-space"   
   and the "Soliton Wave" technology is a highly technical, Trek-specific   
   solution that requires a lot of rapid exposition, making the climax less about   
   human drama and more about scientific maneuvering.   
      
   Overall Impression   
   "Schisms" is an excellent example of TNG venturing into psychological thriller   
   territory. It masterfully uses confusion, shared trauma, and unsettling   
   soundscapes to create a disturbing and memorable viewing experience. While the   
   conclusion is    
   technically complex and the aliens' motivation feels a bit shallow compared to   
   the terror they inflict, the journey remains gripping. It's a great choice for   
   fans who enjoy episodes that are more atmospheric and creepy than   
   philosophical.   
      
   Rating: 8/10   
      
   That was a deep dive into an episode that really stands out visually and   
   aurally!   
      
   ChatGPt   
      
   Here’s my review of *Star Trek: The Next Generation* — **“Schisms”**   
   (Season 6, Episode 5), using the information from the transcript and   
   critical/fan commentary, with a rating out of 10.   
      
   ---   
      
   ## What the Episode Does / Plot Summary   
      
   * Strange things begin happening aboard the Enterprise: several crew members   
   (Riker, Geordi, Worf, and others) experience mysterious missing time,   
   insomnia, unexplained physical symptoms, or feeling that something is not   
   right. ([jammersreviews.com][1])   
   * The clues build slowly: Riker falls asleep, Geordi feels pain, Worf freaks   
   out around scissors, etc. Crew start trying to piece things together.   
   ([jammersreviews.com][1])   
   * Eventually they realize that aliens from another dimension (or phase) are   
   abducting crew members during those missing times, performing experiments   
   (including surgical procedures) while the crew are unaware. ([ja   
   mersreviews.com][1])   
   * There’s a holodeck recreation sequence: some of the affected crew use the   
   holodeck to reconstruct their partial memories (foggy, fragmentary) of where   
   they were taken. This is creepy and disorienting. ([jammersreviews.com][1])   
   * In the finale, Riker stays awake and tricks the aliens somewhat, manages to   
   rescue at least one victim, and they close the rift / subspace gap through   
   which the aliens were abducting people. But the episode ends with some   
   ambiguity: we still don’t    
   fully know the aliens’ motivations; a brief energy pulse at the end suggests   
   something may remain unresolved. ([Wikipedia][2])   
      
   ---   
      
   ## What Works Very Well   
      
   1. **Atmosphere & Suspense**   
      The episode builds dread gradually. What starts with mundane annoyances   
   (poor sleep, odd pains) escalates into something genuinely creepy. Many fans   
   say “Schisms” is one of the scariest TNG episodes. ([IMDb][3])   
      
   2. **Mystery Structure**   
      The slow reveal works: little hints, mismatched memories, unexplained   
   symptoms, leading to the realization of something wrong. It’s more effective   
   by making the viewer feel the unease along with the characters.    
   [jammersreviews.com][1])   
      
   3. **Holodeck Reconstruction Scene**   
      This is widely praised. Reconstructing their experiences in the holodeck is   
   visual, eerie, emotionally unsettling. It’s memorable and tense.   
   ([jammersreviews.com][1])   
      
   4. **Unresolved Ambiguity**   
      The fact that the motivations of the aliens aren’t fully explained, and   
   the threat is partly removed but not completely squared away, adds to the   
   lingering feeling. For many viewers that uncertainty heightens the impact.   
   ([jammersreviews.com][1])   
      
   ---   
      
   ## Where It Falters / Weaknesses   
      
   1. **Pacing / Slow Build**   
      Several reviewers note that the first half drags — the episode spends a   
   lot of time building up the weirdness before moving into more overt horror /   
   confrontation. Some find the lead-in segments (insomnia, poetry reading, etc.)   
   slow. ([   
   jammersreviews.com][1])   
      
   2. **Technobabble & Plot Stretch**   
      The explanation of how the crew are abducted, how the subspace rift works,   
   etc., relies on a lot of technical jargon. Some of the science is vague or   
   feels like it’s there to justify the plot rather than being integral.   
   ([jammersreviews.com][1])   
      
   3. **Alien Threat Under-Developed**   
      While creepy, the alien antagonists are not deeply characterized. We never   
   get a strong sense of why they’re doing what they’re doing beyond   
   “experiments.” No dialogue, motive, or consequences beyond the immediate   
   rescue. Some fans feel this    
   reduces the emotional or thematic depth. ([cameronmoviesandtv][4])   
      
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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