Star Trek 257: Second Chances

257. Second Chances

FORMULA: The Enemy Within + Tapestry

WHY WE LIKE IT: The bold ending.

WHY WE DON'T: Riker just can't help breaking Deanna's heart.

REVIEW: Riker meeting his transporter clone... Let's see, a chance to pull off some deft effects, and obviously, he has to die at the end to maintain the status quo, or perhaps we'll let the audience believe that "our" Riker is the one that died, but then, classic reset button, blablabla. Right? Wrong! The effects are, indeed, wonderful, but the story doesn't actually go where you think it will.

Second Chances manages to do for Riker what Tapestry did for Picard. It speculates on what would happen if your younger self met your present self and found it lacking. Lt. Riker basically spent 8 years in story stasis, so he has remained a risk-taker, ambitious and quite in love with Troi. Commander Riker, on the other hand, has grown comfortable, has refused a couple commands to stay aboard the flagship, and is "just friends" with Troi (despite some somewhat romantic interludes that we must've simply mischaracterized in the past two seasons). Neither likes what he sees in the other. I would probably feel the same. ("Loser." "Jerk.")

Jonathan Frakes does a good job of portraying two Rikers, the same yet different, but it's Marina Sirtis who really sells it for me. This has got to be one of her best episodes. Her reactions seem very real and effective, and we learn a great deal more about how their relationship ended. I also don't think she's ever looked prettier, the fairer hair possibly matching the blue uniform better than the jet black. The opening sequence has her looking a lot more like Marina Sirtis, and I don't think that's a bad look for her. At all.
It's one excellent scene after another (the romantic treasure hunt, the dead-on poker scene, the mention of Riker's father), but when you think it all has to end on a rickety bridge (of course), it doesn't. I can't commend the creators enough for allowing Lt. Riker to live. It's too bad Troi never gives him a second thought (though the romance ends believably, as in Lessons), but it's a bold subversion of audience expectations and the right thing to do. (He'll return in DS9.) Oh, and surprise cameo: Astronaut Mae Jamison as the transporter chief!

LESSON: The road not taken can make all the difference.

REWATCHABILITY - High: I didn't expect it to be this good. Effects, acting and plot all converge to make this one of the surprises of the season.

Comments

De said…
This was certainly one of the highlights of Season 6. Unfortunately, what should have had some significant ramifications for Riker (and Troi to a lesser extent) never materialized on the series (DS9 is another matter entirely).

Oddly enough, Tom Riker appearances in the Expanded Universe between this episode and his next appearance have been fairly rare.
Siskoid said…
Yes, TNG did a lot of that: Introduce a character or concept that should have a major impact, and then ignore it for the rest of the series.

I very often finish an episode and say "and they were never seen again" to much chuckling in the household.
snell said…
I suppose my big complaint about this episode is on a tech geekery level. Since the transporter was able to "create" two Rikers from one pattern (and have them be whole, unlike the transporter clones in The Enemy Within), doesn't this open an unbelievable can of worms, morally, philosophically, legally?

We now know that the transporter can make multiple copies from one pattern (supposedly with whatever matter it finds laying around, I guess...) What's to stop someone from whipping off 100 transporter clones of himself? Or of someone he feels is sufficiently important to the world? Would such a use be made illegal in the Federation? What rights would such clones have?

I know the transporter was just the McGuffin to setr up the "Riker past/present" story, but it's use here is such a huge leap from anything we've really seen before, it seems a shame that none of these issues got the slightest bit of lip service, or even a mention again in the future...
Siskoid said…
It's not quite unprecedented, since the transporter created a second Kirk as early The Enemy Within, but the transporter...

I'm actually more concerned with the times it's been used to "reboot" a person's biology (Unnatural Selection, Rascals). Basically, those episodes tell us that the transporter could make you immortal!

It's totally a MacGuffin, and we just have to believe that the accident that created Riker's transporter clone cannot be reproduced.