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Star Trek - The Next Generation, Episode 50: Evolution [VHS]
 
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Star Trek - The Next Generation, Episode 50: Evolution [VHS] (1987)

LeVar Burton , Gates McFadden , LeVar Burton , Gates McFadden  |  NR |  VHS Tape
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Product Details

  • Actors: LeVar Burton, Gates McFadden
  • Directors: LeVar Burton, Gates McFadden, Gabrielle Beaumont, Robert Becker, Cliff Bole
  • Format: Closed-captioned, Color, HiFi Sound, NTSC
  • Language: English, French
  • Rated: NR (Not Rated)
  • Number of tapes: 1
  • Studio: Paramount
  • VHS Release Date: May 31, 1995
  • Run Time: 46 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: 6303359140
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #422,372 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

A particularly pompous scientist (Ken Jenkins) is aboard the Enterprise to view a once-in-a-lifetime event: the explosion of a star. But even as he's preparing to complete what has been his life's work, the ship's computers begin to go glitch-crazy. More problematic, the computer itself records no instance of failure or malfunction. The problem, as it turns out, is that Wesley Crusher (Wil Wheaton) has been conducting a school experiment involving microscopic robots called nanites. Two nanites have escaped into the computer--and have evolved in a way that allows them to reproduce and run amok in the computer system, threatening not only the scientific mission but the safety of the Enterprise itself.

It's an intriguing episode, one that uses its plot to debate the nature of life as it applies to sentient mechanical beings. In this case, not only are the nanites capable of reproducing but also learning and evolving; when the scientist suggests killing all the nanites to save his project, the nanites themselves gang up and retaliate. On the other hand, the whole episode keeps building to moments of tension and suspense that simply fade away, rather than reaching cathartic release. And a subplot, involving Crusher's mother Beverly (Gates McFadden) and her mother-hen impulses toward her growing son, reveals yet again how stiff an actress she is and why she wasn't missed during her absence for the second season. --Marshall Fine

From the Back Cover

Dr. Paul Stubbs (Ken Jenkins), an eminent scientist, has beamed aboard the Enterpriseto study the rare explosion of a star in the Kavis Alpha Sector. As the crew readies Stubbs' equipment, the Enterprise is suddenly drawn into the path of the stellar matter. The ship is restored to normal, but the computer system, which reports no malfunction, fails to stabilize.

As Picard (Patrick Stewart) warns Stubbs that his study may have to be aborted, Wesley (Wil Wheaton) concludes that a genetics experiment he was conducting engendered the computer breakdown. Wesley's experiment allowed several nanites-tiny robots small enough to enter living cells-to interact and escape to the main computer. Unless the nanites are stopped, they will shut down the Enterprise and destroy the crew's life-support system.


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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars how to create life without hardly trying, January 28, 2004
This review is from: Star Trek - The Next Generation, Episode 50: Evolution [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden) is back for the beginning of the 3rd season, replacing Dr. Kate Polaski. The story was that she was at Starfleet Medical for the year, but in reality, Gates McFadden was pregnant and had been filmed from the chest up at the last of the 1st season as it was. Wesley is working himself cockeyed - when he's not working on the bridge of the Enterprise, he's studying astro physics, temporal mechanics and other Stephen Hawkings-esque subjects to prepare for his entrance exam to enter Starfleet.

Working with nanites (microscopic robots) on his own experiment, he has to help a Starfleet Scientist, Dr. Paul Stubbs (Ken Jenkins), with an experiment of his own. Stubbs has made it his life's work to study a rare phenomenon with a Neutrino star that only occurs once every 196 years. A lot of progress with sensors and measuring instruments in the previous 2 centuries gives Stubbs the opportunity to become the Carl Sagan of his own 24th Century generation.

The Enterprise is at Stubb's disposal to assist him with the project. As they move closer to observe the stellar matter between a nearby planet and the pulsating sun, the Enterprise starts going ape. Suddenly they find themselves hurtling toward a giant star that will turn them all into futuristic pork rinds and nothing is working. No shields, no tractor beams, no sensors and their controls do not even respond. Suddenly, the Enterprise behaves normally and when Picard asks, "Computer! Identify malfunction immediately!", the computer (Majel Barret-Roddenberry) replies, "there has been no malfunction."

Well this is just dandy! The only thing keeping these star-faring astronauts from death is the Enterprise, and they don't seem to be in control of her anymore. All sorts of tests are run to no avail. Wesley returns to his quarters to resume his experiments with his nanites and when he looks in the container he kept them in, he finds that they are missing.

Can the 2 missing microscopic robots have anything to do with a systems-wide failure on the flagship of the Federation. Reluctantly, Wesley informs the senior staff and it turns out that these 2 little metalic stinkers have been harvesting tiny parts of the ship to make more of themselves - and collectively have become self-aware, sentient and able to control the Enterprise.

Stubbs cannot believe what is going on. He at first laughs in the face of their first scary speed bump, but when the nanites threaten to ruin his shot at studying the rarely seen phenomenon, he goes lulu, with more concern for his life's work than for the over 1,000 souls aboard the Enterprise. In a desparate act to halt the nanites, he uses a phaser to destroy millions of them and they don't take it lightly.

An interesting show with mind provoking subject matter for the armchair philosopher.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wesley Crusher creates life in his spare time, November 3, 2000
This review is from: Star Trek - The Next Generation, Episode 50: Evolution [VHS] (VHS Tape)
For the first show of the third season (you thought these were in the correct order?), Beverly Crusher is back as Chief Medical Officer, the Starfleet uniforms now look a whole lot better, and yet another eminent scientist causes trouble on the Enterprise. Dr. Paul Stubbs is going to study a rare phenomenon that happens only once every 197 years, as matter builds up on the surface of a star before exploding. But as the time comes to do this once in an every third lifetime experiment, the Enterprise's computer systems mysterious start to fail and Stubbs is coming apart at the seams at the idea that the mission may be scrubbed. However, it is not fate that is conspiring against the good doctor but Wesley Crusher. As part of a genetics experiment the ship's resident boy genius was working on Nanites, microscopic machines designed to make repairs on the cells of living tissues. Wesley upgraded the Nanites, teaching them to work together, to reproduce and to otherwise evolve. When two of his new and improve Nanites escaped, the result was that the computer core eventually was invaded by thousands of Nanites where they are happy and content, eating the memory chips. Ultimately they threaten not only Stubbs' experiment, but also the Enterprise's life-support systems. No one promised fair, but Stubbs is ready to go off the deep end on this one.

This is another one of those Next Generation episodes that focuses on the issue of sentience. We have dealt with Androids ("The Measure of a Man," Episode 35), holographic characters ("Elementary, My Dear Data," Episode 29), and crystals ("Home Soil," Episode 17), so now we deal with "living machines." Dr. Stubbs wants to exterminate the Nanites and proceed with his experiment. Of course, Captain Picard refuses to destroy out of hand what may well be a new species just because they are eating his computer. They might be small and a new life form, but Picard always likes to look at the big picture. Perhaps one of the biggest ironies of the Star Trek universe is that it is a Starfleet captain, the Federation's "military" wing if you will, who is the voice of conscience and reason. When I watched "Evolution" again I knew it was an above average episode but I was surprised at how strong it was, mainly because it really does not have any major weaknesses. I ended up giving it 5 stars because I liked Dr. Stubbs' mental relaxation technique of playing a baseball game in his mind, foreshadowing one of the more interesting character traits of future DS9 Captain Benjamin Sisko.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Wesley: By Star Trek, September 17, 2006
This review is from: Star Trek - The Next Generation, Episode 50: Evolution [VHS] (VHS Tape)
This is as a opposed to Frankenstein: By Mary Shelley. Plot: Dr. Stubbs (who was a prodigy and is obsessed with his experiment) is launching a special ship called "The Egg" that will be launched into a star just before it goes "BOOM". Meanwhile, Wesley is experimenting with nanites, microbe-sized robots that can enter living cells (later, in "The Best of Both Worlds Part 2", Data and Dr. Crusher suggest using this guys to knock out the Borg, but it would take to long to "breed" them, so they didn't) and a couple escape. To make things worse, they're in the computer core, eating the little computer chips to their delight (which for some reason leads them to "evolve", hence the episode's title) which causes the ship to go haywire. Well, now the decision is either to try and reason with these little pests or simply exterminate them. Dr. Stubbs is for the latter, so that his experiment can continue uninterrupted. Picard would rather try and communicate with the nanites and hopefully solve it diplomatically.

I much prefer this episode over "The Quality of Life", because the reasoning is far better. For one thing, the Enterprise always has the option of wiping out the nanites at any point, but they don't. Another thing is that someone isn't putting someone else at extreme risk of getting killed (like in the aforementioned episode) for something that "may be alive", when they're putting something that is alive in jeopardy. While the "non-living thing evolving so that they're alive and self-conscious" can get a little wearisome in being addressed over and over again, this is one of the better ones.

Gets a nice, solid 5 out of 5 stars.
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