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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Criminal Justice with No Laws, April 22, 2000
This review is from: Star Trek - The Next Generation, Episode 104: Silicon Avatar [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Many people seem to feel compassion and mercy for those who have done wrong and even killed, but I am seldom among them. But this episode shows us an unique situation in which a creature, the crystaline entity, seems to kill on a large level because of its nature. IT MAY NOT EVEN KNOW IT IS KILLING. Now enter the mother of a victim, who, since the death of her 16 year old son at the hands of the creature, has been obsessed with the study and eventual destruction of the entity. The crew of the enterprise figures out a possible way of communicating with the creature (reminiscent of the "Companion" from the original series). Despite the deadly nature and our contempt for the creature, I found my curiousity in what the creature "has to say" out-weighing my hate for it. Five stars if it were not for the high standard set by so many other episodes!
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Silicon Avatar, The Return of the Crystal Entity, March 1, 2000
This review is from: Star Trek - The Next Generation, Episode 104: Silicon Avatar [VHS] (VHS Tape)
This episode (actually #204 on all the STTNG lists) featured the return of the Crystal Entity, first seen in the "Datalore" Episode. Rather than being just "the monster of the week" sort of story, this one was rich with character. The mother of a victim of the Entity uses the Enterprise (and Data) to track down the creature, and in the process has to face her own "survivor's guilt" over the loss of her 16-year-old son. The story deepens as the woman realizes that Data holds in his memory banks all of her son's journals and personal letters, and can even simulate his voice. At one point, the woman even believes that Data embodies her child, and begs him for forgiveness (for leaving him on Omicon Theta when the Entity attacked that planet.) She's thrown into further despair, however, when she learns through Data, after she's killed the Entity, that her son would never have approved of such an action, and would be saddened by the fact that she "murdered" another being in his name. A touching and deeply emotional story, well acted by all. This one's a keeper.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
What's wrong with everyone's memory?, August 2, 2002
This review is from: Star Trek - The Next Generation, Episode 104: Silicon Avatar [VHS] (VHS Tape)
This is a good, solid episode - well made, and with some real depth to it. The Enterprise crew are helping some colonists establish themselves on an empty planet when the Crystalline Entity, that "giant snowflake" that sucks the life energy out of entire planets, attacks. Starfleet sends a xenobiologist, Dr Kila Marr, to study the attack and find some way of dealing with the Entity. But she has secrets of her own, and the developing relationship between her and Data, set against the background of their mission, provides some real emotional depth as the tension rises. There are some flaws with this episode. Dr Marr is allowed to get away with too much, and it seems that Data failed to tell anyone about the growing instability in her behaviour. It also seems that everyone has forgotten about the Enterprise's last encounter with the Crystalline Entity, where Lore proved that it was intelligent and that he could talk to it and understand when it talked back. But those quibbles aside, this episode is very good. The acting is excellent, as is the pacing. The special effects are rather good, too. This episode also raises some thought-provoking questions. How do you react to a life-form that is so different from your own? How does it view the world around itself, and how can you deal with it? Star Trek: TNG at close to its best.
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