“Future Imperfect” is written by: J. Larry Carroll and
David Bennett Carren and is directed by: Les Landau. It was produced under production code 182,
was the 8th episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 4,
the 82nd episode overall, and was broadcast on November 12, 1990.
“Future Imperfect” nestles two twists inside itself, with
the second recontextualizing the episode into meaning far less than without
it. The premise of “Future Imperfect”
puts Riker in a dreamscape of his potential future where he has everything he
wanted: command of the Enterprise and a happy if slightly bittersweet
marriage with son he could not be more proud of despite his tumultuous
relationship with his own father. He
does not remember the events leading up to his command of the Enterprise,
the episode opening with a transporter accident “infecting” Riker with an alien
retrovirus that rewrites his memory. The
setup is a riff on what TV Tropes calls the Lotus Eater Machine: it’s a fantasy
to trick Riker into complacency and a life that he would be happy in even if it
was unchallenged. The Federation is actively in peace talks with the Romulan,
Admiral Jean-Luc Picard overseeing for the Federation and Tomalak from “The
Enemy” and “The Defector” for the Romulans.
Jonathan Frakes plays Riker as never quite complacent and seeing through
the cracks of the fantasy scenario as the Romulan presence makes him
uncomfortable and the awkwardness of being a father to a son he cannot remember
is fascinating. Frakes playing against
Chris Demetral as his son Jean-Luc are the best scenes of the episode and
Demetral has enough screen presence to work.
There are also multiple scenes where Riker plays the trombone, these
little character moments making the episode what it is. The first twist, the “obvious” twist, that
the future is not the future but a holodeck scenario from Tomalak to coax out
the location of a Federation outpost which would bring the Federation and
Romulans closer to war.
This initial scenario and this first reality of the
Romulans using Riker’s own desires against him as the holodeck scenario is from
his subconscious mind is in conversation with The Best of Both Worlds
and Riker’s decision to stay first officer on the Enterprise. His subconscious tells him that he does want
command but only the Enterprise, no other ship would satisfy him. The desire can only come to pass for Riker if
Picard fulfills his own command duties, the promotion to admiral allowing a
standard transfer of command for both men at the correct time. The scenario is superficially perfect, the crack
that gives it away is that Riker’s dead wife is Minuet and his son Jean-Luc is
not real. Jean-Luc is actually a child
called Ethan captured by the Romulans inserted into the fantasy, and with the
reveal the episode shifts into an escape from their base. It is a statement that Riker does not want an
easy future, he does not want to give into the fantasies of an easy life. This is a restatement and examination of who
Riker is as a character, and then the episode throws it away for a secondary
twist. It is not in fact the Romulans,
but Ethan creating these fantasy scenarios.
Ethan is a lonely alien in a really bad grey mask as the last survivor
of his race, hidden from unknown invaders.
J. Larry Carroll and David Bennett Carren are taking the themes the
first 40 minutes of “Future Imperfect” and throwing them out the window. A charitable read is Carroll and Carren with
this twist are attempting to make the episode about isolation and needing to
find connection, the alien just wants to find a place where it can belong, and
Riker does take him back to the Enterprise. The final line does indicate Riker regards
Ethan as Jean-Luc, the son from the initial scenario, but that does not say
anything about either of these themes as Riker does not know this alien who might
be called Ethan (the script is unclear).
In both fantasy scenarios, “Future Imperfect” as an
episode is playing out like a standard, character focused episode of Star
Trek: The Next Generation. Les
Landau is in the director’s chair and continues his understanding of dramatic
blocking, even in the scenes set in reality such as Riker’s birthday party and
the final scene in the cave communicating the character’s emotions where the script
is lacking. Outside of the alien’s true
form, the older designs for the regular cast also look great, the silliest
being putting Patrick Stewart in a silly mustache while the grey streaks in
Jonathan Frakes’ hair works quite well.
The crew of the Enterprise are given obvious futures: only Picard
has moved on, Wesley is nowhere to be seen as that would involve recasting Wil
Wheaton as an adult, Data has not changed outside of his position into a red
shirt, and Geordi La Forge now has implants that allow him to see without his
visor. There is a very subtle detail in
LeVar Burton’s performance of looking more intently as a blind person regaining
sight would, emphasizing his eyes with specific head movements and slight
strains while Landau’s direction is not giving Burton close ups. The Romulan base is also quite a nice
sequence of sets, this episode clearly getting a full budget to build new
environments that sell it as reality, even if they could just reuse the Enterprise
holodeck.
Overall, “Future Imperfect” while not a bad episode, ends
by effectively removing much of the depth that it had by ending a plot
challenging Riker’s view of the Romulans and implying his loyalty to Starfleet
and the Federation could even be tested when abandoned on a Romulan base for something
about loneliness. J. Larry Carroll and
David Bennett Carren write an episode too long and could not see a way to cut
things down so implemented a secondary twist that’s the equivalent of a thought
terminating cliché. Luckily most of the episode
is still solid and bolstered by Jonathan Frakes’ performance throughout even
trying to wrap the final scene into the rest of the episode. 6/10.






