“Final Mission” is written by: Kacey Arnold-Ince and
Jeri Taylor, from a story by: Kacey Arnold-Ince, and is directed by: Corey
Allen. It was produced under production
code 183, was the 9th episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation
Season 4, the 83rd episode overall, and was broadcast on November 19,
1990.
Wil Wheaton’s decision to leave Star Trek: The Next
Generation is a moment in fandom that was unfairly celebrated. Wesley Crusher is a character who entered the
gestalt of pop culture as the prime example of an annoying child character who
saved the day when the adults in the room failed to see solutions right under their
noses. This is a kinder stating of the
sentiment early internet forums at the time displayed. This assessment has issues. While there certainly are episodes of Star
Trek: The Next Generation where Wesley is responsible for saving the day,
especially in the first season, this is due to the writing staff not knowing
what to do with the character. His journey
to become an ensign and enter Starfleet Academy is a compelling character arc,
Wheaton as an actor is allowed to grow even if he’d already proven himself as a
competent actor with earlier film appearances such as Stand by Me. Wesley Crusher is a character who works best
when he’s allowed to be written as a child and not an adult in a child’s body or
Gene Roddenberry’s self-insert. Even subpar
or mediocre episodes like “Coming of Age” are elevated by characterizing Wesley
as a full character and not a sketch of what these adult writers think a child acts
like. Wesley’s exit from Star Trek:
The Next Generation came about because on paper Wil Wheaton wished to
pursue film opportunities, and the production staff of the show would not accommodate
him. Wheaton has spoken of other reasons
for leaving, including emotional abuse from his father contributed to the
decision. His decision to leave, like
Denise Crosby before him, is entirely due to being rightfully unhappy with choices
made by the production team, usually placed at the feet of executive producer
Rick Berman.
“Final Mission” opens with Picard informing Wesley he
has been accepted into Starfleet Academy, he has two weeks to report and will
be accompanying him on a final mission to mediate a mining dispute. Picard and Wesley are joined by a Captain
Dirgo, played by Nick Tate, while the Enterprise is taken to resolve a
distress call involving a radiation leak and a mysterious spaceship as the B-plot
of the episode. The A-plot is the
shuttle crashing onto a desert moon, cut off from the Enterprise. The episode is a race against the clock to
save themselves, Picard as the calm and rational man in a crisis while Dirgo is
always on the knife’s edge of exploding.
Wesley is caught in the middle, “Final Mission” acting narratively as a final
test for the character to see how far he has grown. The weakest part of the episode is the
B-plot, it’s perfectly serviceable and puts Riker in the spotlight but it is at
this point a standard Star Trek plot.
The A-plot could also be described as a quintessential Star Trek
plot where the dramatic tension is being put on the acting ability of Wil
Wheaton to deliver on the episode’s premise.
Wheaton is up for it, Kacey Arnold-Ince and Jeri Taylor (Taylor more
than Arnold-Ince) write plenty of material to examine how much he has grown and
how much he still has ahead of him. The
more interesting elements are Wesley’s own need for paternal approval from
Picard, the final line being Patrick Stewart giving Wesley that pride and approval.
Picard is not Wesley’s father, even if Picard and Dr.
Crusher have chemistry, but he is the father figure in the child’s life. The episode ends with this admission of
pride, not a goodbye from Dr. Crusher to her son. Crusher is in the episode, but Star Trek:
The Next Generation would not be Star Trek: The Next Generation
without leaving a female character with less to do than their male
counterparts. Dr. Crusher in this episode
is part of the B-plot and only in the final act of the episode where she does
get to be concerned for her son, Gates McFadden playing the material she is
given quite well. The shame is that there
is not enough of the material to really excel at portraying the relationship between
a parent and child. A deeper reading of it
and the previous episodes to include interactions between Crusher and her son as
shallower than interactions between Wesley and his male counterparts. Star Trek: The Next Generation is still
a show largely made by men and “Final Mission” is a revelation of how it separates
the relationship between father and son over mother and son as different and
almost incompatible. Indicating a rigid view
of gender, Dr. Crusher is not a character who can provide the same type of
pride and approval that Picard can to Wesley because she is a woman, he is a
man. She is his mother and could not
understand the male psyche, while Picard can.
Jeri Taylor’s influence on this episode specifically makes that about
the absence of the father Wesley never knew, however, the reflection on the series
is there. Picard gets the last word,
Beverly barely gets one.
Overall, “Final Mission” works as a good exit for Wil
Wheaton as Wesley Crusher. There is
certainly more care than the last time a cast member was being written out, Jeri
Taylor’s position on the production team is certainly additive to the
experience. Wheaton’s performance is his
strongest in the series, even if the script is doing in the greater scheme of
television a basic final episode for a character. Where it falls is the B-plot being largely
uninteresting and not including enough of Dr. Crusher in a parental capacity
except for worry and a brief scene at the end of reunion. “Final Mission” is the definition of a
standard good episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation. 7/10.






