The premiere
of Star Trek: Discovery last month
marked the return of Star Trek to television for the first time since 2005.
There had been long gaps between Star Trek shows before, most notably an eighteen-year
gap between the Original Series and Next Generation. Including Discovery, there have now been six Star
Trek TV series of varying quality. Star Trek fans, a particularly vociferous
group, have their own favorite captains, crew members, aliens, and villains. A
few years ago, we ranked all the Star Trek movies from best to worst.
So in honor of the premiere of Discovery
(which will not be included, since it’s only aired 4 episodes), we figured it
was about time to rank the TV shows themselves.
Star Trek: Deep Space
Nine—Being set on a space station meant that the show’s writers had to develop
plot from character interactions rather than weekly visits to new planets. As a
result, DS9 featured the best
sustained character work from a Star Trek series. Sisko, Kira, Dax, Odo, Quark,
Jake, O’Brien and Bashir all underwent significant character growth throughout
the show’s seven seasons. Kira transformed from unrepentant terrorist to loyal
soldier and leader. Bashir went from rookie doctor to war-weary veteran. Poor
Chief O’Brien had to suffer some life-altering tragedy at least once a season. DS9 also
developed a strong stable of villains or recurring characters like Garak, the exiled
Cardassian spy, Gul Dukat, Kai Winn, the Jem’Hadar, Weyoun, and the Dominion.
Star Trek: The Next Generation—The show that launched a million Picard memes. After some brutally terrible episodes at the beginning of Next Generation’s run, the show offered a positive vision of humanity’s future. Crewmembers on the Enterprise accepted one another’s cultures, sought peace and cooperation, and generally lived together in harmony. Captain Picard was more lawyer than soldier, seeking to peacefully resolve disputes rather than resort to violence. Commander Data, the android, sought to become more human. Worf, the security officer, was the last honorable Klingon in the galaxy. The female characters, however, were underdeveloped. Counsellor Troi loved chocolate and frequently lost her empathic powers. Dr. Crusher had a know-it-all son and an episode where she had sex with a ghost. The less said about the short-lived Tasha Yar and the rape planet the better.
Star Trek: The
Original Series—The Original Series
may be ranked too low, but I couldn’t find a reason to push it higher. The show’s
campy elements occasionally overwhelmed creator Gene Roddenberry’s view of a
utopian future. The show featured strong character work and sci-fi plotting.
Allegories abounded about racism, the Cold War, and contemporary American
politics. The episode titled “City on the Edge of Forever” featured Kirk back
in the 1930s allowing a young woman (whom he loved) to die rather than change the
course of Earth’s history. TOS also
established the relationship between Captain Kirk, the logical Mr. Spock, and
Dr. McCoy that would anchor the series and six follow-up movies. The show is,
and remains, a classic.
Star Trek: Voyager—Voyager began with a great premise: A
Federation starship, stranded over seventy years from home, all alone in the
Delta quadrant. Without the support of Starfleet how would they survive? The ship had a strong willed female captain and a racially and ethnically diverse crew.
Yet the show squandered it all, never developing its characters beyond single,
easily identifiable traits. There’s Chakotay, he’s Native American. We know
that because he goes on vision quests. There’s Harry Kim, the navigator, he’s
young. There’s Seven of Nine, she used to be a Borg and wears cat-suits to appeal to young male viewers. Then there were the same recycled
plots about the holodeck malfunctioning, encountering God-like aliens, and a
seemingly endless supply of shuttlecraft even though the show seemingly
destroyed them every other episode.
Star Trek: Enterprise—Undoubtedly
the weakest of all the series, Enterprise
was a prequel to the Original Series
trying to tell the story of the founding of Starfleet and the Federation.
Instead, the show recycled too many old plots from the previous series without
offering anything new or interesting. The characters (always the most important
part of a series) were even blander and more inoffensive than the crew of
Voyager. The over-sexualization of female characters continued with Vulcan
science officer T’Pol continually subjected to Seven of Nine-esque costuming.
This was a show that refought World War 2 (again) with space Nazis, had numerous poorly handled 9-11 allegories, and a series finale that focused on Commander Riker from Next Generation rather than any of its
own characters.
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