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Star Trek: The Next Generation
S6.E26
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IMDbPro

Descent

  • Episode aired Jun 21, 1993
  • TV-PG
  • 46m
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
3.4K
YOUR RATING
Brian Cousins in Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987)
ActionAdventureDramaSci-Fi

When Data experiences his first emotion, anger, after an encounter with the Borg, Data tries hard to recreate the experience, and he is blind as to what the consequences will be. Meanwhile, ... Read allWhen Data experiences his first emotion, anger, after an encounter with the Borg, Data tries hard to recreate the experience, and he is blind as to what the consequences will be. Meanwhile, the rest of the Enterprise investigate the mystery as to why the Borg they faced seemed to... Read allWhen Data experiences his first emotion, anger, after an encounter with the Borg, Data tries hard to recreate the experience, and he is blind as to what the consequences will be. Meanwhile, the rest of the Enterprise investigate the mystery as to why the Borg they faced seemed to have names and feelings of their own.

  • Director
    • Alexander Singer
  • Writers
    • Gene Roddenberry
    • Ronald D. Moore
    • Jeri Taylor
  • Stars
    • John Neville
    • Jim Norton
    • Natalija Nogulich
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.0/10
    3.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alexander Singer
    • Writers
      • Gene Roddenberry
      • Ronald D. Moore
      • Jeri Taylor
    • Stars
      • John Neville
      • Jim Norton
      • Natalija Nogulich
    • 20User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos16

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    Top cast41

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    John Neville
    John Neville
    • Isaac Newton
    Jim Norton
    Jim Norton
    • Albert Einstein
    Natalija Nogulich
    Natalija Nogulich
    • Adm. Alynna Nechayev
    Brian Cousins
    Brian Cousins
    • Crosis
    • (as Brian J. Cousins)
    Stephen Hawking
    Stephen Hawking
    • Stephen Hawking
    • (as Professor Stephen Hawking)
    Patrick Stewart
    Patrick Stewart
    • Captain Jean-Luc Picard
    Jonathan Frakes
    Jonathan Frakes
    • Commander William Thomas 'Will' Riker
    LeVar Burton
    LeVar Burton
    • Lieutenant Commander Geordi La Forge
    Michael Dorn
    Michael Dorn
    • Lieutenant Worf
    Gates McFadden
    Gates McFadden
    • Doctor Beverly Crusher
    Marina Sirtis
    Marina Sirtis
    • Counselor Deanna Troi
    Brent Spiner
    Brent Spiner
    • Lieutenant Commander Data…
    Richard Gilbert-Hill
    Richard Gilbert-Hill
    • Bosus
    Stephen James Carver
    • Tayar
    David Keith Anderson
    David Keith Anderson
    • Deceased Ohniaka III Science Division Officer
    • (uncredited)
    Majel Barrett
    Majel Barrett
    • Enterprise Computer
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    Joe Baumann
    • Crewman Garvey
    • (uncredited)
    Christine Anne Baur
    • Ensign Corelki
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Alexander Singer
    • Writers
      • Gene Roddenberry
      • Ronald D. Moore
      • Jeri Taylor
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    8.03.3K
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    Featured reviews

    10robert-macc

    The Borg are back, but it's far more terrifying than previous episodes

    To me the renegade Borg potentially pose a far more dangerous threat than the Collective, as they have hatred, and want to be cyborgs (which Data is comlpetely). They hate biological life, but they also have feelings and take their Collective traits to sadism, as the Borg were based on non-Anglo Germanic groups who weren't Spaniard, and all have a history of barbaric, and brutal imperialism. Think Denmark and their major empire, Belgium with the Congo, Prussia in parts of sub-Saharia, Russia and their major empire. And we know what the Danes did to anyone who insurrected against Danish rule. The Borg were written as symbols of that without the emotions and needless cruelty.

    The episode starts rather hilariously, "Seinfeld"-like as an episode where Data is playing a card game with Stephen Hawking, Albert Einstein and Issac Newton. The old historical figures are arrogant, while Stephen Hawking is just cocky and daring mostly. It's all hilarious as they talk about the game of probibility. The nice thing is that this scene is smart and treats the viewer with intelligence, which this show, that often glorifies elitism and killing red shirts, fails at a lot. This is cut short when the crew run into a mysterious ship, and receive a report that Ohniaka III, a Federation base, was attacked. They investigate the ship and eventually Picards sends the Away Team. They see a very graphic den of dead bodies, and its downright R-rated and bloody. Again this was "TNG" which was syndicated (and being this aired, usually on what would be, 2 years later, UPN stations, meaning they were independent, and on Fox stations they got away with more) and usually on independent stations. When Data opens up the base's door, the terror begins, a Borg has been waiting to ambush them.

    This is part of the confusing behavior. The Borg fight the Away Team and the differences are quickly noted. The Borg have feelings. It's really disturbing. They hate and and have revenge. They kill one of the crew and the fight carries on. The Borg retrieve their dead. They go back on the ship and attack the Enterprise. The Borg has a new invention, transwarp. At the Ready Room, after the fight, they notice the Borg are acting differently. This leads to a disturbing conclusion, that they are far more dangerous and angry now, as a Collective. Data trying to understand his behavior is also very disturbing as well. He tries not to be angry and he tries to find out why he was angry. Unknown to him is the fact that someone is controlling him and giving him the emotion chip. It gets ugly not long after when the Borg finally attack them. This is a very frightening episode that keeps true to the Borg, even as renegades, more than what "First Contact" and "Voyager" did to them. See it for yourself.
    3skinnybert

    Just awful

    After one of the best opening scenes in all of Star Trek (featuring noted physicist Stephen Hawking in a wonderful cameo), this episode quickly turns to crap: Starfleet can't remember its own motivation, Picard can't competently run a ship, and everyone is forced to go along with what will be a tedious and nonsensical plot. Sometimes we can enjoy a lesser episode as at least being well-intended, and having some good idea to get across, but this is simply time-filling. The only excuse for such an lobotomy of an episode was to have a melodramatic cliffhanger for the season's end -- and that's all it succeeded in being.

    P. S. Part two won't get better.
    6Mr-Fusion

    Questions abound

    'Descent' is one of the many episodes I've never seen before, and I can honestly say I have no idea how this will end. The best parts are all in the first half; a charming poker game with Stephen Hawking, Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein; Borg drones that behave like individuals; and Data's surge of emotion (anger that veers towards sadism). But even with all the phaser fire and crewmembers dropping like flies, it's never as good as those opening mysteries.

    6/10
    4I-want-a-Swedish-Girlfriend

    Not good enough. Almost bad. Destroys all potential.

    Data's evil twin brother Lore takes over a small band of Borg, and leads them against the Federation. The idea is a bit underwhelming, and it matters. Can any fool lead the Borg, now ? It diminishes the fear of that ant-like Borg hive. I for one wouldn't have fiddled with the original Borg invasion idea, at all. Let them roam Federation space for a while undefeated. Several seasons of permanent fear, a bit like a horror series. A bit like legendary Hannibal who remained undefeated inside the heart of Rome's empire Italy. That kind of plot development would not only be more engaging to watch, but also more credible. The Federation stands no chance against the Borg, normally. Captain Picard meets God ("Q") in the pilot episode and pretends nothing happened. Numb. Destined to die out. In this cliffhanger, a mere robot takes over a Borg faction. It's not bad. But it's so not-good-enough that it destroys my interest in the Borg. They lose to the numb Federation, and a robot starts to helm them. If you remove all that context, ignore the great built-up of that race, ignore the ignorant crew of Starfleet's flagship, and ignore the fact that Lore is not human, this cliffhanger makes for an ok thriller. But it buries so much potential. Forever. A bone-scray race has just been diminished into zeros, and an unimaginative civil war seems to be silly solution. Familiar foes are taking over. Well, thanks. Not what I was hoping for. --- Search "Trek Greenspace" on Google Play Books and join my Star Trek Fan Project!
    5ghatbkk

    Putting together 2 of the 3 overdone themes of Next Generation

    Q (and other all powerful aliens), Lore and the other Frankenstein stories and the Borg are the 3 overdone themes of the Next Generation. In this (and the following episode), the writers combine the Borg and the Frankenstein themes and make a terrible pair of episodes. Some of the decisions made by Picard are downright bizarre (supposedly leaving only a skeleton crew on board the Enterprise under the command of Dr. Crusher and beaming everyone else in a crew of 1014 personnel to operate in search teams of 4 and only getting 15 search teams). And one of those search teams has the Captain, the Chief Engineer and the Ship's Counsellor in it. And when the Enterprise leaves, it leaves all the senior officers except Dr. Crusher on the planet. The entire plot is absurd.

    Related interests

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    Action
    Still frame
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    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Stephen Hawking was on the Paramount lot for the video release of his film A Brief History of Time (1991). He asked the staff "Could you take me out of my chair and put me in the captain's chair?" His request was granted.
    • Goofs
      Either the brig continues to be remodeled, or there is a continuity problem with respect to the controls for the force field that closes off the prisoner's cell. In this episode, a crewman sits at a control console & activated/deactivates the force field. In I Borg (1992), a crewman tapped a panel on the wall to operate it, and, in an even earlier episode, Picard was able to turn it on/off with a simple voice command to the computer.
    • Quotes

      [about the Borg encountered on Ohniaka III]

      Commander William T. Riker: They were fast, aggressive, almost vicious. It was more like fighting Klingons than...

      [realizes]

      Commander William T. Riker: ... Borg.

      [to Worf]

      Commander William T. Riker: No offense.

      Lieutenant Worf: None taken.

    • Connections
      Edited from Star Trek: The Next Generation: Time Squared (1989)
    • Soundtracks
      Star Trek: The Next Generation Main Title
      Composed by Jerry Goldsmith and Alexander Courage

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 21, 1993 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • Brandeis-Bardin Institute, Brandeis-Bardin Campus, 1101 Peppertree Lane, Brandeis, California, USA(Borg building)
    • Production company
      • Paramount Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 46m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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