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Celebrate Captain Picard Day with Jean-Luc’s top Next Generation episodes (and one movie)

captain-picard-patrick-stewart
Yank down your shirt, grab some Earl Grey, and settle in for a captain’s marathon.

If you’re looking forward to a glass of Chateau Picard — red — or a cup of Earl Grey — hot — then you’re off to a great start, celebrating like they do on the Enterprise NCC1701-D. Captain Picard Day (June 16th by our calendar) was introduced to the viewers of Star Trek: The Next Generation in Season 7’s episode 12: “The Pegasus.”

Captain Jean-Luc Picard, played by the always sterling Sir Patrick Stewart, finds the holiday embarrassing. Counselor Troi says the children love it. If you watch the episode, you’ll see Commander Riker likes Captain Picard Day too. He’ll take any opportunity to tease people.

While “The Pegasus” is really Riker’s episode and not Picard’s, it’s worth watching the beginning to catch Captain Picard Day in action. There’s a lot of arts and crafts involved: mostly drawings, paintings, and sculptings of Picard’s proudly bald dome. Feel free to boldly go make something. The episode has some goofy craft ideas.

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What else can you do?

  • Read up on Shakespeare.
  • Plan an archaeological dig in your own backyard.
  • Practice playing the flute.
  • Stage a mud fight at a vineyard.
  • Join your best pals in a poker game.
  • Or, probably easiest: host a Captain Picard marathon with some of the top emotional highlights and Picard Speeches from Star Trek: The Next Generation. Make it so.

Here are the “Number One” Jean-Luc Picard episodes (and one movie) for your Captain Picard Day marathon:

These eps had to 1. focus primarily on the captain and 2. be great Next Generation episodes in their own right. (Which knocks mediocre Picard-centric offerings like “The Battle,” “Captain’s Holiday,” or “Rascals” from the stack.) Note — there will be TNG spoilers ahead.

On another note: I’m not including any episodes from the self-titled show Star Trek: Picard, for several reasons. 1. It’s ongoing and heavily serialized. 2. it’s all so depressing, and 3. from what I can see so far, nothing stands out as an inspiring episode worth endless rewatches. This is subject to change. 

Season 2 (There’s nothing crucial in Season 1)

“The Measure of a Man” — Season 2, Episode  9: Easily among many people’s top five TNG stories, this courtroom drama cements the relationship between Picard and Data, showcasing Picard’s inherent optimism towards the Federation. Does Data have rights? Is he alive? Does he have a soul? This AI theme comes up often on Trek, with Data’s own offspring, several holodeck characters in TNG and Deep Space 9, and the Doctor on Voyager. It also re-surfaces as the plot set-up for Star Trek: Picard.

“Measure is a Man” is also the very first five-star Next Gen episode.

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Season 3

“Yesterday’s Enterprise” — Season 3, Episode 13: A good ensemble piece and one of the best Trek episodes ever, especially if you like multiple timeline stories.

Season 4

“Best of Both Worlds, Part 2” — Season 4, Episode 1: Picard is a Borg. Enough said. I recommend viewing BOBW 1 and 2, but if you’re looking for a quick rewatch marathon, part 2 (plus “Family”) will do.

However, the BOWB cliffhanger at the end of Season 3 is one of the best ever conceived on any TV show at the time, still creating goosebumps now. “Mr. Worf, fire.”

“Family” — Season 4, Episode 2: This essential Picard episode can be seen as a coda to “The Best of Both Worlds”, or a trilogy if you include all three at once. While the movie Generations undoes a lot of the goodwill and fine character work engendered by “Family”, this is a must-watch, top-drawer look at who Jean-Luc is in relation to his family and childhood background.

“The Drumhead” — Season 4, Episode 21: With plenty of callbacks to Picard’s previous high-stakes adventures, this time he himself is on trial, in a witch-hunt of epic proportions. The Federation’s Seventh Guarantee is invoked. We must maintain constant vigilance, as Picard tells Worf: this message resonates no less today. One of the best Picard Speeches on the books.

Season 5

“Darmok” — Season 5, Episode 2: Among the most intriguing and enjoyable high-concept outings, “Darmok” illustrates Trek’s ideals at their best, proving why Picard is the captain of Starfleet’s flagship.

“Disaster” — Season 5, Episode 5: We know Picard doesn’t like children, but here we see he can work with them if he treats them like bridge crew. Surprisingly, it works. It’s a nice show for him that’s touching without being sentimental. And otherwise, it’s a got that great disaster-movie trope where unusual pairings come together in fun ways. Worf mid-wifing Keiko’s baby is worth the price of admission alone. The finale scene where the children give Picard a handmade commemorative plaque shows how far Picard has come from the man who asked Commander Riker to be the “genial face’ of the Enterprise.

“The First Duty” Season 5, Episode 19: While ostensibly a Wesley Crusher show, “The First Duty” is a fine look at Picard from outside the view of the competent bridge crew he surrounds himself with. We see and hear exactly what Starfleet means to this career man, and strikes deeply into who Picard is as a character. It’s essential viewing, to the extent that the 2019 San Diego Comic-Con Picard pop-up museum was called The First Duty.

“The Inner Light” — Season 5, Episode 25: An all-Picard, all-the-time episode that’s luminous and appealing. What’s interesting is that the Nexus in the Trek movie Generations showing Picard with a family of his own is entirely unneeded. They did it so superbly here, first. “The Inner Light” is my favorite episode in all of Star Trek, and is so dependant on Patrick Stewart’s mad skills to pull off this effortlessly. A+++. (Bonus ep: “Lessons” — Season 6, Episode 19: A small, self-contained follow-up to one of the most enduring experiences in the captain’s life. It’s nice to see the events of “Inner Light” were not forgotten.)

Season 6

“Chain of Command, Part 2” — Season 6, Episode 11: This second half of a 2-parter stands alone as a tour de force for Patrick Stewart. This is the one where Picard is tortured by Cardassian Gul Macek, played to vile perfection by David Warner. Great chemistry and dialog carry this difficult topic with aplomb. There are FOUR lights!

“Tapestry” — Season 6, Episode 15: A must-see exploration of the road not taken in Picard’s life. Q shows him what kind of man Jean-Luc would have become if he never took on that Naussican in a duel.

The Series Finale

“All Good Things…” — Season 7, Episode 25/26: This series ender is the best finale in the Trek franchise, and with good reason. Jean-Luc is taken on a whirlwind trip back and forth through time in order to save all life in the Universe. And, of course, Q. With a creepy callback to Humanity’s ongoing trial — continued all the way from the very first episode at Farpoint Station. It’s pure temporal excitement, offering some reasonable potential futures for the characters we’ve grown to love over seven years of The Next Generation. The sweet, touching denouement is the perfect cherry on the TNG cake.

You might want to rewatch “Encounter at Farpoint Station” (Season 1, Episode 1) to get up to speed on the themes recurring with Q and the trial of humanity that never ends…

The Best Next Generation Movie: First Contact

Star Trek 8: First Contact: With four Next Gen movies in the can, only one rises to the top as outstanding. If you enjoyed Picard’s gig as a Borg in “The Best of Both Worlds” (also referenced in “Family” and “I, Borg”), then it will be a treat to watch Picard in Action Mode to hunt and kill the Borg infesting his ship. There’s also time travel, lots of Data, good ensemble moments for every main character, a standout guest star, one of the top world-building moments in all of Trek, and the craziest Picard Speech ever. (“The line must be drawn HERE. This far! No further!” “Um…You broke your little ships.”)

So you can now boldly celebrate Captain Picard Day at home or in your own starship. Tug your shirt down and engage.

These are my picks, after being a lifelong Star Trek addict. I know many of you will have episodes you want to be see on this list. Which are your top Captain Picard episodes? Do you prefer a delicate Chateau Picard wine or a piping hot cuppa Earl Grey? Happy Picard Day!

All Star Trek: The Next Generation’s episodes are currently streaming on Netflix and Paramount+.

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Star Wars Meets Star Trek – Holdo’s Last Jedi Sacrifice is the Picard Maneuver

 

 

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Comments

4 responses to “Celebrate Captain Picard Day with Jean-Luc’s top Next Generation episodes (and one movie)”

  1. I was thinking about adding “Sarek” to this list, but in honesty, it’s a tour de force for Patrick Stewart — the actor (during the mind-meld with Spock’s father) — but not so much for Picard himself. We learn a LOT of about Sarek/Spock’s family instead.

    Yet this is probably one of the most intensely intimate experiences of Picard’s life…so…? What do you think?

  2. This is a great trip down memory lane. I miss the best of ST:TNG, but it’s interspersed with so much that is ho-hum, at best.

    It’s a shame that there are a dozen episodes on ST:TNG that are better than the best of the TNG movie. So much potential jettisoned out the airlock.

  3. Too true, Dan, about some really meh episodes, and good point about the poor movie efforts.

    The Best of Both Worlds is a better movie than all the TNG real movies. And All Good Things should be remembered as the real Next Gen wrap up (not Nemesis). AGT is kind of a small miracle. It’s a lovely story and does everything it should have. No other Trek series finale comes close.

    I’ll add that at least TOS ended well with Undiscovered Country. They never had a real series finale, so the movie works very well, honoring the characters/universe.

    Back to TNG eps… The First Duty, if told with expanded character development from Wesley’s squadron-members and good plotting as the events occurred, could have been a superbly dramatic TNG film. Lots of Starfleet Academy scenes, young characters we could have followed up on (like poor Ensign Sito Jaxa in Lower Decks), Picard underlining what Starfleet means to the men and women who give their lives to it. Wesley’s initial descent from Golden Boy to Disaffected Young Man. Courtroom scene. The kid’s sad dad who had to believe his dead child was at fault for the tragedy. And the realization that the Picard and Wesley closeness/mentorship never really recovered from these events.

    The Defector would have made a really tense, emotionally-packed movie too, giving us more Romulan culture than we got in Star Trek: 2009. For more Romulan goodness, The Face of the Enemy would also have worked, had the producers been willing to make a Troi-centric film. Throw The Enemy, The Defector, and The Face of the Enemy together for one really good Romulan TNG story.

    If they wanted a funny, light hearted TNG film, Disaster could have been expanded into a feature, and would have been so much better than the attempted funny of Insurrection. It’s not like people don’t love a good disaster film.

    Hmmm…. Yesterday’s Enterprise would have been the better movie in term of passing the Enterprise baton, as it were, than the limp Generations we ended up with. I have so many problems with Generations, which is why I’m so late in making my review for it. 😉

    What do you guys think? What eps would have made better movies?

  4. Dale Langston Avatar
    Dale Langston

    Great job Jill as always. While I am not a really a big fan of TNG I will say the episodes you covered for Picard Day do represent him well an those episodes I would consider watching my self on his day of honor. I do believe Picard day should not just be about the children and how he feels toward children in general but about his personality, his hobbies and interest in his life. for example his avid interest in archeology or his dedication to Starfleet and duty and his love interest and so on. and you did a good job capturing those things about Picard in those episodes. Again great Job and I look forward to seeing more from you.

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