Star Trek: Deep Space Nine is twenty years old this year. To celebrate, I’m taking a look at the first season. Check back daily for the latest review or retrospective.
And after Progress gives us the most “Deep-Space-Nine-y” episode yet, If Wishes Were Horses… offers the most generic Star Trek episode this side of The Passenger. The plot here should be very familiar. Like in Imaginary Friend or Shore Leave, the characters find their imaginations seem to be bringing things to life. Of course, it turns out to be an advanced alien intelligence that really just wants to study our crew, like in The Observer Effect or Scientific Method or even Schism. What I’m getting at here is that there’s really very little in this premise which hasn’t been done before or since on Star Trek, and nothing which wouldn’t feel more at home on Star Trek: The Next Generation or Star Trek: Voyager.
While it’s not as bad as The Passenger or Move Along Home, it is terribly generic and it feels like a waste of an episode in an already truncated season.
Filed under: Deep Space Nine | Tagged: Benjamin Sisko, colm meaney, Dax, deep space nine, Ferengi, Holodeck, Julian Bashir, Move Along Home, O'BRIEN, Observer Effect, Odo, Quark, Reginald Barclay, Scientific method, Shore Leave, Star Trek Next Generation, Star Trek Original Series, star trek: deep space nine, star trek: the original series, StarTrek | 2 Comments »


















