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It's not the feather, Dumbo. It's you.Kelly Grayson to Ed Mercer[1]

New Dimensions is the eleventh episode of the first season of The Orville. An encounter with a bizarre spatial anomaly damages the USS Orville, which is left stranded in space. Meanwhile, Chief Engineer Steve Newton departs the Orville and Captain Ed Mercer must decide who to promote to Newton's empty seat.

New Dimensions was written by Seth MacFarlane, who explores themes of self-reliance, faith in one's own abilities, and the value of accepting help, while developing the character of Navigator John LaMarr; although MacFarlane later said that the episode was written just "to give John something more to do."[2]

Kelly Cronin, who was normally the show's script supervisor, directed the episode, and Andrew Cottee composed its score.

Though New Dimension's network ratings were on par for the show's Season 1 average, the reception from general audiences and professional critics alike were strongly positive. The episode is now one of the highest-rated of the show, praised for its strong characters and original plot.

Teaser[]

Fox released a 30 second promotional teaser on November 16, 2017. Commander Kelly Grayson asks LaMarr and Helmsman Gordon Malloy: "At any point, did you consider the possibility that what you did was stupid?" To which LaMarr and Malloy hesitantly reply "no." Scenes of action play and a narrator says, "On the next all-new Orville, the crew enters a dimension unlike anything they've seen before." Doctor Claire Finn sees something off camera (the dead Horbalak smuggler Blavaroch) and says, "Oh, my God." More action sequences fly by (some from previous episodes) and Mercer concludes, "Alright, let's move fast."

The_Orville_Promo_"New_Dimensions"

The Orville Promo "New Dimensions"

Plot Synopsis[]

Act 1[]

LaMarr Dann Malloy

Lieutenants Gordon Malloy and John LaMarr clue Dann in on their prank on Yaphit.

The crew of the Orville gathers in the Mess Hall for a good-bye party for Lieutenant Commander Newton, leaving the ship to design a space station under the Planetary Union. Meanwhile, Malloy and LaMarr snicker because they have placed a piece of Lieutenant Yaphit's body into the nearby buffet.

Yaphit feels discomfort after losing a piece of his own body and goes to Sick Bay to see Doctor Finn. Second Officer Bortus enters and complains of "digestive discomfort." The trio figure out that Bortus ate a piece of Yaphit, and that Malloy and LaMarr are likely responsible.

Commander Grayson scolds LaMarr and Malloy and places formal reprimands on each of their records. While looking at their personnel files she pauses, stunned: "You got to be kidding me."

Act 2[]

Grayson goes to Captain Mercer and shows him LaMarr's academic background. LaMarr's achievements at Union Point were "off the charts." Grayson suggests LaMarr be promoted to Newton's old position of Chief Engineer. Mercer concedes that LaMarr is brilliant, perhaps the most intelligent member of the crew after Isaac, but also inexperienced and immature.

Suddenly, the ship is rocked by a spatial anomaly. The ship is partially damaged. With Mercer's blessing, Grayson assigns LaMarr to work with Isaac to scan the anomaly in order to study and map it. LaMarr and Isaac find Yaphit and the three begin scanning the ship for structural damage from the anomaly. Oddly, they find that plants in a room of the ship have died.

Grayson petitions Mercer again to promote LaMarr. Mercer had chosen Yaphit, but Grayson convinces him to give LaMarr a chance to prove himself. However, Grayson slips that she asked Admiral Tom Halsey to promote Mercer to Captain of the Orville, which wounds Mercer's pride. She apologizes for not telling him the truth and leaves, but the damage to their professional relationship is done.

Act 3[]

Horbalak

"I don't take orders from Union goons!" To his own peril, the Horbalak smuggler Blavaroch dismisses Captain Ed Mercer's warnings.

"Look, I don't want to mince words . . . I just want to know the truth," a distraught Mercer petitions Halsey by call. Halsey assures him that, while Grayson did recommend Mercer, he has proven himself qualified for the job.

LaMarr is then called into Grayson's office where she assigns him control of the Science and Engineering task force to study the spatial anomaly. She asks why he does not "make productive use" of his intelligence. LaMarr insists that he wants a simple life free of stress and worries.

Meanwhile, on the main deck, the crew tries to warn a Horbalak smuggling ship to avoid the spatial anomaly, but its Captain is convinced the Union ship is lying. The Horbalak ship passes through the anomaly and emerges intact but adrift, its systems offline and no life signs found. A small away team enters the ship by shuttle, only to find the Captain dead.

Act 4[]

In the Horbalak ship's Cargo Hold, Kitan discovers 20 crates of stolen Krill Plasma Rifles. The crew realizes they are "sitting on a Krill lightning rod."

Back on the Orville, Mercer is still upset that he got his job only because Grayson fought for him before the Union Admiralty, which he interprets as a hand-out from his ex-wife. Yaphit is upset with Mercer for LaMarr's recent promotion to command of the task force; he accuses Mercer of discrimination against gelatinous persons and leaves in a storm.

A nervous LaMarr stands outside the Engineering deck. Malloy encourages him to "break the ice" with a bowl of gum drops. LaMarr attempts Malloy's suggestion with Engineering but Yaphit lashes out at John, saying they should be working instead. LaMarr agrees and they start their research of the anomaly.

Poring over the data recovered from Engineering, Isaac and LaMarr realize "the quantum phasing signature of the anomaly does not conform to the Universal Constant" and that the anomaly is "a doorway."

Act 5[]

The pair explain to the Bridge crew that the doorway is an opening to a two-dimensional reality. The plants and the Horbalak Captain died because they were compressed into two-dimensional space.

From the Bridge, Bortus informs the commanders that Krill ships are on their way to reclaim their stolen goods. With 14 minutes until the Krill arrive and the engines still offline, LaMarr and Yaphit conceive they go through the anomaly via a protective "quantum bubble" which would maintain three-dimensions inside. Mercer gives the go-ahead and, fortunately, the plan works.

Act 6[]

Ed Kelly 2-dimensional space

"It's beautiful, isn't it?" Commander Kelly Grayson and Mercer witness two-dimensional space from the window in Mess Hall.

The Bridge crew marvels at two-dimensional space and the two-dimensional lifeforms that live within. While the ship can leave the anomaly into normal space, Mercer orders they wait several more hours for the Krill to leave.

Mercer relaxes in the Mess Hall when Grayson approaches him. He talks about his discontentment with her recommending him for his position but Grayson grows frustrated: everyone gets to where they are thanks to the help of others, "so what's so wrong with speaking up?"

The Orville is rocked by tremors as the bubble begins to weaken, yet Engineering cannot return them to normal space as the anomaly's "doorway" to normal space has now closed.

Act 7[]

Isaac and LaMarr find another doorway on the other side of the two-dimensional reality. LaMarr explains that he might be able to create a Quantum bubble inside a shuttle, which can then drag the Orville. The Orville cross over to the doorway and free them before the ship gives out. Mercer demands to pilot the shuttle with LaMarr, feeling the need to prove that he is a capable leader to himself.

In Engineering, several engineers mock Yaphit for the idea of a quantum bubble that now endangers the lives of the ship. LaMarr is incensed, and says that the idea was both his and Yaphit's.

LaMarr and Mercer leave in a shuttle and open a Spatial Conduit over the two vessels, and then drag the Orville by tractor beam to the next aperture to three-dimensional space. While they fly the shuttle, LaMarr talks about his childhood that led to him hiding his own intelligence from the others. Mercer offers the position of Chief Engineer to LaMarr explaining: "Kelly was right about you. She was right about a lot of things."

LaMarr Yaphit Chief Engineer

John LaMarr, now Chief Engineer, greets the Engineering section anew and the episode ends.

The quantum bubble begins to give out as before but the Captain and his newly-minted Chief Engineer manage to drag the Orville through the doorway.

Safe in three dimensions and back on the Orville, Mercer apologizes to Grayson for his behavior; he should have thanked her for all she's done for him, not criticize and resent her for it. Grayson gives Mercer a light kiss before he leaves the room.

LaMarr goes to the Engineering and begins to confidently lead his team, embracing his position as the next Chief of Engineering.

Production[]

Andrew cottee seth macfarlane

Creator Seth MacFarlane and Composer Andrew Cottee together in the studio while the music of New Dimensions is performed and recorded.

New Dimensions was written by creator Seth MacFarlane some time between June and October, 2016,[3] although certain scenes were not finished until after November.[n 1]

The episode is unique in that MacFarlane has stated on the record that New Dimensions was written just "to give John something more to do."[2] He elaborated:

You have a helmsman and a navigator side-by-side. We made this whole deal about Gordon being the best pilot in the fleet and there's John sitting next to him. ... There's a little bit of sacrifice because they're so good together you can no longer have them sitting next to each other, but what we gain is an identity for the character that really ended up A, giving us a story, and B, gave us an anchor to this rogue's gallery down in engineering.[2]

Filming[]

Filming was completed sometime in early July, 2017 under the direction of Kelly Cronin, whose normal position on The Orville is Script Supervisor.[4] Filming took roughly eight days.[5]

Music[]

Composer Andrew Cottee's score took three weeks to complete.[5]

According to The Orville: Original Television Soundtrack - Season 1, songs composed for this episode are "Damage Report / What Happened to the Plants?," "Krill Ships Approaching," "Within the Anomaly / Time to Reflect / Quantum Bubble Is Deteriorating," "Engaging Tractor Beam," and "Mission Complete / Commander Lamarr."

Cottee later commented on scoring the episode:

What I'm actually guided by is people's reactions to what they are seeing, so when they go into this two-dimensional space and there's this look of awe on the faces of the crew, Seth wasn't really saying, "This is what this is going to look like," he was saying, "This is their reaction - this is what they're thinking when they're seeing this." It's always the Human element I was trying to get at - what would it be like if you were a pioneer and you were discovering America and you were seeing this scenery that no one has seen before?[6]

Cottee denies that his music is science-fiction themed, although he admitted that Jerry Goldsmith, composer of Star Trek: The Motion Picture, was an influence.[7] He commented that the music when the crew of the Orville goes to two-dimensional space "might have been the same sound you'd have if they were going underwater and seeing some great coral reef or something."[8]

Themes[]

Like several other episodes of the first season, New Dimensions is a "thematic" episode that develops a story founded on certain moral concepts that are not explicitly stated. The generally accepted interpretation of New Dimensions is that it explores the meaning of self-reliance and personal development, building off of the earlier episodes Command Performance and Firestorm, which explored similar themes.

John LaMarr's childhood spent on a Luddite farming colony taught him to hide his intelligence, but also crafted him into an un-ambitious young man who doubts his own ability to lead. Ed Mercer experiences a crisis of faith in himself when he learns that he attained captaincy only through the advocacy of his ex-wife, and not on his own merits alone. Ed questions his own judgment and place in society, whether he truly deserved to the promotion.

Kelly stands in counter-point against self-doubt: she can see that John and Ed are fully qualified, and becomes their chief advocates. A year ago, Kelly knew Ed had the makings of a fine captain, and successfully pushed for his promotion. Now Kelly recognizes John's unparalleled test scores, and guides him to become Chief Engineer.

Both John and Ed are forced to confront their underlying flaws to survive, and, together on the shuttle, Ed and John realize it was their own talents that saved the Orville from attacking Krill and travel through two-dimensional space. Ed promotes John to Chief Engineer, but also sees that he can accept the help of friends.

Reception[]

Viewership[]

New Dimensions was well received by TV audiences, and enjoys an 8.2 rating on IMDB.[9] It was watched by 3.63 million viewers in the United States, roughly on par for its Thursday night time slot.[10]

Critical Response[]

Though critics and general audiences rarely agreed through most of the first season of The Orville, New Dimensions marked a rare consensus between both sides. Michael Ahr awarded New Dimensions 4.5 stars and praised the episode for its "completely unique story" and "impressively deep character development."[11]

Nick Wanserski of the AV Club, who had criticized the show for failing to be consistently good, noted that the run of Into the Fold (the previous episode) and New Dimensions indicated that the show may have hit its stride.[12]

A rare dissent: Jammer of Jammer's Reviews awarded the episode 2.5 out of four stars, calling the writing an "amateurish" attempt to retcon LaMarr's character from a laid-back, underachieving officer into a brilliant prodigy.[13]

Trivia[]

  • The notion of a quantum bubble is first introduced in Old Wounds when Doctor Aronov explains how the quantum accelerator works. There, the accelerator generates a bubble and time within the bubble is accelerated. Here, a quantum bubble is used to maintain three-dimensional space while inside two-dimensional space.
  • At the start of the episode, the Orville is docked at Newton's unidentified space station. Despite references to many space stations and outposts in the Planetary Union this season, this is the first time that we see a station since the Union Dockyard in Old Wounds.

Timeline[]

  • The episode takes place in April 2420.
  • Chief Engineer Steve Newton transfers off the Orville to a space station.
    • A good-bye party is held for Steve. Bortus eats prawgus cake with a piece of Yaphit's body; Yaphit retrieves it within an hour.
  • Repairs to the Orville after its damaging run-in with the spacial anomaly take two hours, 31 minutes.
    • Repairs to the ship take two hours, 31 minutes.
      • The Horbalak captain dies one hour, 15 minutes later.
      • The Krill arrive under one hour, 46 minutes later.

References[]

  • Bortus's "iron stomach" is established in the opening of Krill, when he eats any organic or inorganic the crew gives him.
  • Creator Seth MacFarlane revealed that John and Kelly's conversation about matter synthesis, reputation, and the end of money is an intentional nod to "replicators" and a post-scarcity economy in Star Trek.[14]
  • The song played during Steve Newton's farewell party is "Learnin' the Blues" by the Oscar Peterson Trio.
  • Ed tells Kelly about the book Flatland, a story set in a two-dimensional world.
    • After Kelly calls him a "prideful ass," he asks if they are in a Jane Austen novel.
  • Yaphit accuses Ed of specieism against gelatinous beings, to which Ed replies, "I am not, I have several gelatinous friends." This is a reference to a trope of white Americans fending off accusations of racism by saying they have several friends of color.
  • To explain how the Orville will preserve three-dimensional space within flattened, two-dimensional space, the crew references the TARDIS of Doctor Who, Oscar the Grouch's trashcan from Sesame Street, and Snoopy's doghouse from Charlie Brown.
  • In Home, Solana Kitan was excited to hear about two-dimensional space from her sister.

Episode titles[]

Title Language Translation
新維度空間 (Xīn wéidù kōngjiān) Chinese "new space dimension"
Intelligence cachée French "hidden intelligence"
Flachgelegt German "laid flat"
Új dimenziók Hungarian "new dimensions"
Nuove dimensioni Italian "new dimensions"
異次元への挑戦 (I jigen e no chōsen) Japanese "challenge to a new dimension"
Новые горизонты Russian "new horizons"
Nuevas dimensiones Spanish "new dimensions"
Нові розміри Ukranian "new sizes"

Cast[]

Names and titles are as they appear in the credits unless otherwise noted.

Main Cast[]

Recurring Cast[]

Guest Cast[]

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. The character of Lieutenant Dann was not created until November, 2016, and was re-introduced to the script. See "PLANETARY UNION NETWORK: EPISODE 20". Planetary Union Network. June 17, 2018.

References[]

  1. New Dimensions
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 "Mindscape 58 | Seth MacFarlane on Using Science Fiction to Explore Humanity". Sean Carroll. Aug. 5, 2019.
  3. "The Orville Fan Podcast w/ David A. Goodman (06)". Planetary Union Network. Oct. 14, 2017.
  4. "SDCC 2017: The Orville - Adrianne Palicki, Seth McFarlane". Whedonopolis Videos. July 26, 2017.
  5. 5.0 5.1 "I believe each score takes roughly 3 weeks for the composer to write". MacFarlane, Seth. Twitter. Oct. 12, 2017.
  6. "Voyage to Utopia" in The Orville: Original Television Soundtrack - Season 1 by Jeff Bond (2019). Pg. 14-15.
  7. "Voyage to Utopia" in The Orville: Original Television Soundtrack - Season 1 by Jeff Bond (2019). Pg. 15.
  8. "Voyage to Utopia" in The Orville: Original Television Soundtrack - Season 1 by Jeff Bond (2019). Pg. 16.
  9. ""The Orville" New Dimensions (TV Episode)". IMDB. Last accessed Jan. 29, 2018.
  10. "The Orville:Season One Ratings". TVSeriesFinale.com. Last accessed Jan. 29, 2018.
  11. Ahr, Michael. "The Orville Episode 11 Review: New Dimensions". Den of Geek. Nov. 30, 2017.
  12. Wanswerski, Nick. "We meet John LaMarr again for the first time on a solid Orville". AV Club. Dec. 1, 2017.
  13. Epsicokhan, Jamal. "New Dimensions". Jammer's Reviews. Last accessed Jan. 29, 2018.
  14. Saadia, Manu. "Seth MacFarlane Discusses “The Orville,” “Star Trek,” and the Struggle to Make Science Fiction Funny". The New Yorker. Sept. 9, 2017.
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