Media Archives:
- 30-second episode preview (AVI, 2Mb)
- Simon Tarses sits on trial after being sensed wrong by the
Betazoid, Sabin.
Synopsis:
A retired Starfleet Admiral begins a witch hunt for a traitor aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise after a visiting Klingon officer admits to spying.
When an explosion rips through the U.S.S. Enterprise's warp engine, a visiting Klingon officer is suspected of causing the disaster by providing the Romulans with schematics of the engine. An investigation begins, and Admiral Norah
Satie, renowned for exposing an alien conspiracy against Starfleet, comes out of retirement to help. Based on evidence compiled by Worf, Satie quickly extracts a confession from the Klingon,
J'Ddan, regarding his participation in smuggling diagrams off the ship, but he denies responsibility for the explosion. Satie's Betazoid aid Sabin confirms that J'Ddan is telling the truth, which implies to Satie that there is a co-conspirator aboard the ship.
While questioning crew members who had contact with J'Ddan in search for his co-conspirator, Sabin uses his Betazoid powers to detect that one crewman, Simon
Tarses, is lying. He concludes that Tarses is one of the saboteurs. Satie insists that Picard restrict
Tarses' activities aboard the ship, but the captain refuses to do so without more substantial evidence that he was actually involved. Data and Geordi later conclude that the warp engine explosion was an accident, but Satie still believes that Tarses is a traitor.
After forcing Tarses to confess that he is in fact part
Romulan, Satie enlists Worf's aid in conducting a comprehensive investigation of the crewman's activities and associates. Picard is increasingly uncomfortable with the investigation and meets directly with Tarses himself. A conversation with the shaken but dedicated crewman convinces Picard of his innocence, and he appeals to Satie to stop the investigation. Satie refuses, however, informing Picard that the investigation will expand as Starfleet is sending an admiral to observe.
Angered by Picard's reluctance to aid in her search, Satie summons the captain to be interrogated as a possible traitor in a hearing observed by the Starfleet admiral. During the hearing, Picard makes an impassioned plea for her to give up the witch hunt, invoking quotes regarding freedom made by Satie's late father, a respected Starfleet judge. Consumed with finding the traitor, Satie denounces Picard for quoting her beloved father and then turns vehemently on the captain.
Satie begins to recount some of Picard's past experiences to illustrate her point that he might be a traitor. When her groundless accusations turn into an uncontrollable tirade, the room full of spectators are shocked into silence, and the Starfleet admiral walks out on the hearing in disgust. Soon afterward, the interrogation is recessed, and Worf informs Picard that the admiral has called off the hearings and that Satie has left the ship. Worf apologizes for participating in the debacle, and Picard forgives him, explaining that the price of liberty is constant vigilance.
Timothy Lynch's Star Trek: The Next Generation
Episode Reviews
Review Date: 4/27/91
WARNING: The following article contains spoiler information on this
week's
TNG episode, "The Drumhead". So, if you don't want any spoilers,
don't read
it. (Boy, that should be a generic enough warning--nobody'll know how I
feel,
especially since I'm writing this several hours BEFORE the rest of the
review...:-) )
This starts out really slow, but picks up a LOT. Pretty good overall.
Okay, so I'm a sucker for courtroom dramas. (Makes me wonder why I've
never
been enchanted by "LA Law". Oh well.) This was another
success in the lines
of TOS's "Court-Martial" and TNG's "The Measure of a Man" in
that it managed
to get tons of tension crammed into a very small room. But more on that
after
the synop, like so...
An investigation is underway: there's been a security breach, followed by
an
explosion in engineering which may well have been the result of sabotage.
A
Klingon exobiologist, J'Ddan, is under investigation for the security
breach,
and lots of circumstantial evidence points to him. He denies any
involvement.
Showing up to help the investigation is retired Admiral Nora Satie, who's
smoked out many a conspiracy in the past. Her investigations, combined
with
some of Worf's findings, quickly point to obvious guilt for J'Ddan, who
confesses to his crime. However, when Sabin, a Betazoid aide to Satie,
says
that he appears to be telling the truth in denying the apparent sabotage,
Satie concludes that there's a conspiracy on board.
Satie, whose father was a revered judge in the Federation (required reading
in
the Academy, at least in Picard's time) quickly gets to work. J'Ddan had
few
associates, so the number of people to question is small. Since he
often
received injections, Dr. Crusher is an obvious choice, but she has nothing
useful to give. However, after Simon Tarses, a med-tech, testifies, Sabin
immediately claims that Tarses is frightened and covering up a huge
lie--and
says "there's your man." Picard begins to get worried about this
chain of
events, refusing to hound an innocent man--_especially_ when Geordi and
Data's
investigation later turns up strong evidence that the explosion in
Engineering
was a random accident, not sabotage.
Satie, however, will have none of it, and insists that the lack of
sabotage
doesn't imply a lack of conspiracy. At the second hearing for Tarses
(which
is now open to spectators, incidentally), Sabin ends up using a blatant
lie
about the explosion in Engineering to get Tarses off balance, and accuses
him
of being a known liar about his ancestry (his grandfather was not Vulcan,
but
Romulan). Tarses refuses to answer Sabin's questions.
Picard becomes more and more upset at the turn of events, and reminds Worf
that Tarses has committed no crime. (Worf, however, is by now convinced
that
he "must" seek out the enemies of the Federation.) When Picard
talks to Satie
and demands an end to the hearings, threatening to go to Starfleet
Command,
Satie informs him that she's been in touch with Command, and the hearings
are
to be *expanded*. In addition, her old associate Adm. Henry of
Starfleet
Security is now coming on board to observe the hearings. Picard vows to
fight,
and quickly finds himself ordered to testify at the next set of hearings.
At Picard's hearing, Satie shows little mercy. She questions his devotion
to
the Prime Directive, claiming he's broken it 9 times since taking command
of
the Enterprise. She asks how he can sleep at night after all the
destruction
and loss of life he caused as part of the Borg. The final straw,
however,
comes when Picard quotes her father's old warnings of curtailing freedom:
she
begins to rant that Picard dirties her father's memory by speaking of him,
and
vows to bring down Picard at any cost. Admiral Henry, in response,
merely
gets up--and walks out without a word.
Later, the hearings over and the matter settled, Picard tells Worf that
although Satie is now discredited, others like her will always exist,
waiting
for the right moment to surface. "Vigilance, Mr. Worf. That is
the price we
have to continually pay."
Well, that should do. I had to skimp on a few details to keep it
within
manageable proportions, though. Anyway, on to commentary.
As I said, the story started off rather slowly. In fact, it dragged.
While
most of it was necessary to set up for the later part of the show, I found
myself somewhat disinterested by the early stages of the
investigation.
Basically, I didn't get particularly engrossed until J'Ddan (damn, but
it's
hard to type that correctly :-) ) had actually confessed and the hearings
for
Tarses had begun; in short, until the witch-hunt got underway. The
means
J'Ddan used to transmit information (an optical reader attached to a hypo,
converting data into amino acids and thus using anyone he injects as
carriers
of information) was very interesting, but not really enough to get my
attention for more than a moment or two. It dragged.
However, that changed really fast. As soon as the witch-hunt had started,
I
found it very difficult to think about anything else BUT the show. While
I
often end up thinking about non-Trek stuff during commercials, this time I
was
trying to extrapolate reactions to the last things I'd seen and trying to
figure out exactly what could be done to avoid the problems they faced. I
was
very engrossed, no doubt about it.
The plot was very solid. The one minor plot hole (and that not even a
hole)
is that I think Troi should have been used more than in just the initial
questioning of J'Ddan. After all, two Betazoids (or one and a half, I
guess)
should be better than one, right? Even if Satie would have bristled at
the
concept ("isn't my assistant reliable enough for you?" or something
like
that), I'd still have liked to see it come up. But since Sabin
didn't
actually come up with any wrong feelings (J'Ddan was telling the truth,
and
Tarses WAS covering up a lie), I don't think it would have changed
anything
relevant.
The direction was quite good, at least once the show picked up steam. I
could
tell it was Jonathan Frakes (remember him? :-) ) right off, though--some
of
the shots he used were very reminiscent of similar ones in
"Reunion".
(Specifically, I'm thinking of the shot of Worf from below in
"Reunion", which
looked similar to the one of Worf and J'Ddan in the lift in the teaser
here.)
Not that I mind--I thought both "The Offspring" and
"Reunion" were very well
directed.
A quick, possibly out-of-place interjection. TNG is giving me more and
more
of a serialized impression, and "The Drumhead" was a very good example
of
that. I'm not really talking about all the past continuity mentions here
(the
Prime Directive violations, etc.), but about the very minor subplot with
Worf.
Several times in the course of the show, much mention is made of Worf's
father's alleged treachery at Khitomer (and to VERY good effect; I was
half
ready to snarl a bit at Sabin myself when he accused Worf of being the son
of
a Romulan collaborator...) and of Worf's virtual nonexistence on the
Klingon
homeworld. Nothing was really done with it--it was just emphasized a
great
deal in the course of the show. I think they're getting ready well in
advance
for lead-ins to "Redemption", the season finale--and if they prepare
for it
this far in advance, and this well, I really can't wait.
(In the like vein [yeesh, I'm digressing from my digression!], I found it
interesting that "Conspiracy" was alluded to here for the first time
since its
existence. (I'm talking about Adm. Satie having "uncovered a
conspiracy at
Starfleet Command" just under three years ago here...I doubt they meant it
to
refer to anything else.) One wonders if they're actually thinking
about
getting back to it. We can but hope...)
Anyway, onwards to characterizations and the like. There isn't much to
say
about most of the regulars, because they had very few lines. All of
the
regulars except for Picard and Worf were basically walk-ons, and all did
their
jobs just fine. So with THAT out of the way, let me deal with the guest
stars
first. I guess the three main ones are Satie, Sabin, and Tarses.
Jean Simmons did a surprisingly good job as Adm. Satie. From the preview,
I
wasn't expecting much, but the "I've brought down bigger men than
you,
Picard!" was probably her worst moment of the show. (Nice choice in
clips,
guys. Yeesh.) With a couple of short exceptions (that clip as one,
along
with basically the whole rest of that outburst, which I thought was a
little
overdone), she was rather believable on the whole. In fact, I suppose
she
must have been fairly believable, because I wouldn't have harbored such
strong
feelings towards her character at the end if she hadn't been. (When
she
mentioned the Borg incident at the end, I was muttering various phrases
about
her, her attitude, her somewhat dubious parentage, etc.)
Bruce French (Sabin) was equally good if not better than Ms. Simmons.
He
managed to go from one side of his character to another quite well; I was
feeling rather mellow towards him early on, but was definitely against him
by
the end as well. A lot of that was the writing, but if French hadn't done
as
good a job as he did, I wouldn't have bought him in one of the two
roles.
Nice job.
As for Spencer Simmons (Simon Tarses)...well...he was okay. Not
spectacular,
but decent, and far better than he could have been. In a number of cases,
but
particularly in his case, the show could have degenerated into major
melodrama. Fortunately, it didn't. Simmons wasn't bad, but he's
probably in
the top third of TNG guest stars.
Then for Picard and Worf. Both were TREMENDOUS. Worf was expertly
written
and expertly played--as soon as the little bit about Tarses's grandfather
came
out, I just knew Worf would take that (both the ancestry and his refusal
to
answer any further questions) as "all but" an admission of
guilt. It would
have stunned me to no end had he not. (That's not quite the same thing
as
being predictable, though, which I do dislike. Predictable would have
been
for the investigation to turn up some link to Picard which brought him
down,
and then it all turned out to be a hoax, with someone else, probably one
of
the investigators or something, as the culprit, etc. That would have
been
mighty dull.) It seems to me that a security officer is the perfect
choice
for someone who would be likely to take Satie's attitude hook, line, and
sinker, and see only as far as "the Federation DOES have enemies!",
period.
Lots of bravos here--probably Worf's best show since "Reunion".
Picard. Wow. I've gone on record many times as stating that not only
is
Patrick Stewart amongst my favorite actors, but that Picard is probably my
favorite character on TNG. This clinches it. I empathized more for
him than
I probably ever have. (I suspect that not everyone else will,
however. A lot
of this may be due to the fact that I have VERY strong feelings about the
issues raised here myself, and Picard pretty much said everything I felt
on
the subject, and far more eloquently than I ever could.) If people want
to
see a good example of Patrick Stewart's acting abilities and why I like
Picard
as a character, this show will be a shining reason why.
Let's see, what else. Quickly--the music was okay. I liked the
somewhat dark
sound of the strings in the teaser, but it got overused later, so I guess
it
went neutral, same as usual.
I said before that the plot was solid, but I didn't say why I did think
so.
Let me amend that mistake now. Everything was built very carefully
on
everything else, and given the (in my view) warped mindset Satie started
off
with, a lot of her "conclusions", both about Picard and everything
else, made
sense. Truths were misinterpreted and subtly twisted into extremely
damning
innuendoes. Everything just made SENSE to me, that's all.
In particular, a lot of the main lines of the show (particularly Satie's,
Worf's, and Picard's) rang exceedingly true. A few of them:
"If it was so innocent, why do you hesitate to give us the
names?" I've seen
this used elsewhere, with equal effectiveness. Really nasty,
manipulating,
fear-mongering statement for me, but damn it all, it works.
[Tarses refused to answer about his grandfather]
"That is not a crime, Worf! Nor can we infer his guilt because he
didn't
respond!"
"Sir--if a man were not afraid of the truth, he WOULD answer!"
Just perfect
for both characters, and for both sides of the issue.
"Admiral Satie has ordered you to report to the interrogation room at
0900
hours tomorrow morning. You are to be questioned before the
committee."
LARGE Brrrrrr.........I don't think I'd ever want to be on the receiving
end
of a line like that.
I think I'm just about done, but I should see if I can come up with an
answer
to the implicit challenge in the show, namely what 9 instances Satie's
referring to where Picard broke the Prime Directive. (Granted, her
interpretation was probably a VERY strict one, but still.) I can think
of
three that are clear and obvious violations: "Justice" (rescuing
Wes), "Pen
Pals" (allowing Sarjenka to be helped and saving her planet), and "Who
Watches
the Watchers" (pretty obvious here). As for the other six...hmm...I'm
really
not sure, since the level of the culture is sometimes murky. I'll work on
it.
I suppose that just about wraps it up. I liked the show a lot once it
got
going. Whether you will...depends. I liked it because I'm a sucker
for
courtroom dramas, and because I have very strong feelings about the issues
raised herein (i.e. McCarthyist tactics). If you've been left cold by
other
courtroom-type Trek (like "The Measure of a Man"), I doubt you'll like
it as
much as I did. If you want action, you're out of luck. If you want
comedy,
you're definitely out of luck--this was a dead serious episode from
beginning
to end. But I thought that a lot of it was truly gripping.
Anyway, onto the numbers. I should mention that I'm changing my rating
system
a little: it's silly to have a whole separate rating and equal
consideration
given for "Technical", i.e. music, effects, etc., since I really
don't
consider it the equal of the other aspects of the show. I think I'll
change
it into a +1 to -1 rating which adds on to the rating I get from the other
three. With that in mind...
Plot: 9.5. A tiny bit off for not at least mentioning the use of
Troi, but
rock-solid otherwise.
Plot Handling: 7. Three points off for the slow start, but that's
it.
Characterization: 10. The absolutely fantastic Worf and Picard more
than
make up for the slight problems with
one or two of the guests.
TOTAL: 9, rounding up for the slightly better than average music.
Definitely
a keeper.
NEXT WEEK:
Wait a second. Did I read this right? Are they trying to do a
Lwaxana Troi
story STRAIGHT? Angels and ministers of grace defend us...well, we'll see.
Tim Lynch (Cornell's first Astronomy B.A.; one of many Caltech grad students)
BITNET: tlynch@citjuliet
INTERNET: tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
UUCP: ...!ucbvax!tlynch%juliet.caltech.edu@hamlet.caltech.edu
"With the first link, a chain is forged. The first speech censured,
the first
thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably."
--
Copyright 1991, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to
ask...
This article is explicitly prohibited from being used in any off-net
compilation without due attribution and *express written consent of the
author*. Walnut Creek and other CD-ROM distributors, take note.
Related Links:
Where
to Watch - Local channels and airtimes.
VHS, Laserdisc and DVD availability.
Cast:
Patrick Stewart as Jean-Luc Picard
Jonathan Frakes as William Thomas Riker
Brent Spiner as Data
LeVar Burton as Geordi La Forge
Michael Dorn as Worf
Gates McFadden as Beverly Crusher
Marina Sirtis as Deanna Troi
Guest Cast:
Spencer Garrett as Simon Tarses
Jean Simmons as Admiral Satie
Bruce French as Sabin
Henry Woronicz as J'Ddan
Ann Shea as Nelien
Earl Billings as Starfleet Admiral
Creative staff:
Director: Jonathan Frakes
Written By: Jeri Taylor