“Captain’s Holiday” is written by: Ira Steven Behr and
is directed by: Chip Chalmers. It was
produced under production code 167, was the 19th episode of Star
Trek: The Next Generation Season 3, the 67th episode overall,
and was broadcast on April 2, 1990.
“Captain’s Holiday” is the definition of a good time. It’s an episode of Star Trek: The Next
Generation that is slightly fitting to be reviewed while I am away on
vacation (I am writing this review before I leave for posting over the weekend). Ira Steven Behr writes an episode that is
utterly ridiculous: Captain Picard being overworked is tricked by his crew,
mainly Riker, Troi, and Crusher to get him to go to the pleasure planet of Risa. This is some of the best character interactions
in the episode: from Troi’s tactic of claiming that her mother is going to join
the Enterprise on the Starbase for maintenance which just pushes him
away, Crusher attempts the indirect approach by proposing a completely
different crew member is burnt out and desperately needs a vacation, and Riker
just proposes his general charm and the ridiculous thought that Picard might
need to have a relationship that is not strictly professional. Jonathan Frakes and Marina Sirtis in particular
play it specifically as if Riker and Troi have been trying to profess their
love for one another but Picard being a stick in the mud has come in between their
relationship. It’s genuinely a hilarious
moment that’s entirely in the subtext.
The implication that Picard would wish to go to Risa also feels
deliberately the wrong vacation for Jean-Luc Picard, he brings far too many
books with him to read intent on staying alone by the poolside for the entire
trip. Ira Steven Behr also doesn’t forget
that this is a show with an ensemble cast, giving every main cast member in the
episode at least one little comedic moment to push Picard into taking a
vacation.
This is only the first act of the episode, an act that
takes up perhaps just a bit too much time to get to the actual point of the
episode. “Captain’s Holiday” is a big
tribute to adventure films with treasure hunting, ridiculous time travel, and
several beautiful women flirting with Picard because Riker tricks him into buying
a souvenir that is basically an upside down pineapple. Ira Steven Behr’s script is maintaining a
tone between the Roger Moore James Bond films and Spielberg’s Indiana Jones
trilogy, attempting to connect the time travel shenanigans to Picard’s own
personal future. Jennifer Hetrick plays Vash,
our Bond girl though given far more characterization than the typical Bond girl. Vash is an archeologist’s assistant looking
for the Tox Uthat, that is our MacGuffin of the episode, after her mentor had
died, though Picard is wrapped up in several lies. Hetrick and Stewart have fantastic chemistry throughout the episode and Vash is far too much a presence to waste in a single appearance. Our Bond villain of the episode is Max
Grodenchik’s Sovak, welcoming back the Ferengi into Star Trek: The Next
Generation in a role that intentionally is leaning heavily into the comedy
of the episode. The joke being that capitalist
scruples, the lack of, are eventually a fruitless endeavor. “Captain’s Holiday” is about fruitless
endeavors, Behr concludes the episode by noting that Picard and Vash’s actions were
only ensuring a future would come to pass, not altering the timeline in any
notable way.
“Captain’s Holiday” is in a way all about subversion. Patrick Stewart may have wanted an episode
full of action and adventure, but Jean-Luc Picard as a character still feels
ever so slightly out of place in this type of adventure. The adventure is a pastiche of a very old
type of adventure film, something that the original series of Star Trek
would actually be more comfortable in. Yet,
the episode works because Picard as a character is so out of place in this genre. Despite Gene Rodenberry envisioning the character
as Horatio Hornblower in space, Horatio Hornblower isn’t actually an American
hero while the protagonist of this subgenre of film is explicitly American. Where the episode actually falls down is
honestly the limits of being an episode of television made in 1990. The effort is being put in by director Chip
Chalmers and he is shooting most of the episode well, but the way the action is
shot is limited by the resources available and the closer, quieter scenes aren’t
quite allowed to be as quiet or intimate as Ira Steven Behr’s script really is
allowing for. There is also the concern
that this is just the type of episode certain people will not really connect
with because you have to be willing to go into some very silly places for it to
work. The pacing is not quite at the
three act structure of a television episode, the first act actually taking up a
bit too much time leaving the second and third acts to be slightly truncated.
Overall, “Captain’s Holiday” works because of how much
fun Patrick Stewart is having getting to play the reluctant Starship Captain
out of his element. There is something
magical about the 26 episode season allowing an episode like this to exist, it’s
filler focused exclusively on watching one character dragged into a vacation
because he has been working too hard. It
would not be made today, and the plot would not allow a self-fulfilling
prophecy of time travel with a reluctant hero, but because of where it is
placed in the season it is nothing but a good time. 7/10.






