“Hollow Pursuits” is written by: Sally Caves and is
directed by: Cliff Bole. It was produced
under production code 169, was the 21st episode of Star Trek: The
Next Generation Season 3, the 69th episode overall, and was
broadcast on April 30, 1990.
“Hollow Pursuits” really should have been titled “Holo-Pursuits”
as this is an episode exploring what happens when a crewmember becomes addicted
to the fantasies of the holodeck and the consequences therein. This is a very odd episode in many ways since
it’s actually a look at a character with mental health issues, and in exploring
mental health issues the episode is actually attempting sympathy towards
Barclay, played by Dwight Schultz, an officer who clearly is suffering from some
form of anxiety disorder. He clearly has
the knowledge to be a competent crewman and engineer, but struggles with
interpersonal communication which in turn leads to harboring resentment towards
his colleagues. The episode does a
fairly competent job at positioning Barclay as wrong for falling into the
fantasy of the holodeck, there are several sequences where he places his
colleagues in roles of villains for him to defeat as well as the rest of the
crew regularly giving him the nickname Broccoli. This is a nickname started by Wesley Crusher,
something he is told to stop doing but it spreads even up to Captain Picard who
uses it right to Barclay. Picard is
treated as in the wrong for this, it is portrayed as an incredibly awkward faux
pas, though Picard doesn’t actually face any consequences. Schultz’s performance is doing much of the legwork
for the episode, because there are some major issues with Sally Caves’
script. Schultz plays the role very much
as well meaning but unable to communicate and it has caused him to become
self-isolating. That self-isolation becomes
resentful and clearly wants the respect from his coworkers, but it’s more than
that.
Barclay as a character is also a man in a television
show written in 1990. As a character, he
is explicitly a misogynist: his fantasies specifically prop up his own sense of
masculinity as either a strong man or swashbuckling hero while Troi and Crusher
are presented as the only women in the fantasies. Crusher is portrayed in Barclay’s fantasy as
a mothering figure specifically to him while Troi is reduced to a sex
object. Now Troi as a sex object is something
that Star Trek: The Next Generation struggles with, but here this is an
episode that is actually aware that she is being reduced to this. Troi as ship’s counselor is given material to
be sympathetic towards Barclay, until his instability confronts her with her
holodeck double which the tells to “muzzle it” with the comments about being a
goddess of empathy. It’s intentionally
creepy, Barclay is implied to have rejected Troi’s counselor services when he
desperately needs them. The rest of the
regular cast is largely written out of character. Some of this is possibly down to the perspective
of the episode clearly meant to be Barclay’s so the viewer may be seeing them
through their eyes, but there are moments where Riker in particular is quite
cruel. He does not get much focus, but
throughout there is just this lack of empathy and care that Picard has to call
out at points which are off. Again some
of this is also clearly because Barclay is written to be in several ways
morally repugnant, the episode proposing it is partially a result of his self-isolation,
but the script also does have moments where Barclay is just treated
terribly. Wesley Crusher is responsible
for most of them: there is the rather unflattering nickname but also a moment
where Wesley just does not let Barclay even get a word in when he is reporting on
the engineering issues plaguing the Enterprise.
Though the episode is focused on Barclay what helps “Hollow
Pursuits” work is that unlike episodes which focus on one-off characters, this
is equally an episode about Geordi La Forge having to be Barclay’s superior
officer. Geordi’s plot, the emotional
B-plot of the episode because while the conflict is several mini-misadventures
that link in the end to a leaking biological sample, the episode really is
interested in examining Geordi’s command.
LeVar Burton actually gets his best material of this season (so far) in
this episode, playing Geordi as the most understanding of the regular cast
behind Picard. He takes advice from his commanding
officers (and Guinan in a particularly great little character moment) to put
his dislike and frustrations towards Barclay aside to understand the man and help
him work through his issues. This does
have the underlying message involving someone’s personal issues to be other
people’s problems, especially when those problems are these biases and
bigotries underneath are being placed on the one prominent black member of the
crew, but then again this is a show made in 1990 by a mostly white production
staff. Caves’ script is interesting in
that it does not at any point really invalidate Geordi’s feelings towards
Barclay, even when the climax in the holodeck happens the episode portrays the
crew as correct for being disturbed by the fantasy even if they are attempting
understanding towards Barclay in equal measure.
Overall, “Hollow Pursuits” from the perspective of
someone watching over 35 years later actually does play quite well in terms of
mental health advocacy. The biggest stumbles
are in a script that mischaracterizes the regulars even with the argument that
we are not in the typical perspective during the episode. Barclay is an interesting character that is
played well despite the character lacking much of the charm of a typical
character. Were it made today the nuance
would be brought a little more to the forefront while the direction from Cliff
Bole would also be more than the serviceable visuals we have. The discomfort feels intentional at points even
if there are some big blunders in portraying that discomfort, though the
material for Geordi La Forge is particularly great. 7/10.






