“The Return of the Archons” is written by Boris
Sobelman, from a story by Gene Roddenberry, and is directed by Joseph Pevney. It was filmed under production code 22, was
the 21st episode of Star Trek Season 1, and was broadcast on
February 9, 1967.
Up front I need to be honest about this episode, this
was a very difficult episode for me to get into and it’s because it feels very
much at odds with what Star Trek is in a lot of ways. There is a brilliant piece of speculative
fiction here devaluing extreme conformity, but this is an episode that is very
confused about how it wants to present these ideas. Watching it in 2023 rips it from the very
important context of early 1967, the Vietnam War, and the Cold War. This is a time where American propaganda
against communism was at an all time high while the anti-war movement was on
the rise. “The Return of the Archons” as
an episode fits almost perfectly in stoking fears about communism as well as
the fear of conformity that was perceived to have come with it. This conformity is generally seen as an
extension of collectivism, especially with ideas of people working together for
the good of the society against the individualism of the American Dream. It’s an episode about a planet where the people
all share a gestalt consciousness controlled by Landru, with the Festival of
Red Hour sending the young into a violent and sexual frenzy on the streets. The computer has to be stopped by a very
small resistance of three people, all older gentlemen who are ineffective
against the strong forces of an ever expanding hive mind. This, combined with our protagonist’s almost
immediately being driven to take down the computer by any means necessary,
reveals much about Gene Roddenberry’s ideas behind the episode.
Sobelman’s script and Roddenberry’s ideas are
interesting in that this is the first time Star Trek mentions the Prime
Directive, stating that the Enterprise crew are not to interfere in the
development of other planets with some explicit exceptions. The way “The Return of the Archons” plays it
feels like there is an attempt to satirize American exceptionalism and
interference with mention made of the crew of the Archon, a starship
that disappeared a century ago and left the computer in charge of this
planet. This could have made “The Return
of the Archons” great at exploring the effects of American imperialism and colonialism,
but instead it is an episode that almost runs out of time showing the imagery
of this society instead of contemplating where Starfleet, and by extension
America, has made its mistakes. The
episode also just has some structural problems since all of the material
towards this particular reading is done in very quick exposition while the rest
of the episode fits very much into the ideas of American exceptionalism and
freedom. Joseph Pevney directs, this
being his second episode for the series, and his direction plus the costumes of
the episode is something incredibly positive.
Since the society on the surface has an 1800s Earth culture, period
costumes are used and it makes the episode visually stand out in a very
interesting way. The action itself is
shot very well, despite almost getting in the way of the story. The episode starts in media res and there isn’t
enough time devoted to really showing the audience how we got to that
point. George Takei and DeForest Kelley
are the standouts here as they are made ‘of the Body’ in communion with the
computer leaving these dopey performances.
The climax of Kirk essentially
contradicting the computer into suicide is also a nice touch, but the
characterization of Kirk is especially 1960s American.
Overall, “The Return of the Archons” while not a bad episode
and well-remembered for its iconic imagery (it was an inspiration for The Purge
of all things) is an episode with a very many problems, especially in its messaging
being very out of line with the rest of Star Trek in a lot of ways has
set out to do. It especially feels weird
to be an idea from Gene Roddenberry too.
Structurally there are pacing issues and almost not enough time to
explore ideas that would make the messaging far more nuanced than the very
simple ideas against conformity and collectivism without examining in any real
depth as to why these things could be wrong (the argument presented is a loss
of free will but doesn’t factor human empathy into the equation). The performances, direction, and costumes all
go a long way to make it watchable and it isn’t bad per say but it is very
messy. 5/10.
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