“Patterns of Force” is written by John Meredyth Lucas
and is directed by Vincent McEveety. It
was filmed under production code 52, was the 21st episode of Star
Trek Season 2, the 50th episode of Star Trek, and was
broadcast on February 16, 1968.
“Patterns of Force” is an uncomfortable watch. This is an episode that in 1968 decides it
wishes to deconstruct fascism and directly and openly uses fascist imagery of
Nazi Germany in the costuming, the characters, and actual propaganda footage of
Hitler. The attempt is not one of making
light of fascism nor playing up the camp factor of seeing our heroes dressed in
the uniforms of Nazis. John Meredyth
Lucas was the adopted son of Casablanca director Michael Curtiz, making
him part of a family who lost relatives to the Nazi regime. The stinger of the episode directly quotes the
idea of “absolute power corrupts absolutely” and even the joke from Kirk feels
more subdued. The camp of “Patterns of
Force” is clearly unintentional, arising from seeing our heroes dressed as
Nazis, amplified later in the episode by having the Enterprise replicate
a Nazi uniform for McCoy and he struggles getting his boots on, an actual plot point
this episode attempts to employ for drama.
This is also an episode that is not subtle, several of the characters are
clearly future alterations of Jewish figures, the resistance includes Isak and
Abrom (Isaac and Abram/Abraham), played by Richard Evans and William Wintersole
respectively, and the oppressed group being the Zeons, a clear alteration of
Zion. These are all attempts to make the
situation feel real and historic, despite the futuristic setting, as well as
Lucas’ interest in examining the idea of the Prime Directive being broken. As an episode it’s actually quite effective,
the retroactive camp being there because some obvious moments of comic relief
being there so the episode isn’t incredibly dark because of the subject matter,
something that makes sense for television despite not playing well now. The cast in particular using their natural
American accents adds this added layer of sinister familiarity, there were
American sympathizers in the war and Neo-Nazi groups have always existed in the
aftermath of World War II. Vincent
McEveety is also a great, dynamic director for this one, really leaning into making
it feel dark with levity in places.
The actual plot of the episode involves Kirk finding
one of his Starfleet Academy professors, John Gill, in the role of Fuhrer for
this fascist regime after he and Spock are captured and tortured by this
particular regime. The sequences in
captivity are genuinely uncomfortable as is the general aghast nature of Kirk and
Spock, Shatner and Nimoy selling the horror of seeing a regime revived in the
future which is generally peaceful and anti-fascist. The sequence of getting in contact with the
resistance, including a test to prove the loyalty is well done as well, before
the plan to infiltrate the regime at a speech from Gill is where the episode
begins to really slow down. This is where
the philosophical aspects of the episode really begins to come to the forefront
and somebody thought it was a good idea to mention weird sympathies as to the
efficiency of fascism and the original Nazi regime. It’s one line from Spock that feels entirely
out of line with the rest of the episode, and it only begins to fall apart from
there. “Pattern of Force” uses this to
imply that not only is fascism efficient, but it is also the responsibility of
one man who will then be used as a figurehead by another, in this case Gill
having mentally deteriorated and was taken over. Obviously this is meant to be read about the inefficiency
of authoritarianism and fascism in general, but it’s something that doesn’t play
well. This is also an episode that ends
with calls for peace when the Nazi regime begins to fall, something that feels
far too 1960s in a bad way. These are Nazis,
this is an episode that explicitly uses Nazi rhetoric to show the horrors of
the regime; it should not be ending with an attempt to renounce cycles of
violence because this is not an issue, the Prime Directive being explicitly stated
to be necessary tot prevent fascism, this misunderstanding how fascism can come
about. Luckily it doesn’t imply a
tolerance for fascism.
Overall, “Patterns of Force” is an episode that despite
an outlandish premise, actually is largely successful at pulling it off with a
nearly appropriate tone and plot. It
shines when it holds a dark mirror to the United States of the time with a cast
using their American accents, despite the ridiculousness of seeing our heroes
dressed in those costumes. The attempt
to explore how things fall apart is admirable, but the back half of the episode
doesn’t work as well as the setup despite being blatant and unafraid of what it’s
trying to do. Though I don’t actually
know if this is an episode that could have been pulled off better without
massively overhauling the premise and imagery so it gets a very conflicted
6/10.
No comments:
Post a Comment