Saturday, November 30, 2024

The Naked Now by: J. Michael Bingham, from a story by: John D.F. Black and J. Michael Bingham, and directed by: Paul Lynch

 


“The Naked Now” is written by: J. Michael Bingham (a pseudonym for D.C. Fontana), from a story by: John D.F. Black and Bingham, and is directed by: Paul Lynch.  It was produced under production code 103, was the 3rd episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, and was broadcast on October 5, 1987.

 

“The Naked Time” was the fourth episode of Star Trek and is one of those early episodes that really was successful at endearing the audience to characters by playing on what had come before to subvert who these characters are.  Star Trek: The Next Generation decided that the third episode they aired, the second time the show was airing, was to remake the episode after a pilot that was almost entirely unsuccessful in establishing new character dynamics or even really doing characterization.  “The Naked Now” was assigned to D.C. Fontana, who co-wrote the pilot and is genuinely one of the best writers for Star Trek, but during production Fontana requested her name to be taken off the script, another indication of the behind the scenes production issues with Star Trek: The Next Generation, Fontana going on to write two more episodes of the season and would have story credit on one final episode before leaving the show entirely, though returning to pen an episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.  The trouble with discussing the plot of “The Naked Now” is that despite the production team saying they simply wanted to homage a classic episode of Star Trek, “The Naked Now” is quite literally the same plot with the aesthetic difference of instead of a planet falling apart, it is a star that is about to collapse.  The Enterprise sends a team to investigate a ship in orbit of the collapsing star after receiving a message of the crew sounding drunk and apparently being blown out into space.  The team investigating the ship is the episode’s best sequence, director Paul Lynch is quite dynamic with the lighting creating an atmosphere that is quite good despite any viewer who has seen “The Naked Time” knowing exactly what is going on.  Geordi La Forge is the first to be infected here and the episode attempts to be a little slow with his descent into the illness, complete with one interesting if slightly problematic scene with LeVar Burton really playing Geordi’s disability as awkward.

 

After this point, things really start to go wrong as more people become infected, including all three of the female main cast members and Wesley Crusher.  Wesley is the one that causes actual problems on the ship, he takes up the role of Lt. Riley from “The Naked Time” in commandeering engineering and holding the Enterprise hostage complete with the same demands for more dessert.  Wil Wheaton is clearly trying with the role that he is given, and I do think Lynch is giving him direction: his scenes with Geordi and Beverly Crusher hint again at deeper character relationships, but the material he is given is quite literally a spoiled brat who thinks he can be in command.  This goes against what was established in “Encounter at Farpoint” where he was characterized as in awe at the Enterprise and wanting to prove himself, not one to just take over the ship and have no regard for the crew and passengers being in danger.  Fontana’s script is smart enough to have him take part in the solution, even if it is an utterly ridiculous amount of technobabble for a quick climax while Data works on drunkenly fixing the ship.

 

Where the episode struggles further is in characterizing everybody else.  The only main cast member who remains uninfected by the end is Michael Dorn as Worf, the trouble being that we don’t actually know much about these characters to understand where their actions while infected take place.  The female characters are given the worst of it: Troi, Yar, and Crusher are all reduced to various states of sexual arousal.  Denise Crosby as Tasha Yar is given the worst of it, being forced to slink around the ship randomly kissing men and getting into a sexual encounter with Data where the episode decides to use that moment to establish the fact that Tasha’s upbringing is one of avoiding rape gangs.  This is a character with sexual trauma that just isn’t explored, it’s using some of the worst possible sexual violence as a background detail in a scene played for comedy.  Gates McFadden probably gets the best treatment of the three (Troi is just reduced to wanting to get back together with Riker), Crusher being the one to still research how to stop the infection.  The male characters, on the other hand, are infected and characterized as bravely pushing through it, especially Jonathan Frakes as Riker, despite the fact that he doesn’t really do anything in terms of solving things.  Picard just gives a bunch of orders and looks confused as Patrick Stewart clearly doesn’t quite know who the character is yet while Brent Spiner as Data is the one doing comic relief.

 

Overall, if “Encounter at Farpoint” was a pilot that was deeply flawed but showed promise of improvement with time, “The Naked Now” is a step in the complete opposite direction.  At its best it is an episode remaking the plot of a far superior episode with characters who had already been established, and at its worst it’s an incredibly uncomfortable and sexist experience, using sexual violence as a joke instead of actually developing the little bit of the characterization the pilot laid down.  3/10.

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