“The Last Outpost” is written by: Herbert Wright, from
a story by: Richard Krzmeien, and is directed by: Richard Colla. It was produced under production code 107,
was the 5th episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, and
was broadcast on October 19, 1987.
Star Trek
introduced the Klingons late into its first season in the episode “Errand of
Mercy”, establishing them as already having an intergalactic Cold War with the
Federation through their empire and in an episode that saw them coming to blows,
already aware of what the other side was capable of. Star Trek: The Next Generation, in
developing a future post-Klingon empire, wanted to recreate a long-running
enemy to match the pop culture status of the Klingons and Gene Roddenberry came
up with the Ferengi, mentioned in “Encounter at Farpoint” before appearing
proper in “The Last Outpost”. This
episode was produced as the seventh episode, but shown fifth for whatever reason
and it’s the closest Star Trek: The Next Generation has gotten to
producing an episode that is actually good.
This is an episode of two halves: buildup to the reveal of the Ferengi’s
actual appearance and the fact that the trouble the Enterprise finds
itself in is also affecting them, and the payoff of it being the remnants of a
third, godlike empire of aliens turning it into a remake of “Errand of Mercy”
with much less charm. The back half of
the episode is really where things fall apart: the Ferengi almost immediately
stop being a threat and reveal themselves to be sniveling capitalists and
particularly boring ones at that. When
given any real pushback they begin to lie to the godlike alien apparition trying
to make humanity look bad, Armin Shimerman playing the Ferengi leader on the
planet as especially over-the-top. This
is an episode that also ends in a complete anti-climax, almost rushing to fill
the runtime and sidelining the Ferengi as any sort of threat, though allowing
Jonathan Frakes as Riker to show off his own philosophy.
There is the possibility that this is an episode is
attempting to be more comedic when the Ferengi are involved: this has a running
gag with Data being trapped in a Chinese finger trap that ends with a box being
sent to the Ferengi as a way to annoy them.
A charitable reading is that screenwriter Herbert Wright wants to
directly make the Ferengi look pathetic as a way to show the outdated nature of
capitalism in the far future, which seems in line with Star Trek in
general. Wright does become another
writer who decides to write Tasha Yar as being sexually harassed, this time by
the Ferengi who for whatever reason have a culture where Ferengi women are
naked and clothes on women make the men wish to assault Yar to strip her. This is the third episode in a row where
something uncomfortable like this happens to Yar. There are some good things in the back half
of the episode however, mainly the few scenes on the Enterprise as the power
is going out, Picard, Troi, and Crusher ensuring everyone stays warm as death
looms. There is a particularly
interesting scene between Picard and Crusher, Crusher reflecting on the danger
and the fact that she’s keeping Wesley in their quarters and contemplated
sedating him so he didn’t have to suffer.
It’s quite a dark scene, and is just left hanging in the air that both
Gates McFadden and Patrick Stewart play incredibly well, Stewart for the first
time in the series really feeling like he’s getting how to play Picard.
The first half of the episode is all buildup, but it’s
quite good buildup. The decision is made
to start the episode with a chase between the Enterprise and a Ferengi
ship, taking nearly a third of the episode before hearing from a Ferengi, and a
further five minutes to actually show the Ferengi, the leader on the ship being
played better by Mike Gomez going less over the top than those on the
planet. It takes cues from the original
series episode “Balance of Terror”, the best episode of the original series,
though it lacks any parallelism between the two captains and crews at play. It is, however, the setup for a good episode even
if the setup is derivative, the derivative nature allows the crew to actually begin
to gel slightly, though this could be because this was the seventh episode produced. It is not until getting to the planet that
the Ferengi become incompetent villains, the initial discussions are largely
played straight and that is for the best.
The design is also quite impressive, if a bit silly which adds to the
question if the Ferengi were ever really meant to be taken seriously like the
first half of the episode attempts to make them. Some of this also may be down to director
Richard Colla, once again a director who only did a single episode of Star
Trek: The Next Generation and he doesn’t really set up a whole lot of
interesting shots. At best his direction
is incredibly flat, and at worst it actually is quite poor at framing a lot of
things in the episode, making this one slightly more difficult to actually
watch, especially on the bridge viewscreen where the Ferengi leader really
needed to be framed as intimidating.
Overall, it’s actually quite surprising that “The Last
Outpost” is heralded as one of the worst episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation,
because it’s actually the closest the series has come so far to being
good. The main cast is finally starting
to click or at least understanding their roles with even the weaker material
given to them and the first half of the episode is a fairly enjoyable
watch. The back half lets it down
completely as things devolve into an incredibly inferior, almost poorly comedic
remake of “Errand of Mercy”, simplified and rushed, but it is more an average
hour of television instead of anything all that bad, and after the streak it
feels like maybe something good could be on the horizon. 5/10.
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