“Pen Pals” is written by: Melinda M. Snodgrass, from a
story by: Hannah Louise Shearer, and is directed by: Winrich Kolbe. It was produced under production code 141,
was the 15th episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation Season
2, the 41st episode overall, and was broadcast on May 1, 1989.
The Prime Directive is one of those Star Trek
ideas that the original series often used to create moral dilemmas about the
interference with civilizations that lack the technology for space travel. It’s Gene Roddenberry’s answer to colonialism
and imperialism, something he clearly thought had no place in what humanity
should be. This is a point where
Roddenberry is completely correct, colonialism is one of the great evils of
humanity and telling stories threading the needle between interference and the
human desire to help each other. “Pen
Pals” is one of the more interesting scripts to play around with the Prime
Directive. Star Trek: The Next
Generation had attempted Prime Directive plots before, most notably “Justice”
which is one of the worst episodes of the show, positing that the Prime
Directive means no interference on other planets ever even when directly in
contact with them. “Pen Pals”, on the
other hand, initially keeps the Enterprise out of contact with the civilizations
in this unexplored galaxy. The premise
is that the Enterprise arrives after an unmanned probe found lush
ecosystems, to planets that have been destroyed. This destruction is natural, geological
activity is what is destroying them, the people living on these planets having no
part in the activity. The moral dilemma
for the episode is if the Enterprise can reverse these natural processes
with their advanced technology, a scene in the second act laying out the
question of how far can we justify saving a people. Sure a natural disaster seems clear cut, but
what if it were something like man made climate change, or a dictatorship, or
war?
This moral dilemma is perhaps where the episode
slightly falls flat. The script is
written by Melinda M. Snodgrass who had written “The Measure of a Man”, another
episode with a moral dilemma at its center, and she clearly understands how to
write characters engaging in a dilemma.
The dilemma is a bit too silly, however, because it does posit that
these different scenarios are the same, actually, something that is generally a
problem. This episode writes out a clear
cut case of a situation where lives can be saved, and the Enterprise
doesn’t actually have to reveal itself to do it. The only reason it is even considered is that
Data has been receiving radio signals from a child, Sarjenka, and forming this friendship. Brent Spiner plays it incredibly well, the episode
also being one where Data is portrayed as more human than the rest of the
series, when the episode concludes with Sarjenka’s memory wiped to stay in line
with the Prime Directive Data leaves a token for her to remember him by
(something she won’t be able to do, so it's clearly sentiment on his part). Having a child represent the people on these
planets is a particularly good conceit to get the crew of the Enterprise
and the audience on the side of breaking the Prime Directive, children represent
innocence and it’s very difficult to leave a child to die on late 1980s
television. This is also notable for the
first time in Star Trek’s history where a child character actually works
completely, something this franchise has struggled with to say the least.
The B-plot of the episode is also structured interestingly. The episode itself takes place over the
course of six weeks of investigation, done in a single cut, and only made
apparent because Wesley Crusher is conducting the geological survey of these
planets to discover why they are breaking up.
Wil Wheaton is clearly relishing the material, it’s one all about
teaching the kids in the audience responsibility and leadership. Wesley has to pick a team, decide what tests
to run, and present the results to the crew.
It is the reason that the Enterprise can save the day, but where
it really shines is allowing Wesley to have a relationship to grow with Riker,
Jonathan Frakes providing this fatherly influence. Particularly odd, however, is that when
deciding to give this task to Wesley there is clearly a dissent from Dr.
Pulaski which is meant to be from Beverly Crusher, but Gates McFadden was
unjustly fired for speaking her mind, so the reassignment of the idea doesn’t
quite work as well as it could be. It
feels even slightly out of character for Pulaski to have this moment, perhaps
being more suitable for Picard who actually spends a lot of the episode as the
general opposite force to Data (and revealing that he likes horseback riding in
an early sequence on the holodeck).
Overall, “Pen Pals” is a really solid examination of
the Prime Directive and its function within Star Trek. The moral dilemma at its center suffers
slightly from being a bit too clear cut, though this is an episode that spends
more time getting into the question of why these planets are being destroyed
and establishing the relationship between Data and Sarjenka before proposing
the dilemma. The B-plot is equally solid
even if it does have similar weaknesses of not having as many characters close
to Wesley Crusher as a character. It’s
currently the fourth in a streak of good episodes, the strongest run of Star
Trek: The Next Generation thus far, further indicating that the series has
found a footing despite everything working against it. 7/10.

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