“Who Watches the Watchers” is written by: Richard
Manning and Hans Beimler and is directed by: Robert Wiemer. It was produced under production code 152,
was the 4th episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 3,
the 52nd episode overall, and was broadcast on October 16, 1989.
It’s very possible that when Star Trek: The Next
Generation is all said and done, “Who Watches the Watchers” might just be
the definitive Prime Directive focused episode.
Sure, it’s an episode that writers Richard Manning and Hans Beimler
don’t exhaustively examine the idea, the premise of Starfleet having a hidden
base observing a population and planet secretly feels like it goes against the
idea of the Prime Directive because it could cause problems like this, but it
also could be intentional in the script and I’m just misreading the setup of
the episode. It’s an idea just asking
for trouble, and sure enough the inciting incident is the cloaking device
shielding the base from the Mintakan’s malfunctions and a Mintakan sees it,
approaches, and is shocked because of the malfunction. Crusher has to save him, but that involves
bringing him to the Enterprise and everything spirals from there: Picard
is seen as a god overseeing the overseers because an attempted memory wipe
doesn’t work and the religion essentially spirals. Much of the conflict of the episode actually
comes from the crew of the Enterprise struggling to undo the damage as
it spirals further and further out of control: there is a fantastic moment
where Crusher insists on healing Liko because it won’t actually make the
situation worse and Starfleet is responsible for his injuries. That responsibility aspect of Starfleet is
what is really at the heart of the episode, Manning and Beimler are very clear
that it is the crew’s duty to undo the damage that they have done to this
society and not be the gods that the Prime Directive is partially in place to
stop humanity becoming.
The universe of Star Trek is fascinating on the
subject of gods, several episodes of the original series include aliens that
are godlike, and yet Christian imagery at points is present in episodes like “Bread
and Circuses” that suggest Christianity is correct and a faith that would recur
throughout the galaxy independently. Much
of this is likely due to the conservative Christianity that dominated the
culture in the United States during the 1960s, Gene Roddenberry was an atheist and
more importantly a humanist but was raised a Southern Baptist, though there is
also some evidence he believed a form of Deism at points in his life. “Who Watches the Watchers” is perhaps the
most explicitly atheistic the franchise has gotten in terms of examining the intersection
between religion and science. The episode
is very much interested in keeping them separate, Picard being the biggest
advocate of talking to the Mintakins and attempting to put their technology
into language they would understand. It
leads to the best scene in the episode where Patrick Stewart delivers a
monologue about how their people started in caves, graduated to huts.
This is a speech given opposite the Mintakan leader
Nuria, played by Kathryn Leigh Scott, who has the perfect timing in not being
able to accept that Picard isn’t a god.
Nuria wants Picard to bring back the dead, something that if he could he
likely would do due to the dead being those killed by a flood months earlier. Both major guest players are two excellent
character actors: Scott as leader and Ray Wise as Liko, the injured Mintakin
who starts the religious fervor. It’s
also built up because the initial attempt is to send Riker and Troi down to the
planet to spread essentially heresy and blasphemy for this forming religion. Gaslighting is the word of the day and there’s
just something fantastic about how Jonathan Frakes and Marina Sirtis both play off
each other to try and get these people just to forget what Liko saw, the very
much idea of seeing a hallucination in an injured state and shock causing the
injuries to seem worse than what they are.
Overall, “Who Watches the Watchers” is an episode that
works so well because it stays as humanist as Gene Roddenberry could at his very
best be. Yes, it has a setup that is
particularly messy and the Prime Directive as an idea struggles in general to
really work with what has been laid out at this point, but the character drama
and humanity at the core of the entire casts performance and the fact that this
is not an episode with a villain, everything is concluded peacefully and with
understanding exemplifies a lot of what makes Star Trek work so well. 8/10.

No comments:
Post a Comment