A
cyborg is a being of both biological
and artificial elements, and one with enhanced abilities due to
technology. Edgar Allen Poe was among
the early authors to envision cyborgs, as early as 1843.
In
cult-television history, cyborgs have proven both heroic and quite villainous
in equal numbers, and sometimes in the same series.
Based
on the novel Cyborg by Martin Caidin, The Six Million Dollar Man (1973 –
1978) introduced America to a heroic cyborg, Colonel Steve Austin (Lee
Majors). An astronaut before a deadly
crash, Steve worked as a government agent (for the OSI) and his bionic implants
included two legs, an arm and an eye.
As the famous opening credits reminded
us, Steve was “better…faster…stronger”
than the average human.
The
Bionic Woman
(1976 – 1978) introduced Steve’s female counterpart, Jaime Sommers (Lindsay
Wagner), another agent at the OSI. Like Steve, Jaime had bionic legs and a
bionic arm, but she had augmented hearing courtesy of a bionic ear.
Science
fiction series set in “the future” have often featured human beings who saved
from death and injury by mechanical implants or replacement organs.
Professor
Victor Bergman (Barry Morse) of Space: 1999 (1975 – 1977), for
instance, had a mechanical heart
installed after his biological heart gave out, but nonetheless remained one of
the series’ most human characters. In
some Year One stories, such as “Guardian of Piri,” the fact that Victor had a
mechanical heart became an issue, and it was implied that he somehow came under
alien control because of it. In other
stories, such as “The Infernal Machine,” the mechanical heart also played a
role.
In
1988, during the second season of Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987
– 1994), viewers learned that Captain Picard (Patrick Stewart), like Bergman
before him was also outfitted with a mechanical heart, and one that needed
occasional servicing (“Samaritan Snare.”)
Some writers have also suggested that Geordi La Forge (Levar Burton) is
a cyborg, since his mechanical VISOR permits the blind officer to see.
Malevolent
cyborgs are numerous in sci-fi television history. Doctor Who’s (1963 – 1989) two most
famous and popular villains -- the Cybermen
and the Daleks -- are both cyborgs, the blend of organic and artificial
elements. Kid Pedler’s Cyberman were
former humans who augmented themselves with machine parts but found that losing
their biology means, literally, losing humanity.
The
Borg of Star Trek -- who are very
similar in nature if not appearance to the Cybermen -- learned much the
same lesson. Cult-television seems to believe
that cyborgs, if allowed to develop, will consider all humanoid life forms as
nothing more than spare or replacement parts.
Famously, in the two-part Star Trek: The Next Generation episode
“The Best of Both Worlds,” Picard was assimilated by the Borg and transformed
into Locutus, a mouthpiece for the collective.
In
the late 1990s, Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan), a Borg separated from the
collective, was a series regular on Star Trek: Voyager (1995 –
2001). The statuesque character
single-handedly made cyborgs sexy, and her Borg implants played as the visual
equivalent of body-piercings or jewelry, in some way. Seven of Nine looked exotic, and boasted
physical and mental capabilities beyond her human crew-mates. In some way, the character points to a future
in which man can co-exist with cyborgs, and even consider them attractive
alternatives to human specimens.
Fine look at this, John. I'd only add 'The Cybernauts', a 1965 episode from the stellar British TV series, The Avengers (the John Steed and Emma Peel version). I realize you were staying within the television realm, but what of 'the more human than human' aspect from the film BLADE RUNNER? Thanks, John.
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