In
“Guardian of Piri,” Earth’s traveling Moon encounters a new and strange world,
which Victor Bergman (Barry Morse) mysteriously designates “Piri” during a
command conference.
Unfortunately,
every attempt to gather more information about Piri seems to go awry, and
Computer provides a steady stream of inaccurate or confusing information about
it. When an Eagle mission to the planet is believed lost, its crew assumed
dead, Alan Carter (Nick Tate) is furious, blaming the tragedy on Computer
because the pilots believed what “the
lousy computer told them to believe.”
Before
long, Alpha’s computer begins to make catastrophic errors regarding the base’s
internal operation too. Professor Bergman faints after Computer recalibrates
the oxygen in the base’s air-supply, without heed. Later, another Alphan, Sarah Graham, dies
when Computer stops a blood-transfusion in mid-operation.
Commander
Koenig (Martin Landau) believes that David Kano (Clifton Jones), head of
Computer Section can help determine why the machine has gone “haywire.” Several years earlier, David undertook a
dangerous experiment to link computer memory with the human brain, and now he
and Koenig believe this link-up might help pinpoint the problem. Instead a
force spirits Kano away from Alpha when link-up is made.
Koenig
travels to Piri in an Eagle, and sees that the Eagle pilots and Kano have
become mindless drones on the strange planetary surface. He encounters a
beautiful woman (Catherine Schell), who identifies herself as the Servant of
the Guardian of Piri, and reports that her purpose is to take “transient, imperfect” human life and
render it “perfect.” She also reports that the Guardian has
stopped time, because absolute perfection is eternal.
Koenig
objects, noting that the Pirian Way is not the human way. But back on Alpha, Dr.
Helena Russell (Barbara Bain) and the others are already preparing for
Operation Exodus, and a permanent re-settlement on the planet…
In blunt terms, “Guardian of
Piri” is a story about the ways that technology and automation can be
dehumanizing influences.
Space:
1999 writer Johnny Byrne told me during an interview that the
Gerry and Sylvia Anderson series grapples explicitly with the notion that
technology is a double or two-edged sword. Technology gives us something, but also takes away something else. Johnny was
talking, specifically, about “Matter of Life and Death” when we had this
discussion, but he could have been discussing Christopher Penfold’s visually
dynamic and thematically resonant “Guardian of Piri” as well.
“Guardian of Piri” has
fascinating origins in Greek Myth. In Homer’s The Odyssey, Odysseus was desperately attempting to return home to
Ithaca following the Trojan War, but along the way encountered the sirens.
These
inhuman beings had a tantalizing call, one both irresistible and sexual in nature. Odysseus had himself tied to the mast by his crew so he
could hear the song, but not heed the call. That’s how powerful the siren song
proved to be.
In “Guardian of Piri,” the
Guardian and its servant are created very much in the fashion of the mythical
sirens, drawing the Alphans and even Computer to the planet surface.Yet importantly,
in this case their song is not overtly sexual (though the episode’s
final act features strong sexual overtones...), but rather technological in
nature. Specifically, Piri promises a paradise in which machines will tend to every human
need, and humans will be left to their leisure. Even the day-to-day matters of “sustenance” will not interfere with
human pleasure, as Helena asserts at one juncture.
What makes all that pleasure possible is the toil and custodianship of the
Guardian.
Uniquely, “Guardian of Piri”
suggests a continuum in term of dependence on technology (specifically machines
or computers). The Alphans represent an
early but still dangerous point on that particularly graph.
They “believe what the lousy computer” tells
them to believe, and thus nearly lose an Eagle crew.
Similarly Koenig notes that there are simply
not enough personnel to run the base on manual control.
The Alphans are overseers of their technology, but they cannot regulate
every function on Moonbase Alpha. Sarah
Graham dies because her blood transfusion -- considered a routine
computer-controlled process --went unobserved by human eyes. “I am
not a computer,” Dr. Mathias (Anton Phillips) declares angrily, and his
suggestion is that Medical Section is unmanageable without Computer’s
custodianship of it.
Koenig starts to suspect that this dependence on Computer, while necessary, is having ill-effects. “That computer seems to be telling us
exactly what we want to hear,” he observes correctly. Indeed it is, because the computer has heard
the song of Piri and is now in thrall to the siren...the Guardian.
The Pirians meanwhile, stand at a later point
on the same continuum, or more aptly, its end point.
The Servant explains to
Koenig how the Pirians were people of “great skill” and how they built machines
to run everything. Then they constructed the
Guardian to oversee their machines to save them “from decision.”
The (ostensibly humanoid) Pirians thus abandoned every responsibility they had, even those pesky matters of day-to-day
sustenance, in favor of pleasure. But a
people that didn’t build anything, didn’t exert themselves, and couldn’t be
bothered, even, to feed themselves became...apathetic. In the end, as Koenig
realizes, they died. They could not
thrive in a computer’s idea of paradise.
Late in
the story, Koenig stumble on the antidote to this mind-numbing apathy: pain. He
punches a monitor in Main Mission and cuts his hand. The Servant offers to heal
it for him but he objects: “Leave me with my pain. It reminds me I’m human.” Then he descends to Piri and puts Helena through
shock treatment to rouse her from her trance of apathy. The message seems to be that some amount of suffering, or pain (the opposite of pleasure) is necessary if human civilization is to thrive.
One
of the most fascinating aspects of “Guardian of Piri” involves the episode’s
ending. By destroying the “moment of
perfection” created by the Guardian, the Alphans actually restore natural
(rather than machine life) to the planet’s surface. They were brought there, essentially, to die
in a computer's vision of perfect bliss.
Instead, they upended the machine’s vision and imposed a sense of order
more in keeping with human biology. Too
bad, as Koenig says, that they didn’t stay.
As I noted in my book, Exploring Space:1999, several episodes of the series involve the Alphans acting as catalysts, bringing new life or resurrecting dead life on alien worlds. In addition to their catalyzing actions in "Guardian of Piri," the Alphans help Arra to evolve in "Collision Course," and bring the seeds of life to Arkadia in "Testament of Arkadia,"
Beyond
the plot line, which suggests a futuristic siren call and a computerized
version of paradise, “Guardian of Piri” thrives on its amazing and uncanny
visuals.
In all of science fiction
television history, there has never been another world that looks like Piri. It is unique. The planet’s surface is a strange,
technological forest atop a rocky plateau. In the forest, the trees seem to be wrapped in wires bundles instead of organic vines, and
instead of leaves, there are giant mechanical white bulbs everywhere. his set was built in miniature and in
live-action proportions, and remains, as noted above, absolutely singular in appearance.
As one Alphan notes, the planet is a “weirdy.” But an unforgettable weirdy.
This
episode always reminds me why I admire Space: 1999 to such a degree. Its visual presentation is downright
stunning, and often incredibly original. Spectacular is probably the right word. And this episode gives us the spectacular Catherine Schell as well,
strolling among the strange wiry trees of Piri, suggesting a distant world both
alluring…and utterly alien.
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