Tuesday, February 07, 2017

Star Trek 50th Anniversary Blogging: "Patterns of Force" (February 16, 1968)



Stardate: 2534.0

In the M43 Alpha solar system, the Enterprise travels in search of a missing Federation history professor whom Captain Kirk (William Shatner) once admired: John Gill.

The Enterprise approaches the M-class world Gill was last known to be studying -- Ekos -- and Kirk is surprised to see the ship fall under attack from a missile. The Enterprise avoids destruction, and closer examination of Ekos reveals a horrifying discovery.

The world has been transformed into a planetary Nazi regime, presumably because of Gill’s interference, and is now launching a “final solution”-style genocide against its peaceful neighbor world, Zeon.  Kirk and Spock (Leonard Nimoy) must undo Gill’s interference on the planet and save Zeon.  

They join the resistance to do so, and learn that John Gill is the “Fuhrer” of this alien Nazi state.


Star Trek’s (1966-1969) “Patterns of Force” is a cautionary tale of vigilance, and one that reminds audiences that a hostile ideology rooted in guter emotions like hatred, resentment, and scapegoating can crop up anywhere, at any time. We are never safe from it. Especially if we forget our history.

The Nazis can rise in the 23rd century on the distant world of Ekos, for example, or even right here, in America, 2017.  This is why vigilance is a responsibility and duty of every citizen.

The antidote to such terror is the very thing we witnessed in the 1940s, and Star Trek shows us a corollary in “Patterns of Force:” allies of diverse backgrounds banding together to stop this nativist, racist form of evil.  


In “Patterns of Force,” Kirk and Spock join the resistance, which sees both prosecuted Zeons and good-hearted Ekosians rebelling against the evil regime.  People of good conscience fight what they see as a betrayal, essentially, of human decency. The Ekosians want their world restored. Zeons want the attacks to end.  Their differences in nature (being from different worlds) don't prevent them from joining forces and fighting the Nazis.

Yet the story of John Gill is, perhaps, a perplexing one, and Kirk actually acknowledges this fact in-story. Gill states that “even historians fail to learn from history,” and yet it is a total mystery why Gill picked Nazi Germany as a “model society” to impress upon the Ekosians. How could anyone make such a catastrophic misjudgement?

As if in support of Gill’s theory (though of course not his actions...), Spock notes in the episode that Nazi Germany was the “most efficient state” ever known on Earth. Sadly, this is “fake news,” to coin a phrase, and a comment which prominent historians have widely debunked. 

Nazi Germany was a bureaucratic nightmare, apparently, because each leader felt that he held more power, and had more jurisdiction, than he actually did; thus creating an environment of competition, backbiting, and in-fighting. Hitler himself was reputedly quite disorganized.  So Gill’s notion of Nazi Germany as an ideal, or super-efficient state is more fiction than fact. The Roman Republic (pre-Empire) might actually have been a preferable model for state-run efficiency, though there are Roman influenced societies in Star Trek already, including in “Bread and Circuses” and the Romulans.


But how could any self-respecting historian possess  the arrogance, or vanity, to believe he could impose a “good” Nazi society on another one?  Not only is such an act a clear violation of the Prime Directive, it suggests a bad mis-reading of history, or at least an extremely…selective reading of it.

Why? Well, what actually held Nazi Germany together? The historical record tells us it was a constant state of warfare, nationalistic propaganda, and the scapegoating of populations that didn’t conform to Hitler’s preferences.  It’s difficult to see how these particular traits could be marshaled into a society that is benign, or benevolent.

I’m not complaining about the episode, and indeed, the whole idea is “baked in,” because of Kirk’s comment of bewilderment to Gill. We are left, simply, to wonder if John Gill went senile, and his dementia somehow played a role in his selection of Nazi, Germany as the paradigm for Ekos.

Gill’s plan skirts plausibility, and yet I nonetheless feel it is important for Star Trek to dramatize this particular story.  

"Patterns of Force" reminds us that sometimes good people go along, at least for a while, as fascism rises.  

It reminds us that even a technological, modern state can succumb to the worst aspects of human nature. 

It reminds us that when we are faced with those in po234 who break the law and betray our human values, we can, in a word, resist.

And "Patterns of Force" reminds us, finally, that if we must be ever vigilant, lest mankind make the same mistake all over again.  “Patterns of Force” is worthwhile for all such reasons.


Given that the subject matter is so severe -- one scene includes dialogue about an innocent women, a Zeon, beaten to death, her body spat upon by Nazis -- it is a surprise to report that “Patterns of Force” also utilizes a good bit of humor, ostensibly so the going doesn’t get too dark.  

Spock tells Kirk “You should make a very convincing Nazi,” for instance, in a perfect deadpan.  And Bones gets to pretend to be a drunk Gestapo doctor in another scene.  Kirk and Spock’s escape from a jail cell, with Spock babbling about scientific theory, and Kirk enduring great pain, is similarly amusing.


The subject matter is never treated lightly, but the episode’s seriousness is leavened just enough by the series’ quirky sense of humor.

In the second season of Star Trek, Kirk and the Enterprise crew keep encountering “cultural contamination.” In “A Piece of the Action,” a book from Earth about Chicago Mobs of the 20s changes the very face of a culture.  In “Bread and Circuses,” human beings from a spaceship end up as “barbarians” fighting in a modern Roman gladiatorial game.  And in “Patterns of Force,” of course, a historian exports the Nazi ideology to an innocent people.  In all such instances, Kirk investigates, and the wisdom of the Prime Directive is reinforced, I suppose one might conclude. 

But there's another conclusion to draw as well. 

If mankind is to touch the stars, he’s going to bring the worst angels of his nature (and history) with him, at least sometimes. But via the noble example of the Enterprise crew, we see that his best angels will be well-represented  out there, on the final frontier, as well.


Next week: “By Any Other Name.”

6 comments:

  1. Never understood why this one get so much hate in many fan circles.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sheri5:44 PM

    Good review, John. I would point out that one reason the humor in "Patterns of Force" seems less jarring than it might have otherwise is that "Hogan's Heroes" was airing at the time--and both were constantly in syndication for decades. I suspect few ever encountered one without the other, until recent years with the fragmentation of TV (except for the retro channels dedicated to rerunning classic TV). I wonder if younger viewers who encounter Star Trek in a wholly different environment feel differently about the humor in this episode.

    It's interesting that your description of the Third Reich--"each leader felt that he held more power, and had more jurisdiction, than he actually did; thus creating an environment of competition, backbiting, and in-fighting"--in many respects characterized FDR's administration! Administrative style was hardly the difference between the two governments, of course.

    As to the issue of John Gill and how he comes to do what he does, the undercurrent of thought that one might place a better leader atop the Reich regime and get a different result was not an uncommonly expressed one for a couple of decades after World War II. It was not unusual up through the Sixties to hear some version of "The Germans made the trains run on time." That is, the German state was regarded as efficient, capable, and remarkable if only it could have been turned toward good instead of evil purposes--as if Hitler himself could have been separated from the forces that empowered and elevated him. "Patterns of Force" elucidates the error in that line of thought: in attempting to repeat the positive aspects of the Third Reich without unleashing or failing to control the negative, Gill finds that it was all of a piece and that repeating any of it repeats all of it.

    The episode goes all klunky and absurd on me in the jail cell, darn it. The use of the translator crystals is an utterly klutzy escape device--not even a wince or a drop of blood as the crystal is dug out of Kirk's forearm, and it just handily happens to fit in the bolt-hole in the bed slat, oh, please! Then there's that kinky BDSM whipping scene, one of the numerous unfortunate scenes on which the blame for Kirk/Spock slash fiction directly rests. Come to think of it, the Sixties were just FULL of gratuitous whippings and beatings of both men and women, from Gunsmoke to Bonanza to . . . uh, Star Trek. What the HECK was up with the kinky writers and producers in that period?

    ReplyDelete
  3. John,

    More terrific insights regarding a memorable episode, which has become very timely in 2017 for all the wrong reasons. There's an unspoken aspect of this story which has Gill meeting the natives of Ekos (a name which suggests the echoing of another period in Earth's history), and finding them in a state similar to Germany after WWI, depleted and destitute, and his solution to right a historical wrong goes horribly awry. Just a theory, at any rate.

    Steve

    ReplyDelete
  4. " 'Patterns of Force' reminds us that sometimes good people go along, at least for a while, as fascism rises."

    Well said John. So relevant...and so terrifying.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I've often wondered what it was like for two Jewish men to have to put on Nazi uniforms for this episode. Did't anybody on the creative team remember that Shatner and Nimoy were Jewish? Didn't any of the producers care about what it might be like for them? Sheesh.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Another well-meaning (and relevant now in the time of Trumpian hate) but poorly scripted story set in a Hogan's Heroes version of Nazi Germany, scrubbed clean of the real perverted horrors of Nazism, for prime time reasons. The phonetic parallel of Zeon and Zion, and the Ekosian treatment of the Zeons (paralleling Nazi mass murders of Jews, Gypsies, Poles, gays and others) has been noted many times.

    The comedic bits fall flat. There's nothing funny about Nazis, regardless of what Mel Brooks thinks.

    That Gill actually ending years of bigotry, sadism and murder with a final broadcast of a few sentences is an infantile resolution of an extremely complex cultural situation. I've never read any network mandates to keep original Star Trek stories simple and ending on a positive note but they must exist.

    Human academics in Trek were often extremely misguided, like historian John Gill here, demented or criminal: Daystrom in Ultimate Computer, Dr. Adams in Dagger of the Mind, Dr. Corby in Little Girls and Dr. Sevrin in The Way to Eden.

    The use of the subcutaneous transponders was a great concept but never used again. The overuse of parallel worlds showed the lack of an adequate budget and weakness in the writers' pool: Romans, Chicago mobsters, Nazis, Chinese Communists (The Omega Glory) and western gunfighters.

    ReplyDelete

30 Years Ago: Wes Craven's New Nightmare (1994)

The tenth birthday of cinematic boogeyman Freddy Krueger should have been a big deal to start with, that's for sure.  Why? Well, in the ...