Our
retrospective of Ark II comes to an end with this fifteenth and final episode, “Orkus.”
Interestingly,
“Orkus” is an episode that feels more like an installment of Logan’s
Run: The Series (1977) or The Fantastic Journey (1977) than
one from the Filmation series’ own catalog. It’s very much in the nature of a 1970's,
prime-time “civilization of the week”
tale.
Here, the Ark II team stops for repairs and investigates reports of pollution. Unfortunately, Ruth and Adam fall prey to that pollution, and deadly toxins super-age them in a matter of moments. Unless an antidote can be developed, Ruth and Adam will die of old age in mere hours.
Then,
out of the blue, an imperious man named Orkus (Geoffrey Lewis) utilizes his
high-tech powers to hijack the Ark and seize control of it. Jonah matches wits with this duplicitous leader
of a Utopian community ensconced behind a protective force field, and tries to
free the Ark and save his friends.
Orkus
is virtually immortal, Jonah learns, and made so by his society’s
super-computer, called “The Provider.”
Furthermore, Orkus requires Ark II’s power source to continue protecting
his own people and city from the atmospheric pollution. “We can
only save ourselves,” he insists.
Also, as Jonah learns, Orkus and his people are actually responsible for
the pollution in the first place.
Now
Jonah must not only apply a cure for Ruth and Adam, but destroy the source of
pollution, and transform Orkus’s society to one of more human dimensions. Fortunately, he gets help from some of Orkus’s
more independent-minded followers…
“Orkus” is a more hard-edged Ark II segment than some, albeit one with many familiar ingredients from 1960's and 1970's cult television. There’s the super computer that governs a stagnant society (“Return of the Archons,” “Guardian of Piri,” Logan’s Run, “Turnabout”) and a disease that causes extreme, instantaneous old age (“The Deadly Years.”)
In
the end, order and “normal development” are restored, as immortality is
destroyed (“The Apple,” “Guardian of Piri”), and something more “human” replaces
it. It’s not a particularly original
episode, but it is fascinating to see the Ark II crew pitted against a
dyed-in-the-wool liar and “black hat” like Orkus, for a change; especially with
crew-members imperiled and on the verge of death.
With
this episode, our retrospective of Ark II is complete. The series’ strongest points remain the
technology and production design, in my opinion. The vehicles, sets, props and uniforms are
all genuinely impressive, even today.
Less
impressive is the kind of loose-minded, indistinct “background” detail underlying
the post-apocalyptic world of Ark II’s future.
In Star Trek, episode wrap-ups would frequently see Captain Kirk noting in a log that Federation advisers, teachers or helpers were on the way to help a planet changed by the Enterprise’s visit. Ark II could have used some of that specificity, particularly since Jonah and his people are trying to rebuild a world, and that agenda requires more than a cursory one-off visit to troubled villages and towns.
In Star Trek, episode wrap-ups would frequently see Captain Kirk noting in a log that Federation advisers, teachers or helpers were on the way to help a planet changed by the Enterprise’s visit. Ark II could have used some of that specificity, particularly since Jonah and his people are trying to rebuild a world, and that agenda requires more than a cursory one-off visit to troubled villages and towns.
Yet the missions undertaken by Jonah and his crew are generally pretty loosely-structured, and there’s very little sense of follow-up or persistence. Many episodes involve the idea that bad actors and evil-doers, once confronted with their anti-social behavior, will see the error of their ways and do right. That is not a strong enough basis upon which to re-build a ruined world in my opinion.
The series should have
featured, at some point, back-up personnel helping to smooth transitions and
usher in the positive changes first initiated by Jonah and his team. Also, I would have found it fascinating to
feature a story in which Jonah and the others run across a villain who won’t back
down, but only doubles-down, thus forcing them to confront their “non-aggressive”
mission strategy and actively fight. In
other words, I would have liked to have seen a stronger test of the
protagonists’ values.
I must confess: this is the very thing that bothers me the most about Star Trek: The Next Generation. It’s easy to preach noble values when you live in paradise; when you have a full stomach and the time to “enrich” yourself educationally and otherwise. But what happens when you don’t live in paradise? Then what?
I must confess: this is the very thing that bothers me the most about Star Trek: The Next Generation. It’s easy to preach noble values when you live in paradise; when you have a full stomach and the time to “enrich” yourself educationally and otherwise. But what happens when you don’t live in paradise? Then what?
Because of the series format, the Ark II team often over-matches the bad guys. The vehicle’s crew has science, technology, knowledge and force fields on their side. Accordingly, many episodes do not feature an adequate or deep sense of menace. Thus the episodes that I remember best are those, like “Orkus,” which present a real challenge. Other examples are episodes such as “Omega” (about a mind-controlling computer), “The Cryogenic Man” (about an entitled 20th century businessman) and “The Lottery,” which features a kind of “phantom zone” pocket universe where a tyrant banishes enemies.
Another highlight of the series is the episode
“The Robot,” which features Robby the Robot as a learning machine, and includes
an abundance of colorful character interaction.
Every
Ark
II episode carries a message about morality, and some adults may find
this aspect of the series tiresome. But
if you remember the program’s original context – as a Saturday morning show for children – the didacticism is easily
understandable. I don’t have any problem
with the moral framework of the series, and feel it’s an excellent program for kids
to watch since it meditates on ideas about how best to “build” a better tomorrow.
Finally, I
can’t help but feel that an adult-oriented Ark II would be a great subject for
remaking today. This is a “sci fi” world
that could certainly stand some deepening and maturity, but which is already
interesting and unique enough to merit interest from audiences.
The
problem, of course, is that probably not enough people remember the series in
the first place.
John, nice review of the final episode and simply brilliant analysis of the ARK II series as a whole here in this final post. It was an extremely impressive series for all the reasons you stated, especially the production design. I still want an ARK II Technical Manual. Agree, it probably should have been a prime-time series and it definitely needs a reboot. If only a director with clout wanted to do it, e.g., J.J. Abrams or James Gunn et.al.
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