December 22, 1967 |
"When a man feels guilty about something, something too terrible to remember, he blots it out of his conscious memory." |
"I wonder what it is we're not supposed to be afraid of?" |
"She said something else. Words that didn't make any sense." |
I have no idea what Bloch's overlap with Scientologists was, if there even was any, but it's worth mentioning that this sort of thing had begun to be advanced by L. Ron Hubbard around this time. Our true nature has been hindered by alien events long ago and unchecked threaten not just ours but many planets.
"The law of Argelius... is Love."It's twenty times more likely L Ron saw this episode and hastily added its ideas to the latest mission briefing. |
"An entity which feeds on fear and terror would find a perfect hunting ground on Argelius, a planet without violence,
where the inhabitants are as peaceful as sheep. The entity would be as a hungry wolf in that fold." (I guess here's as good a place as any to assign the Title its 2.25 points.)
Not all of misogyny can be blamed on the entity, of course, and I'm not saying that's what is asserted in this episode. Just a particular type of re-directed sexual anxiety. Argelius II is a pleasure planet. Whose pleasure? Men's, certainly.
But
women's too, just as certainly. Just because we see only what 3 hetero dudes on the prowl see doesn't mean that's how the whole planet is; we get every indication it is far more than that. It's an environment where the
sexually uninhibited can fornicate to their heart's content, free from consequence or commitment, a planet-sized Plato's Retreat, the
sort of sexually ambiguous "paradise" that's also explored in
things like Looking For Mister Goodbar. (Which also explores the
idea of a killer-of-women in a sexual-free-for-all zone; I guess that
one's more palatable because it had Diane Keaton in it.)
Jealousy is the worst sin. That's interesting, and important. Enter our Enterprise snakes into that paradise, and it is from their (wounded, intrusive) point of view that we enter the story.
Jealousy is the worst sin. That's interesting, and important. Enter our Enterprise snakes into that paradise, and it is from their (wounded, intrusive) point of view that we enter the story.
"Fear, anger, hatred... anger feeds the flame. Oh! Oh! There is evil
here! Monstrous, terrible evil... consuming hunger. Hatred of all that
lives. Hatred of women. A hunger that never dies."
Bond also writes "All of Bloch’s Star Trek scripts threw classic horror tropes into the
unfamiliar territory of science fiction in clever ways—he references
“the Old Ones” a la H.P. Lovecraft in the android dehumanization tale
“What Are Little Girls Made Of?” and the traditions of ghost stories and
Halloween in “Catspaw.” “Wolf in the Fold” adapts Bloch’s own story
“Yours Truly, Jack the Ripper,” and all three benefit from the creepy
frisson of classic horror themes thrust into Trek’s sci fi setting. "
The locked-room murder mystery is set up pretty well, but it's completely undermined by the existence of the psycho-tricorder. Then again, as Bond notes, that was probably the intention, to wink at the conventions of such a thing and explode them with sci-fi.
Ditto for the courtroom drama. |
Before moving on, it must be said that "You cannot reach me... your manual overrides are extremely limited in life" is a taunt that has never received its due. Just once I'd like to hear someone say that on Cops while being shoved into the back of the wagon.
Internal Logistics: (1.25) Beyond the psycho-tricorder stuff, the entity is a bit like Pennywise from Stephen King's It, lying low for long intervals, then awakens to feed in a mass killing spree. Another parallel is that it feeds not just on on death but the terror that accompanies it. So why can't there be a Stephen King's Space It? Or is that what The Tommyknockers is supposed to be?
Unless I'm misunderstanding, this Space It waits until Scotty is alone with a woman and then shoves him aside and kills her? Or possesses Scott and does the same? Yet also resides in Mr. Hengist? If it possesses the ability to flip between hosts as necessary, why doesn't it just leap into Kirk or Spock?
It doesn't matter, I know, I know. I know forever. But if it can even inhabit the computers... I mean, come on.
Visual Design: (2.25)
Redjac! Redjac! |
Shatner's pause in the doorway here, to strike this pose, is too funny. |
"Freefall!" This is the perhaps the most pointless and quickly-disposed-of dangers Kirk and Spock face in TOS. Absolutely great, though. |
Charles Dierkop as the Jealous Man. Fans of 80s slasher movies might remember him from Silent Night, Deadly Night. |
Every line this guy delivers is fun. Especially when it keeps cutting to him for completely generic and unsolicited observations during the trial. "But all men die..." "A man couldn't survive all of these centuries?" etc. I was amused (though not at his expense or anything) to discover he opened a well-respected acting school in Las Vegas several years later. |
And of course, Jaris is played by:
Memorability: (3) As mentioned here, "On
the great list of things to watch while tripping your face off, you
rarely see "Wolf in the Fold," which is a
shame. If I was the director of a drug freakout clinic, I'd keep it (and "Metamorphosis") queued up at all times."
And beyond that, this was one episode I spent a considerable amount of time cutting up in the spring of 1998. Hovered over a 4-track in the last days of analog, with the laser disc player plugged into tracks one and two, looping it over suggestive 70s funk music (really just one particular instrumental from the Boogie Nights soundtrack.) I'm tempted to bump it up a point just for that. But I'll restrain myself.
"For the good of the Body, obliteration... is necessary. It is a great sorrow." |
And beyond that, this was one episode I spent a considerable amount of time cutting up in the spring of 1998. Hovered over a 4-track in the last days of analog, with the laser disc player plugged into tracks one and two, looping it over suggestive 70s funk music (really just one particular instrumental from the Boogie Nights soundtrack.) I'm tempted to bump it up a point just for that. But I'll restrain myself.
Total Points Awarded: 52.25