I have a hard time watching Metamorphosis. In some ways it's a really good episode, that has an engaging premise, with wonderful performances from the cast. Even the score is terrific. It's just a well played production, all around, and as Trek episodes go, is a great viewing experience.
However, I find myself uneasy with the ending. It's just hard to get around the fact that Nancy is, in at least some part, consumed by the companion, for the benefit of its own motives of wanting to further its relationship with Cochrane. Now, from the sensibilities of the time the show was made, it may have been much easier to overlook. She was only moments away from dying, & therefore, the companion saved her from that fate (Even though it was the direct cause of that fate) Plus, in her diseased delirium, she in fact confesses to her own loneliness, but neither of those facts are cause enough to speculate that she would be willing to let herself be possessed in such a way, & the episode doesn't specifically reference her willingness to have herself become the vessel for the companion.
In fact, any such consent given, would certainly have been under the duress of knowing she would soon be dead otherwise, & that's the meat of it. It's just not possible to see THAT as consensual. It's at best coercion, and at worst abduction. There actually isn't any reflection of Nancy from any point after which the companion has entered her. Every remaining line of dialog reflects only what the Companion is experiencing or how the future will affect it. Nothing of Nancy at all, until the final line which reduces her impact down to the mere fact of what her current mission had been, a remark so cavalier in delivery, that it's kind of an insult to her as a person.
In fact, in some ways, it's almost reasonable to think this possession is no different than the effect of TNG's neural parasites, from Conspiracy. Even if that's debatable, it's certainly true that if this were Picard's away team, & someone they had been with had this happen to them, they surely wouldn't be leaving like everything was splendid, no?
However, I find myself uneasy with the ending. It's just hard to get around the fact that Nancy is, in at least some part, consumed by the companion, for the benefit of its own motives of wanting to further its relationship with Cochrane. Now, from the sensibilities of the time the show was made, it may have been much easier to overlook. She was only moments away from dying, & therefore, the companion saved her from that fate (Even though it was the direct cause of that fate) Plus, in her diseased delirium, she in fact confesses to her own loneliness, but neither of those facts are cause enough to speculate that she would be willing to let herself be possessed in such a way, & the episode doesn't specifically reference her willingness to have herself become the vessel for the companion.
In fact, any such consent given, would certainly have been under the duress of knowing she would soon be dead otherwise, & that's the meat of it. It's just not possible to see THAT as consensual. It's at best coercion, and at worst abduction. There actually isn't any reflection of Nancy from any point after which the companion has entered her. Every remaining line of dialog reflects only what the Companion is experiencing or how the future will affect it. Nothing of Nancy at all, until the final line which reduces her impact down to the mere fact of what her current mission had been, a remark so cavalier in delivery, that it's kind of an insult to her as a person.
In fact, in some ways, it's almost reasonable to think this possession is no different than the effect of TNG's neural parasites, from Conspiracy. Even if that's debatable, it's certainly true that if this were Picard's away team, & someone they had been with had this happen to them, they surely wouldn't be leaving like everything was splendid, no?
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