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Code of Honor

Dr Bonezee

Lieutenant
Red Shirt
So I have noticed in a lot of other threads that Code of Honor isn't getting as much hate as the worst episode ever in Trek History.

To me there is no worst episode and that includes TATV.

Just wondering what everyone's thoughts are on this matter or is it still the worst episode?
 
So I have noticed in a lot of other threads that Code of Honor isn't getting as much hate as the worst episode ever in Trek History.

To me there is no worst episode and that includes TATV.

Just wondering what everyone's thoughts are on this matter or is it still the worst episode?
Code of Honor is absolutely bonkers as an episode, and really is quite aggravating. It is not internally consistent as a story, the character motivation shifts oddly, and the kidnapping is annoying. Plus Troi going, "Oh, and let me broadcast how horny is everyone for Yar down there."
 
Code of Honor has one good thing going for it - the score by Fred Steiner.

He was brought in by Robert Justman as a favor and put together a "modernized" version of TOS music for the episode. It's lively and fun to listen to... Unfortunately, that's exactly not what Rick Berman wanted out of the music for the series, so Steiner was never asked back.
 
When I rewatched it recently I found it didn't do a great job of holding my attention, but that's true of half of season 1 and when I rank it against the worst that Star Trek has given us it doesn't even make my bottom 20 list.

The casting might be a bit dodgy, but Jessie Lawrence Ferguson as Lutan was the correct choice in any hypothetical version of this episode, because he's great. Plus the episode does go to an alien world and make an effort to build a story around how tricky diplomacy can be between two different cultures, which is a proper Star Trek subject. Trouble is that the plot is 26 minutes of characters going 'well, I don't know what to do' followed by a terrible fight scene and an ending stolen straight from Amok Time.
 
This episode is dragged down considerably by the horrible casting choices which introduce a racial issue. However, the worst episode in all of Trek? Not by a country mile. Not even close. I'd rather watch "Code of Honor" than "Justice," "Aquiel," or "Sub Rosa" any day. And that's just limiting myself to TNG.
 
Justice is kind of like Code of Honor's mirror in a lot of ways. The planet's all white people, the culture clash happens due to the crew not obeying the planet's code, the Enterprise is less powerful than the Edo god and instead of finding a clever loophole to beam their crewmember back and receive the vaccine, Picard makes an argument for an exception to the rules and takes the colonists away.
 
I think "Code Of Honor" represents a bit of a special case. It would be an entirely forgettable "early TNG copies TOS" episode if it wasn't for the glaring racial issue. THAT is what makes it memorable, and definitely not in a good way. TNG has much worse episodes when it comes to atrocious plots tho.
 
(started this yesterday, got sidetracked, tried to be Grizzly Adams in taming skunks but that backfired and how many of today's audiences would get that reference anyhoo...)


I think the story has some good acting and trying to elevate a decidedly mixed bag of ideas, such as bringing up the prime directive and why they cannot use it, along with the usual TOS trope of having to haul a critical substance to another planet before the countdown timer ends and they all die from whatever ailment it is. (What does ENT's finale have, apart from another bookend for the TNG crew? Nothing memorable, certainly.)

One comparatively subtle issue is how Picard opts to threaten the entire population by launching and detonating photon torpedoes across the atmosphere, which is not the best way to introduce the story theme. While the goal of the story is to show technologically- and rulebook-superior Picard having double standards for his code of honor (the prime directive) while the non-technical Luton is devout in his, the execution of this by Picard acting like this does him no favors and we're only into the third full story of the first season. The idea is there and has potential if done right, but the execution is horrendous and couldn't have been done any worse -- unless Picard actually ordered the torpedos to hit the ground or buildings, good grief.

Along with not knowing what to do with half the characters, or doing them well, this is another example - albeit only partially successful - for Yar and her being devout to her career a Security Chief. But more on that later as where the story fails is regarding what has been established for her character and how out of character part of this story is...

The story also plays fast and loose with some medical terminology, which is never good for sci-fi, but in this story both "vaccine" and "antidote" are used interchangeably, except a vaccine reduces/prevents the person from being infected by the cooties, and an antidote heals anyone who's been infected by the cooties. This is high school-level stuff, even by 1987 standards, but the story otherwise uses this subplot as a crutch and nothing more, so let's switch to an element that DID work:

Well, mostly: Despite her name having as much creativity as if I were to create a competing pencil brand and call it "Pencilbrand", I like the character of Yareena. She's well-acted, has some dramatic as well as story weight, and - yeah - the fight scene between Yareena and Yar is actually pretty good, especially for the time. The ending when Dr Crusher beams them aboard and gets a vaccine an antidote delivered in miracle worker time. Some dialogue has that ever-special season one hokeyness, such as the following (albeit truncated and condensed):

PICARD: We need to know as much as possible about Ligonian armaments. Data, especially important is an analysis of their combat capabilities. Geordi, concentrate on their cutting edges, wherever applicable, durability, composition, weaknesses of material.
LAFORGE: Aye, sir.
DATA: From any particular point of view, sir?
PICARD: From the perspective of Lieutenant Yar using them in combat with Lutan's wife.
DATA: Most interesting. Could this be human joke number six hundred sixty three?
LAFORGE: Negative, Data. That's a Captain's order.
DATA: Which makes it important to know which of these weapons are to be used.
PICARD: And that won't be known until combat begins.
(LaForge and Data return in the next scene)
LAFORGE: The weapons in that room, Captain, are surprisingly flexible, durable, and deadly.
DATA: And light, as if they were made for women to use.
LAFORGE: Some of them still have traces of blood and poison.
PICARD: Poison?
LAFORGE: Alkaloid base. Lethal.
PICARD: What about those lengths of metal in the yard outside?
DATA: Uncertain, sir. However, joined together they would make a rectangle or square enclosing one hundred twenty one square metres. If put end to end vertically, they would make a pole forty four metres high, or two of twenty two.
PICARD: Thank you, Data.


Surprisingly generic and otherwise mostly pointless insight by Data and Geordi, by stating what was obvious (for edification of any of the audience tuning in last-minute?), and no pun intended. Which makes me second-guess condensing that earlier scene, so I'll put it back as it lends to yet another point and problem:

PICARD: And that won't be known until combat begins. You're right, Data. It does sound like a joke. With the power of the Enterprise, we could overwhelm this place easily, just take what we want.
DATA: I may not understand human humour, sir, but I am a Starfleet Academy graduate.
PICARD: Which means, of course-
DATA: understanding the Prime Directive, sir.
PICARD: That is, ironically, what this is about. By our standards, the customs here, their code of honour, is the same kind of pompous, strutting charades that endangered our own species a few centuries ago. We evolved out of it because no one else imposed their own. I'm sorry, this is becoming a speech.
TROI: You're the Captain, sir. You're entitled.
PICARD: Not entitled to ramble on about something everyone knows.

Picard's first line not excepted (or accepted as it's even more juvenile dialogue for him as cypher for the audience that already knows this), I'll stick to the point, but first a short rambling preamble: There is a problem regarding our crew, for which Yareena gets a genuinely terrific moment - as if the writer wanted to write something more polished and intriguing instead but couldn't due to editing or what not. See, Yareena gets to admonish the holier-than-thou Yar with "You are on our world now!!" and rightly so, noting how season one has a form of arrogance (and cliquishness) amongst the bridge crew that surely can't be typical of these "evolved", "enlightened" 24th century humans who condescend to everybody, even the audience at times. 24th century humans are so pompous that they think they can just go anywhere in the galaxy and strut, it's no wonder Azetbur in ST6/TUC made a quip about "in alien, the very term is racist." By then, that's season 5 of TNG when characters and situations were more refined (if not more boring), but the uneven nature of season one makes it too easy to mention.

Hmmm, make that two problems: Even by 1987, most audiences knew of the Prime Directive. This story is early on in TNG and might be taking into account general/unestablished fans who do not know of the Prime Directive, but it's a tricky situation requiring care to weave these factoids into story narrative. Something the story keeps tripping itself up over time and again.

There clearly was a series bible and background conditions for the crewmembers, so it is out of place for Yar to be so brazenly drooling over Lutan, or Data in the previous episode, or anyone else, without proper time in the story to actually go into character depth, which this episode basically did not and thus hinges on previously told character traits - which is sometimes doesn't. But Tasha's statement is more or less a single entendre, as to why she didn't want to stay with Lutan -- she's career first and only. While TNG could have waited an episode or two to help define that trait more solidly, especially after her premiere and followed by "The Naked Now" of all episodes, that didn't happen and now all the audience gets is a muddle of messages that's more incongruous than most of my prose. Early TNG had so many character inconsistencies thanks to the rewrite of "The Naked Now" and then some dumb dialogue for characters in later stories, especially "Justice", that does Yar one of the worst disservices ever. Ditto for Wil/Bill/Willy/Wilhelm/Whatever as season one also had character names inconsistently thrown around as well, but I digress: It's amazing how season one had some interesting ideas about the prime directive, but then wrote around those ideas with such incredible sappy shlock. And, yeah, we only hear William called "Wil" or "Bill", not "Willy" or the others... but, yeah, character consistency also renders the "She's also horny for Lutan" pointless and misplaced.)

And that's just what I remember off the top of my head right now.

And yet, this story still has more depth and potential to it than TATV, no matter how botched or misplaced. But, yeah, it's a flop on almost every count, due to thoughtless handling and a novel paradoxical issue it's wanting to present.
 
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Justice is kind of like Code of Honor's mirror in a lot of ways. The planet's all white people, the culture clash happens due to the crew not obeying the planet's code, the Enterprise is less powerful than the Edo god and instead of finding a clever loophole to beam their crewmember back and receive the vaccine, Picard makes an argument for an exception to the rules and takes the colonists away.

^^this.

Just as unintentional and one-note, it still makes audiences wonder all the wrong things and that does not help.

Worse, look at how jocular and rough-edged the story is, treating Yar and Riker as a couple of utter dingbats for somehow not realizing that, despite their thorough research, they missed out on the biggest law there is: "Break it and you die". Riker being Yar's supervisor and all, it makes sense for him to review something as big as this, but he glosses over something that's clearly not in "the fine print". The result is, in this regard as much as every other, a flop.

Never mind that it treats the best bridge crew in such a paltry way for now, we have the opening scene where - in the same scene - they go from how the inhabitants copulate at the drop of a hat, any hat, then discuss how it'll be great for the kiddies to have shore leave. (Never mind the kids seem to wear more clothes and how they don't notice their entire neighborhood fondling one another is a larger mystery than anything Yar and Riker missed, which isn't saying much.) But whether this is supposed to be 24th century enlightened people, unrefined dialogue for the situation, both, or other, it's another FTW moment. The end goal is to get kids to the planet so Wesley can be the center of the plotting, true, but the lines regarding copulating at the drop of any hat didn't need to be there and ultimately do more to add unneeded confusion, and on the planet we already get the idea that they otherwise would have eradicated every touch-related infection that could possibly inflict them, etc. But this is the season with the corn of "there was a cure for the common cold and people only got it long ago" as well. "Datalore" and "The Battle" allude to something like that, anyhow.

The episode also shows some promise once the usual plot crutch props in, aka "The Discussion of The Prime Directive". There's a Picard speech too, which is okay but not great (as you'd indicated there's no actual discussion between Picard and Edogod), and then the episode ends wordlessly as the Edogod lifts the forcefield thingy and off they go and we don't even get closure for the Edoians, who are rightly upset. What would the Edogod tell them? Even I could think up "They were invading demons and I dealt with them in the best way possible, now here's some more oil so go back to rubbing each other" and voilà, plot resolved. Picard needn't save the day, and Wesley having anything to say would be another example of "Wesley saves the day in a crass way that undermines the adults. Again.", so the ending could have been worse. Glad they kept it vague...
 
If O'Brien could beam 8 officers through Jim Kirk's shields as if they were not there, Then... Oh, it's still O'Brien, then O'Brien can beam Tasha up from Lutan's world as if he had no transporter suppression interference or shields around his base or planet.

They only didn't rescue Tasha, because they wanted to be political.
 
They do beam Tasha up to the ship. That's how they get her back.

I had an idea for a fanfiction, where still bethrothed & endentured Tasha is left behind (and discharged from Starfleet), so the story turns into Die Hard, where she kills most of the palace guard to escape and then is blowing up power stations and building a guerilla resistance to over throw the government, but the story is told in exposition from Lutan over the course of weeks, begging Picard to come back, and take her away "please".
 
Roddenberry was bound and determined to show societies where people slept with everyone all the time. That was going to be the backstory of the Deltans in Phase II which, thankfully, got reduced to a few minor references in TMP. And Ira Steven Behr has talked many times about how, when he was writing "Captain's Holiday," Roddenberry wanted all kinds of people having sex in the background. To be honest, TNG was far better off once Roddenberry stopped running it day-to-day.
 
Roddenberry was bound and determined to show societies where people slept with everyone all the time. That was going to be the backstory of the Deltans in Phase II which, thankfully, got reduced to a few minor references in TMP. And Ira Steven Behr has talked many times about how, when he was writing "Captain's Holiday," Roddenberry wanted all kinds of people having sex in the background. To be honest, TNG was far better off once Roddenberry stopped running it day-to-day.

Humans became addicted to sex with Deltans, so withdrawal, after just one hit, quickly ended in incurable insanity.

Ironically, unintentionally and early, it's a fair metaphor for HIV/AIDS safety in the workplace.
 
So I have noticed in a lot of other threads that Code of Honor isn't getting as much hate as the worst episode ever in Trek History.

To me there is no worst episode and that includes TATV.

Just wondering what everyone's thoughts are on this matter or is it still the worst episode?
Everyone has their own barometer for what constitutes 'worst episode' of a series.

For me, while "Code of Honor" is definitely lower tier TNG, it certainly is NOT the worst of TNG, let alone the franchise.

There are several good things about it. First, Jessie Lawrence Ferguson was great casting. He commanded every scene he was in. Second, it's the first episode to show the Data/Geordi friendship with the shaving scene. Great friendship. Third, the fight at the end was pretty unique and well done.

The episodes that I put as 'worst' of a series or the franchise are ones that, for example, completely damage or destroy a lead character or species. "Sub Rosa" is an example of the worst of TNG because it makes Beverly look REALLY bad. Or "Rascals", because it makes Riker, Data, Worf, and everyone else look like complete buffoons because they got outclassed by a pair out of date Klingon ships run by Ferengi... the same crew who faced and defeated THE BORG. I mean... really? REALLY?!

Another quality is an episode is so boring it's terrible, which for TNG for me is "The Masterpiece Society", as an example. (While I would put boring as a part of worst of a series, I would never add that as a criteria for worst of the franchise. Character or species assassination would fit the bill for the franchise overall.)
 
Roddenberry was bound and determined to show societies where people slept with everyone all the time. That was going to be the backstory of the Deltans in Phase II which, thankfully, got reduced to a few minor references in TMP. And Ira Steven Behr has talked many times about how, when he was writing "Captain's Holiday," Roddenberry wanted all kinds of people having sex in the background. To be honest, TNG was far better off once Roddenberry stopped running it day-to-day.

Yikes. I always thought "Flesh Gordon" was a ripe parody of the genre, not a how-to guide...
 
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