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Episode review: Bem (TAS 2x02); beware spoilers!

Mendon

Lieutenant Commander
Red Shirt
Summary:

The Enterprise is hosting a Pandronian guest observer named Ari Bn Bem. For the past six weeks, Bem has remained in his personal quarters rather than observing any of the crew's operations. Now, the Enterprise is orbiting a planet whose primitive native population they wish to investigate. To Kirk's chagrin, Bem inisists that he will accompany the landing party on this delicate mission.

Bem prepares the transporter for their beamdown, but Kirk and Spock materialize over water. While submerged, Bem covertly replaces their communicators and phasers with duplicates. Kirk brushes off the transport mishap, but insists to Bem that he leave normal ship operations to the members of his crew. Soon after, Uhura informs Kirk that an anomaly has been identified near their position, leading Kirk to wonder if there is an unknown intelligence on the planet. Unexpectedly, Bem rushes ahead toward the natives, quickly abandoning the away team by disassembling his body parts to pass through the dense brush. When Kirk and Spock catch up to him, Bem has been surrounded by a ring of natives in their ritual hunt.

Due to interference from the anomaly, Uhura has lost contact with Kirk, Spock, and Bem. The rest of the away team is brought back to the ship pending further information on the nature of the anomaly. Meanwhile, Kirk and Spock discover that their communicators and phasers are inoperative copies. Although irritated by Bem's actions, Kirk attempts to rescue him from the cage the natives have placed him in. They too are apprehended by natives however, and placed in cages of their own.

Bem is disdainful of their rescue attempt, which further frustrates Kirk. He states that if Bem had not replaced their communicators and phasers, this would never have happened. Bem maintains that they would have overly simplified their mission, but returns the originals, again disassembling his body to pass through the bars of his cage. Kirk and Spock are astonished by this surprising capability, and Bem explains that he wished to observe their mission from the vantage of a prisoner. Kirk places Bem under arrest for subjecting the Enterprise crew to his own personal experiments.

Kirk and Spock wield their phasers in an escape attempt, but before they succeed, they find themselves immobilized. A voice admonishes them for their use of force on the natives, informing them that the population is under her protection and will not be subject to interference by the Enterprise crew.

In their cages once more, Bem again expresses his disappointment in their handling of the situation, and judges them as inferior beings. He disassembles and flees. Kirk appeals to the intelligence that spoke to them earlier, apologizing for their error and asking to return to his ship so that he may inform his people not to interfere with this planet. The intelligence is impressed with this proposal and agrees. Communications with Enterprise are restored, and a landing party beams down to release Kirk and Spock. Kirk refuses to return to the ship without Bem, however, and goes to retrieve him.

Bem is startled to discover that Kirk and Spock have escaped and dealt successfully with the intelligence. Kirk wishes to return Bem for the sake of the Federation's relations with Pandro, but Bem instead intends to end his life since his previous judgment of the Enterprise crew as inferior has proven defective. The intelligence again appears, however, to encourage Bem to instead embrace this opportunity for learning. Humbled, Bem not only regards Kirk and crew with a newfound respect, but recognizes that in spite of their comparably limited capabilities, they have exercised wisdom beyond his own.

Analysis:

Despite some fine material for Kirk and Uhura, this is really Bem's episode, and your ultimate enjoyment is therefore likely to hinge on how well you warm to his character. His distinctly alien capabilities make for some fascinating contrasts with the humanoid crew, but his judgment is shown not to be equally advanced as he moves from disdain to respect for our heroes over the course of the episode.

The message could perhaps be criticized as a little basic or heavy-handed, but it is a good one: our capacities for reason and compassion can make us the intellectual equals even of beings whose capabilities far exceed our own. That's a particularly satisfying message to receive from a series that so often treats the notion of superior intelligences.

Still, Bem does not make an especially likeable lens for the transmission of this message. That's unfortunate, because the conceptual underpinnings for the character are quite interesting. Much of the blame for failing to better establish Bem as a character we'd like to see grow could be attributed to the brevity of the episode, because the concepts actually seem to be very well-developed.

Verdict:

7/10. While it is difficult to like our protagonist, the events he sets in motion are ultimately rewarding.
 
One important note concerning this episode: it establishes that Kirk's middle name is "Tiberius". So for those who don't consider the animated series canon...-1 point for you.
 
This isn't a bad story in itself. And anyone notice how closely TNG's 1st season episode "Justice" closely parallels "BEM?"

But what ruins this story for me (beyond yet another Doohan voice) is how they depict BEM as a colony being. It's cringingly stupid!

There's nothing wrong with the idea of a colony being. For a good example I refer you to Greg Bear's novel Anvil Of Stars. If TAS animators had shown something more like that it would have been cool and would have worked much better.

What hurts BEM is the same thinking that hurt "The Infinite Vulcan." Everything about that story is just fine...until you hit the fifty foot Spock clone. :wtf::wtf::wtf: doesn't begin to express it! Then you're taken right of the story because of such stupidity. If they'd kept the Spock clone as normal sized than "The Infinite Vulcan" could have ranked as one of TAS' best.
 
There, there... We can always rationalize ourselves out of these jams, now can't we? It's not that bad, it never is. Just sit back and think happy thoughts while I think of something...

For example, if Bem was a colony being, it makes little sense for him to consist of the body sections of a humanoid to begin with. He'd most probably consist of far smaller elements, arranged as required. However, the fact remains that he was of humanoid shape - and for what purpose? Why, for deceiving our heroes about his true nature!

So it sort of follows that what we see of him later on should still be subterfuge or camouflage of some sort. He cuts his fake head and fake feet off to clear an obstacle, but he doesn't completely abandon his fake humanoid shape. We can then safely assume that he is of a far more interesting and plausible biological makeup, just made of very fine components (as in the Foster novelization, which depicts an entire Bem-style biosystem in the extended part), and does his damnedest to fool the eyes of the heroes - and thus of the audience as well.

Hence, we think we see a flying detached head, while in fact a swarm of component creatures is flying like a swarm of bees and maintaining a deceptive shape.

As for the 50-foot Spock, give me a minute. Or a few.

Timo Saloniemi
 
I am posting in The Infinite Vulcan threat in relation to comments made here...

But I rewatched BEM today and really liked it. I loved the "aborigines"--they were cool-looking. But Bem was also an interestingly complex character--by turns irritating, intriguing, exasperating, somewhat pitiable. You could never tell either what his own motivations were or how David Gerrold, the writer, wanted us to view him.

I also enjoy Nichelle Nichols getting the chance to be an otherworldly deity. I would definitely give this episode a "B+."
 
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