I think it was meant to be a blotch of Armus' oily concentrated evil he left behind.I liked this episode a lot, especially the Armus creature. The one thing I hated though, was that weird "splotch" (I assumed it was supposed to be blood, but not sure? Impact mark??) on Tasha's face. So carefully drawn and fake-looking.
Which is why I don't buy it so much. Geordi, Worf, Troi. Lots of the characters were being underutilized. She was no greater example by any stretch. No one is going to come out & say "Hey, she thinks she can do better somewhere else" but that is easily what the situation likely was, & when the show took off, it was time to let everyone know "Hey. I'm still around" I wouldn't call it begging, but it certainly was convenient that suddenly she wanted to be back on board, so to speakIncidentally, Marina Sirtis also pushes back really forcefully in the interview on the notion that Tasha got no development in season 1. She got all the stuff about an abusive upbringing on a brutal planet, whereas Troi was being written out of shows left and right that season. It was an interesting perspective
Heck, the whole episode with her sister wouldn't have even been worth doing otherwise. Tasha was imho FAR more useful to the show dead than living lol. It bonded everybody in real way. It gave tangible history that otherwise would've been absent, or needed to be built, & it removed the possibility of the actress, (Who I think isn't very good) from influencing things with her performing, & frankly, it added a new level of drama to Star Trek that hadn't been there in TOS. Heck, it hadn't even been there in the movies, ever since they decided to bring Spock back from the dead. Nope, main cast dying was new ground worth having happen, even if it looked really tossed together. I do wish it have been given a more thoughtful treatmentVery well said. They did such a good job with subsequently using little moments to demonstrate how permanently haunted everyone was by Tasha's death. Data keeping the hologram of her, Troi talking to Worf about receiving promotions due to the death of a crewmate, Riker invoking Tasha when he is outraged by Worf's plan to commit suicide, the way Picard looks at her the first time in "All Good Things".
These moments happened rarely, but they were so impactful when they did. It really does keep her death reverberating through the entire series, in a way TV rarely manages.
Which is why I don't buy it so much. Geordi, Worf, Troi. Lots of the characters were being underutilized. She was no greater example by any stretch.
Code of Honor was her featured episode. Was it crap? Sure. Haven wasn't much better. All the roles had yet to deliver what was promised of them IMHO. It's only the 1st season. Even Data only got 1 featured episode. Outside of Picard, who is the lead, I think they did a fair job of evenly distributing featured time (excepting Wesley who got way more). It's just my opinion, but she bailed too easilyNobody said Yar was the only character that was being underdeveloped. People are individuals. Put two people in the same situation and they'll probably react in different ways. Several of the actors were being underutilized, but Crosby was the one who decided to deal with it by walking out. Perhaps Sirtis, an English actress who was fairly new to America, was less confident of her ability to make a career in Hollywood if she left the show. Or perhaps she felt she'd invested more in the role by coming to the US and thus wasn't ready to walk away.
And I'd hardly say Worf and Troi were as underutilized as Tasha. Worf had "Heart of Glory." Troi had "Haven." The only real focus episode Tasha got in season 1 was the one where she died. Before that, what kind of focus did she really get? Getting space-drunk and sleeping with Data. Getting kidnapped by a racial stereotype. Getting stuck in the "penalty box" by Q. She was supposed to be Vasquez from Aliens, strong and fearless, but she kept getting objectified and made vulnerable. More than with any of the others, she was not given the role she was promised.
Code of Honor was her featured episode.
It's just my opinion, but she bailed too easily
Frankly, Troi's arranged marriage story in Haven did just as little to bolster her character imho
While it's her career, as a viewer, I'm entitled to hold opinions about what happens on the show. They're harmless opinions, & not entirely without merit. I think she didn't give the show a proper chance. Plain & simple.
Code of Honor was her featured episode. Was it crap? Sure.
Exactly my point. She was "featured" by being treated like a possession. It didn't really develop her character that much, it just made her a prize to be fought for, even if she was the one doing the fighting. Basically the only things it established about her were that she's a good fighter, that she firmly believed in Starfleet principles, and that she felt flattered to be desired by "such a basic male image" as the man who kidnapped her and planned to force her to marry him (holy crap, people!). And she wasn't really in that much of the episode overall, since a lot of it focused on the other characters trying to free her from captivity.
I also remember being really ticked off when Beverly left. Has there ever been a credible story about that?
Lol, that's one way looking at it . Unfortunately, I don't consider them either the worst or best. As an episode, Code of Honor, while idiotically insensitive, doesn't reach the depths of poor story telling & production values that Shades of Gray does imho. It's a pretty lame episode, & inadvertently controversial, but not notable other than that. If it weren't for the race issue, no one would even talk about it, because it's forgettable, like many S1 episodes.At some point I realized the entire series contains only two installments I would describe as Tasha Episodes -- "Code Of Honor" and "Yesterday's Enterprise" -- and I consider them, literally, the single worst and the single best episode of the entire series.
So that's one way her presence was notable! Who else has that little time being showcased, and still manages to be so crucially involved with the series highest highs and lowest lows?
If it was anything other than her feeling the show wasn't worth sticking around for, it would've come out by now. Call it whatever you want, felt underwritten, underutilized, poorly written, misled, thought the show was a lost cause, etc... She left because she thought she had other better options out there, & as far as I'm concerned, I'd say she didn't. Heck, to this day, 30 years later, her IMDB page is still featuring a Tasha Yar profile pic. It's the most noteworthy thing she ever did, & it wasn't enough to keep her around. She bailed too hastily imho.The point is, there may be factors we don't know about. Maybe it wasn't just about the size of her role. I think her role was underwritten, but we can't know what other professional or personal factors may have influenced her choice.
As an episode, Code of Honor, while idiotically insensitive, doesn't reach the depths of poor story telling & production values that Shades of Gray does imho.
If it weren't for the race issue, no one would even talk about it, because it's forgettable, like many S1 episodes.
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