“FAR BEYOND THE STARS”
“It’s official. Deep Space Nine—BEST STORY EVER!”
I can’t overstate how much I love this episode. I’d say it’s certainly in DS9’s top 3, not to mention one of the finest of the franchise, and one of my favourite pieces of television full stop. It’s the first time Star Trek has truly explored the racism of Earth’s past in an upfront and unflinching manner and the results are powerful to say the least. Of course, a message show is only as good as its execution, and thankfully “Far Beyond the Stars” boasts an inspired and beautifully crafted script by Ira Behr and Hans Beimler, brilliant performances and lavish production values. It’s engaging, emotional, thought-provoking and still absolutely devastating after all these years.
The central premise is simple yet effective: the Prophets evidently trying to rally Sisko’s spirits by giving him a taste of another life in another time, perhaps in order to show him how far humanity has progressed over the centuries. The actual details are kept deliberately ambiguous and the writers thankfully forgo the need to overdo the technobabble explanations and instead focus on the heart of the story.
And what a wonderful story it is, too. I found myself immediately immersed in the world of Benny Russell, and have to commend the producers for so beautifully and vividly recreating the period of 1950’s New York. It’s an absolute joy to watch and perhaps the most wonderfully rendered and atmospheric period piece Star Trek has ever done. The fact Benny and his colleagues (who look remarkably like our DS9 crew) are writers for a pulp sci-fi magazine is an inspired touch, and makes the episode something of a Valentine to what was something of a golden age for sci-fi. Not only that, but it allows for some delicious meta touches. For instance, I’ll never NOT be delighted by seeing the characters sitting around a table reading Benny’s DS9 story and commenting on how great it is (“it’s a damn fine piece of writing is what it is, and Deep Space Nine is a very intriguing title!”). Is it self-congratulatory on the part of the writers? Perhaps, but they’ve more than earned it!
The characters are wonderfully drawn and brought to perfect life by the cast, who are clearly having a blast. It’s great to see real-life husband and wife Alexander Siddig and Nana Visitor playing a married couple, while Colm Meaney is fun as the robot-loving, Asimov-esque Albert and Terry Farrell is utterly charming as the endearing receptionist with a very Brooklyn twang. Armin Shimmerman truly shines as the fiery Herbert, a talented yet tempestuous writer with a social conscience, while Rene Auberjonois does a superb job as Douglas Pabst, their blunt, rather unlikable editor: a man whose primary concern is towing the line, pleasing the publisher and keeping the profit margins up (why did I wonder if this character was maybe a sly dig at Rick Berman?). As he tells Benny, “I’m a magazine editor, I’m not a crusader. I’m not here to change the world, I’m here to put out a magazine.” The fireworks between Pabst and Herbert make for compelling and fascinating viewing. If Herbert is ahead of his time, Pabst typifies the backward looking conservative type who aren’t necessarily bad people in themselves, but who care more about maintaining the status quo even if they know that it’s unjust and wrong. His justification for rejecting Benny’s story on the basis of his lead’s skin colour is clear racism, yet he sees his response as simply pragmatic because that’s just “the way things are”. Thank the Prophets not everyone adopted such a weak, conformist attitude. As the saying goes, “the only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for good people to do nothing.”
The star of the show is, of course, Avery Brooks, who also serves as director, and he is utterly fantastic both behind and in front of the camera. One of the first things I noticed in his portrayal of Benny is that his voice lacks the strength and resonance it usually has when he plays Sisko. Benny is soft-spoken and almost rather shy and unsure of himself. He’s a man that has clearly had to struggle to get where he is and feels beaten down by life. In fact, as we see when he is walking home minding his own business and, later, when having a night on the town with his girlfriend, violence is a constant spectre in his life, and the lives of all those marginalised by society. It’s wonderful seeing Benny come alive as he creates his story about a “coloured Captain”; a beacon of hope for a better future, as Star Trek has always been to so many. One of the most heartbreaking moments is when his young friend Jimmy, marvellously played by Cirroc Lofton, openly scoffs at the very idea of a black hero. It’s the only time we ever hear the “N-word” used in Star Trek, and the way it’s used is a punch in the gut, yet I don’t think anyone could object in the context. It’s a sign that, back then, in the 1950’s, the very idea of equality was a hopeless delusion.
Something “Far Beyond the Stars” does remarkably well is celebrate the power of visionary fiction to inspire, to heal, and to open peoples’ minds to new ideas and new ways of thinking; to expand our consciousness. That’s something Star Trek has always done from the moment of its inception, and something, I think, it continues to do. But, this story takes place a full decade before Star Trek first aired, at a dark and deeply divisive time. People often tend to view the 1950’s as something of a golden age, and it perhaps was if you were white, heterosexual and had sufficient money in the bank. It would have been nice if Benny’s story had a happy ending; an ending he richly deserved. Sadly, Benny was a man before his time. Not only is the guy still recovering from the horrific beating he received at the hands of two racist cops, but the final beating he takes is far more painful: having the very story he poured all his heart and soul and hopes into destroyed.
I’ve seen a lot of people complain over the years that Avery Brooks’ overplayed the climatic breakdown. I call bullshit on that, and I hope the “What We Left Behind” documentary helped people revise their opinion. I think part of the problem comes from TNG, where a character’s pain or grief would largely take the form of a sanitised, stoic yet lingering gaze into the middle distance at the end of the episode. That’s about all the emotion a lot of Star Trek fans seem able to handle. A lot of people will never have seen someone have a mental breakdown, but those that have will know how accurate and real Brooks’ performance is here. It’s not pretty, it’s not restrained and it’s not stoic; we’re talking real, ugly-crying. The fact Brooks made people uncomfortable is good, because they shouldn’t be comfortable. Frankly, he brings me to tears each time I watch this episode, because he’s clearly channeling a pain that I’m certain isn’t manufactured, but is real and, as his fellow actors shared, he opened a floodgate that wouldn’t easily close afterward. Brooks’ passion about the episode is palpable and he excelled all round, bringing a sense of genuineness, heart and legitimacy and helping make this one most powerful episodes of Star Trek ever created.
Fortunately, the heart of the episode is about hope, and we get a wonderful closing scene with Ben and his father, Joseph, who makes a most welcome return to the series (along with Kasidy, who I almost thought the writers had forgotten about). Sisko finds the strength to carry on with his job by recalling Benny’s strength and the the positive change people like him eventually went on the create in the world. The final musing about perhaps his reality all being the dream of Benny rather than Benny being a product of his dream is beautifully poetic and meta; particularly as Sisko almost seems to be looking into the camera as he speaks the words. It reminded me of the words of the Chinese philosopher Chuang Tzu, who once woke from a dream in which he experienced himself as a butterfly only to wonder if he was, in fact, the butterfly dreaming he was a man.
Beautiful, heartbreaking, inspiring, painful and rich episode—one of the very best, most quintessential episodes of Star Trek, and television at its finest.
Rating: 10