"The Cage"
That fairy dust noise you hear signals the arrival of “The Cage”.
I have to say I really like this one. I considered it a positive surprise upon first viewing it (which was later than most of the rest of
Trek). I actually would have liked to see what a series with Pike, Number One, Boyce and Spock Mark One would have been like; I thought these characters were promising and quite three-dimensional.
“The Cage” has a very engaging theme and it takes it seriously, and what’s satisfying about it is that it doesn’t reduce the key issue to anything simplistic. The Talosians’ behaviour, probing primal emotional states and establishing situations that encourage those primal responses in Humans, becomes fascinating when you realize that for all their assumed air of superiority, they're really studying the strength they have lost, not the weakness they have overcome. The episode turns the idea of what constitutes superiority quietly on its head.
There are a great number of layers here and it’s quite delightful peeling away at them. I particularly like the many angles we're given on the Pike-Vina relationship, and the conflicting but interlocking roles Vina plays in this scenario. There are so many facets: Vina as a fellow captive, encouraging Pike’s sympathy with her, which is both a natural reaction to the unjust circumstances they find themselves in and yet plays into the Talosian plan (both resisting the Talosian imposition on their Human dignity and simultaneously abetting it, as the Keeper smugly notes); Vina as a fellow victim yet also a conspirator; Vina as an obfuscation yet also the voice of truth and exposition; Vina as a fantasy (indeed as a whole string of them) but also as the one sure point of reality in the whole affair, grounding Pike in the moment and the reality of his situation... even as the whole point is to embed him in the fantasy through embracing her. Excellently done.
The episode provokes some often rather subtle exploration about the urge, or the need, to break through illusion and fantasy, about the trap of an apathetic unwillingness to face life's realities and the extremes of the psyche. It explores how the achievement of dreams through differing means can invalidate as well as affirm the original act of dreaming. How building and succeeding can in fact take you away from the struggles that instinctively define a being, and render your subsequent life hollow, so that you're not truly building or succeeding anymore.
(Aside: It occurs to me that this essential theme is explored even more provocatively in the
Destiny trilogy, reinforcing the sense that
Destiny is, for me, the ultimate
Star Trek story. It's an extrapolation of the philosophical underpinnings of this, the first
Star Trek story).
The episode offers some frank and really quite piercing philosophical discussions (condensed for the medium of course) that are wrapped in illusionary visuals, and at times we cut bluntly through that illusion to watch the Talosians observing, offering their commentary. We're never allowed to get lost in it, because this isn't about the illusions but about the balance of struggle VS dream. It's not about twisting Pike's psyche but about demonstrating something about life in general.
(Of course, the whole set-up is also simply to illustrate in ultra-literal fashion the truth of Boyce’s observation that you either meet life warts and all or you turn your back on it and wither away, but it works nonetheless).
Pike really does seem like he's approaching the situation as a dynamic participant, rather than being strung along for the sake of the script. That’s absolutely essential, of course, because if we didn’t have that sense of restrained energy and drive in him, them the whole situation fundamentally wouldn’t work. He asks some very pointed and intelligent questions and cuts to the key observation at every step (itself illustrative of his drive and will to struggle that prevents him buying into the illusion, showing his unsuitability for the Talosian plan and also showing us that he already understands and embodies what Boyce was trying to tell him at the beginning). The Keeper and Vina really seem to work to catch up to him, to respond to the shifts in circumstance that are driven by his intellectual probing and his desire to make sense of what’s happening. It's all just very engaging. I also like the interesting dilemma that this natural tendency on Pike's part to think and analyse and solve problems - this civilized demeanour - is actually working against him, because it's the primal emotional states that cause the Talosian control to falter. Just as the Talosians have lost the will to engage with reality because their fantasy is more comfortable -
not more engaging, just easier - they've lost their grip on their own primal natures and can’t handle the very traits that they probe, exaggerate and place emphasis on in their analysis of Humans. For all their smug description of how Pike is responding to his initial captivity – “now it will make a posturing display of mock-violence”, etc. – they can only reach alien minds when they’re
not cast in the aspect of raw instinctual emotion. It’s all particularly fascinating when you consider that the Talosians view Pike (and presumably Vina) in the same way that Pike would view the Kalar – as an instinct-driven, animalistic being. Vina's complaint that they, the Humans, can't keep such primitive emotional shields up for long enough is a fascinating dilemma for people in the situation of being viewed as inherently non-intellectual "lower life-forms”. How can the Humans convince the Talosians to show them respect? They’re too civilized to do so!
Pike rejects the Talosian threat against
Enterprise, accusing them of being "too intelligent to kill for no reason at all", a summary of Talosian weakness and success in one package. Also, the Keeper’s seemingly genuine reason for rejecting Pike’s eventual offer of mutual cooperation (in spite of his anger over their lack of apology or sensitivity over what they've done) is that if Humans mastered Talosian illusion they would destroy themselves too, which the Keeper evidently doesn’t want. There are a lot of angles here on what constitutes advancement and positive change, what the trade-off on "progress" is. Above all, what a people need to take with them out of the wilderness if they’re going to thrive, if they're not going to drive themselves back there, living in the ruins and dreaming, having achieved “progress” and “betterment” by ridding themselves of the very traits that set them on that journey. A hollow success that is no success at all.
Given where Roddenberry Trek will later go with its implied philosophy, in early
TNG, for example, this is rather eye-opening, no?
Having a peaceful resolution that depended on an understanding arrived at through a willingness to hate and rage and threaten is a wonderfully twisted but provocative idea.
The characters are all likeable. I like Boyce in this one, far more than the take on him in
The Children of Kings. I think I might prefer Pike to Kirk, for what's it worth. I also think Number One worked very well as First Officer.
The Talosians truly begin a
Star Trek tradition of enigmatic aliens testing Humans (our renegade Organian friends from "Observer Effect" being the only real example thus far in this run-through), but they're not just testing out of curiosity or to "understand", they're protagonists in their own right, really, and our angle on what they're doing changes in surprising ways as we come to know them. As I said earlier, they're evaluating "primitive" Human traits with a half-acknowledged awareness that this is a strength they've lost, not an undesirable trait to "evolve out of". Their somewhat smug control over their psyches is no control at all, but a withdrawal from the very things that made them a once-potent force, a withdrawal from life, and they’re clearly aware of that even if they can't admit it. They feel the need to recapture what they’ve lost in order to reclaim their world, even if they can only do so by cultivating the trait in other, "lower" species. Loathing and fearing what they know they need, assuming that they can't or mustn't embody "distasteful" traits that they exaggerate in the image they choose to hold of others.
Talosians...are fascinating. Good show.
They should find better turbolift music though. Although I suppose the Keeper
is like one’s Fairy Godmother, if the Fairy Godmother arranged her own balls and tried to force you to go along and become a princess against your own desires.
Continuity
Rigel VII continues to cause problems, apparently. It seems the United Federation of Planets simply inherited the problems facing the Rigelian Trade Commission (see
Tower of Babel). Bringing VII up to the level of its neighbours isn't proceeding too swiftly, from what we see.
The laser weapon used by the
Enterprise crew greatly resembles the mining lasers used on Luna a century prior ("Demons").
I guess we have to shrug and ignore references to hyperdrive and time warp factor.
I also guess Spock hasn’t adapted to the thicker non-Vulcan atmosphere yet. Your voice carries just fine, Spock.

Next Time: "Conflicting Natures" from
Enterprise Logs. More emotional tomfoolery.