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TNG Rewatch: 5x15 - "Power Play"

Trekker4747

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PowerPlay.jpg


The Enterprise comes upon a hostile, barely habitable, moon from which an old Starfleet distress signal is coming, a stress signal from the starship Essex a Daedalus-Class starship that went missing nearly 200 years ago. At first Picard is content to move-on, having solved the mystery of this missing ship but Troi senses life on the moon so the crew decides to investigate.

Electromagnetic disturbances in the atmosphere of the moon necessitates taking a shuttle down, in experiences a turbulent flight resulting in a crash-landing. Troi and Data come out of the shuttle un-harmed but Riker broke his arm in the impact. Soon, O'Brien beams down with transport-enhancers to allow everyone to beam safely back to the ship. Before transporting O'Brien is struck by lightening which takes out the others as well, four entities of light converge on the group and enter their bodies, though the entity intended for Riker leaves without entering him.

Once back on the ship Troi, Data and O'Brien begin acting strangely, trying to convince Picard to take the ship to the southern pole of the moon, the entity in Data grows impatient and tries to take the ship there himself, resulting in Riker shutting down bridge functions and the three possessed officers flee the ship and end up sealing themselves in Ten-Forward with hostages after the bridge tries to capture them.

Picard offers himself for a hostage exchange as some crew were injured the siege on Ten-Forward. Once there, Picard learns what is going on. The leader of the group, in Troi, claims they are the dis-embodied spirits of the Essex bridge-crew. When the ship crashed two centuries ago somehow the disturbances on the moon gave the ship's crew a non-corporeal form and they've been trapped there ever sense. They plan to have the Enterprise remove their remains from the moon and give them a proper burial back home. They believe that doing this will give their spirits rest.

Naturally, Picard is dubious to these claims but plays along as the bridge crew works to remove the entities from the bodies of the three officers. Eventually, all efforts fail and Picard allows the group to head for a cargo bay where they will beam-aboard the remains of the Essex crew.

Once in the cargo bay, Picard is able to get the real story out of the Essex captain. He reveals that Picard is right, they're not the spirits of the crashed crew, but rather the spirits of alien prisoners "incarcerated" in a non-corporeal form on the moon. He plans to use the Enterprise crew as hosts for the remaining prisoners so they can flee the moon.

Picard and the bridge play a gambit where they're able to use a field to confine the beamed-aboard spirits in the cargo bay and Picard offers the lead-alien the choice of them either returning to the surface peacefully or he will open the cargo-bay door, blowing the crew and all of the alien "spirits" out into space. The alien agrees to Picard's terms, Troi, Data and O'Brien are returned, unharmed, to Picard and the alien "spirits" are returned to the moon.

I believe this is the first episode of the series to play in the genre of the action/hostage movie genre and it more or less pulls off the idea with a success.

The themes in the episode are very much of the action/hostage-movie genre, generally in the battle between the lead villain (in this case the alien in Troi) and the hostage negotiator (in this case Picard) and the attempts by others to resolve the situation. Riker works as a something of a second-tier negotiator from the bridge while Ro and LaForge work with available equipment to find a solution.

Our three "possessed" actors do a great job in their roles, Meany further solidifying his main-case potential for when he goes to DS9, Spiner does a good job in being the more aggressive "first officer" to the "captain" of the Essex and Sirtis does a great job of the leader of the group in her posturing and voice of being intimidating. It's episodes like this that shows how underused Sirtis tended to be in the series. But when they use her to her full potential she certainly delivers.

There's probably some weak plot-points and quibbles here and there, O"Brien is able to accomplish quite a bit from the small computer terminal in Ten-Forward, but overall this is a pretty solid episode all around.

Of note: In this episode when going down to the surface in the shuttle the group are seen wearing five-point harnesses. I know it's something of a common thing to joke about when it comes to Trek (or any sci-fi) and the lack of seatbelts but those jokes mostly ignore the gravity/inertia manipulation starships (or any sci-fi ship) are capable of (and would have to be in order to achieve relativistic speeds in an instant.) Usually when we see the crew tossed around or something it's due to an unexpected impact or other anomaly that the inertia dampeners cannot 100% compensate for (but likely is still doing *something* considering the speeds and movements we'd be talking about without gravity/inertia manipulation.)

So here, it's odd to see seatbelts used in the shuttle. I believe one of the few times, if not the first time, we see seatbelts used in Trek. Granted, we could argue the atmospheric problems around the moon maybe necessitated them to some degree but I find it hard to believe the movements of the shuttle were severe enough to warrant seatbelts to compensate for the deficiencies in inertial dampeners considering the movements cannot be more violent than the movements experienced on the ship from time-to-time.

It almost looks to me like, maybe, the turbulent shuttle ride was done "in camera", that the shuttle was on a gimble or something to rock it, rather than the old trick of just shaking the camera. I wonder if doing this necessitated the seatbelts for the actors' safety rather than suggesting anything about the restraint system technology of the 24th century.

Without looking it up, I believe this episode is the first one to reference the Daedalus-Class starship, the name given to an early design of the TOS Enterprise, the ship with the sphere-shaped primary hull. We would see a model of this class of ship on occasion in the various series, most notably in the office of Sisko on DS9.

As something of a humorous experience working on the show, Marina Sirtis sites this one as being a lesson in doing her own stunts. When the away team is hit by the lightning they fly backwards and land on their backs. Sirtis has said that she did her own stunt in this scene and managed to fracture her tail-bone on landing, only to discover the final shot was so far away that the extra effort put into the stunt was for naught. "It could have been Worf in Troi's uniform and no one would have known the difference." (para.)

Also, odd for the series at this point, the music in the episode is pretty good.

In short, a good episode that plays in this type of action-movie genre well.
 
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I really enjoy this episode. A pity nearly 2 minutes of film is lost, so they had to upscale SD footage on Blu-ray.

I guess we're all going to handwave over the fact that not only can these imprisoned spirits easily take over the bodies of humans and half-Betazoids, but also androids.

It's also curious that Picard wouldn't call out the aliens sooner because they're obviously not acting like Starfleet officers. For plot reasons, they had to hold on the reveal, but that's the kind of thing that would be challenged right away.
 
Daedalus-Class starship, the name given to an early design of the TOS Enterprise, the ship with the sphere-shaped primary hull.
Well, the name isn't exactly given to that design. It's just given to the unseen Essex which, with her explicated 200 crew, is an extremely unlikely candidate for the sphere-hulled midget ship (especially when Archer's ship from the same era only ever had 80 crew but had a saucer bigger than Kirk's).

O'Brien's successes with the Ten Forward computer terminal are all the more remarkable for the fact that the terminal appears to have been introduced for this purpose only! Previously, Guinan relied on a separate office, and whatever control of replicators or drink mixers she needed, she achieved with concealed interfaces.

In short, a good episode that plays in this type of action-movie genre well.
These genre stories walk a fine line, though. Storylines of crime-fighting and counter-terrorism are more exciting if featuring flashy and futuristic weapons, devices and technologies - but if those are too alien to us, they only confuse the audience, making any dramatic jeopardy a "ridiculously contrived setup" and any solution a "silly deus ex machina".

Technobabble relating to why the heroes can't just stun the villains and sort out any complications such as possession later on is vital to the story but also off-putting. Taping an extra pistol between your shoulder blades, the audience understands and enjoys. Using a high-powered sniper rifle, the audience understands and enjoys. Introducing a fictional monitoring system that sees through walls, the audience may understand and enjoy. But a plasma discharge device with fictional rules controlling its use, the audience may simply reject.

It's the same with science fiction whodunnits - the crime cannot be mundane or the scifi setting would be superfluous, but it cannot be incomprehensibly futuristic, either, or the audience will miss all the clues. But "Power Play" does remarkably well here, probably mostly because the TNG audiences are already saturated with technobabble and don't find its presence here offensive; similar babble is often found in action movies with a 20th or 21st century setting, to their great detriment.

It's also curious that Picard wouldn't call out the aliens sooner because they're obviously not acting like Starfleet officers.
You really think Kirk wouldn't act like this if fighting for his life among people claiming to be "future Starfleet officers"?

Well, perhaps Kirk might not, but Picard would have to account for the likes of Tracey, Merrick or Stocker, too, for a variety of survival strategies and personality types. Certainly "failing to follow proper procedure" would be no proof either way.

Timo Saloniemi
 
I really enjoy this episode. A pity nearly 2 minutes of film is lost, so they had to upscale SD footage on Blu-ray.

I guess we're all going to handwave over the fact that not only can these imprisoned spirits easily take over the bodies of humans and half-Betazoids, but also androids.

It's also curious that Picard wouldn't call out the aliens sooner because they're obviously not acting like Starfleet officers. For plot reasons, they had to hold on the reveal, but that's the kind of thing that would be challenged right away.

Yeah it's odd the spirits were able to take over Data but the show plays fast and loose sometimes with "how Data works" it's possible his positronic brain is similar enough to a human (biological) brain that it canb e taken over.

And, Picard does seem to call-out that the aliens aren't acting like Starfleet offciers but Worf counters that their time in a non-corporeal form may have driven them mad.
 
Love this one. One of the best from seasons five, six and seven.
 
This used to be my favorite episode from Season 5 at one point. It isn't anymore, but it's up there still.
 
One of my fave episodes. I think the three leads are all exceptional, and the moody atmosphere on the Enterprise after they have come back aboard is really well done. I think they really captured the mood of being a quiet place in the middle of a storm.
 
One of the better "possession" episodes of STNG. It picked up the pace after a series of "slow" episodes. I'd always rank it near the upper part of the season.
 
I thought she was great. And the scenes with possessed Miles, Keiko & Molly really creeped me out this time ( having been the first time I've seen it since becoming a father myself).
 
Good episode. Very disturbing and dark in tone, this one. Not the kind of thing we typically see on TNG at all.

The vibe between the possessed Miles and his wife and daughter was really creepy, yeah. In fact, I thought at one point when he seized her arm and she started screaming that this was leading into an even darker direction than Star Trek has ever gone. :eek: By which I mean the beginnings of a scene akin to what was in Troi's mind in the previous episode Violations, except for real. Thankfully that didn't happen.

But I do wonder what rating this episode was? I know film and TV certifications are different, but just as a brief example of the former, in Britain, the BBFC certification of 12 (or 12A) defines, with regards to horror in films, states:

BBFC said:
Can horror films be passed 12 or 12A?

Yes, some horror films are passed at this category. Moderate physical and psychological threat is permitted at 12A or 12A as long as horror sequences are not too frequent or sustained and the overall tone is not disturbing.

So the DVD and video must surely be rated PG-13 in the US and 12 in the UK. I would say the material here goes WAY beyond what a PG would normally allow. In fact, the amount of threat and menace in the episode is rather shocking by Star Trek standards.

Wish Star Trek had more really edgy episodes like this. A lot of the time across the series things feel too safe. But when this level of genuine threat and menace is delivered, Star Trek can actually be disturbing and powerful, much like it is when it successfully does scary episodes.
 
The Season 5 DVD Collection is indeed rated '12' here in the UK.

The original VHS release from 1992 was rated PG (and wasn't edited), but I can't recall when UK VHS started using the '12' certificate in any case - it wasn't at the same time cinema did (e.g. the 1989 Batman film was a 12 in the cinema, but a 15 when released on video).
 
The vibe between the possessed Miles and his wife and daughter was really creepy, yeah. In fact, I thought at one point when he seized her arm and she started screaming that this was leading into an even darker direction than Star Trek has ever gone. :eek: By which I mean the beginnings of a scene akin to what was in Troi's mind in the previous episode Violations, except for real. Thankfully that didn't happen.

Star Trek had already gone in that direction in "The Gamesters of Triskelion" (season 2) and "The Day of the Dove" (season three), back in the 1960's.
 
The vibe between the possessed Miles and his wife and daughter was really creepy, yeah. In fact, I thought at one point when he seized her arm and she started screaming that this was leading into an even darker direction than Star Trek has ever gone. :eek: By which I mean the beginnings of a scene akin to what was in Troi's mind in the previous episode Violations, except for real. Thankfully that didn't happen.

Star Trek had already gone in that direction in "The Gamesters of Triskelion" (season 2) and "The Day of the Dove" (season three), back in the 1960's.

True, to a point. But for some reason I found those scenes a lot less disturbing, even if the implication in one of them "Uhura in The Gamesters of Triskelion" was technically actually worse. I'm not knocking TOS here either.

But, subjectively, the truth of the matter is that I found the scenes with possessed Miles and Keiko in "Power Play" to be far more disturbing. Perhaps it's because "Power Play" is played completely straight throughout, while the aforementioned TOS episodes were generally campier. Doesn't mean they couldn't be taken seriously, but the whole approach of a lot of those earlier episodes makes the subject matter seem a great deal less weighty to me, with a few exceptions.

It's a bit like how "Wolf in the Fold" from TOS deals with murder and alien ghosts, and is quite freaky, and then you compare it with a TNG episode such as "Schisms". It's not that TOS couldn't do scary, but TNG generally did those kinds of weird, really eerie and edgy type episode better, IMHO.

The point I was trying to make with an episode such as "Power Play" is that it's unexpected for TNG. It's played deadly serious and dead straight, even if possessed Data sometimes goes a bit far in his malicious behaviour, bordering on overacting, it never quite goes too far - it all seems chilling and genuine. The funny thing is that I didn't find this episode that disturbing as a kid at all. As I got older, the episode seems even darker. And in actuality none of the different series (TNG, TOS, VOY, DS9, ENT, or TOS: Animated) did episodes like this on a regular basis.

What if they had?
 
The vibe between the possessed Miles and his wife and daughter was really creepy, yeah. In fact, I thought at one point when he seized her arm and she started screaming that this was leading into an even darker direction than Star Trek has ever gone. :eek: By which I mean the beginnings of a scene akin to what was in Troi's mind in the previous episode Violations, except for real. Thankfully that didn't happen.

Star Trek had already gone in that direction in "The Gamesters of Triskelion" (season 2) and "The Day of the Dove" (season three), back in the 1960's.

I find the scene with the villagers and Tyree's wife near the end of Private Little War to be the worst of the three. Maybe because it's a "gang" of them? Not sure why but I never usually worry when my daughter walks in watching Star Trek but when that scene started I stopped it until she left.

I think the whole Uhura thing being off camera mutes it a bit and even though Chekov does rip Mara's dress, she's still more covered up than that furry bra Nona wears. What the hell was that. Two unfortunate tribbles, or maybe lucky tribbles if they were still alive. It is a matter of perspective.
 
I find the scene with the villagers and Tyree's wife near the end of Private Little War to be the worst of the three. Maybe because it's a "gang" of them? Not sure why but I never usually worry when my daughter walks in watching Star Trek but when that scene started I stopped it until she left.

Thanks for the reminder. I had forgotten about "A Private Little War"! I do think Star Trek is generally darker than many people give it credit for.
 
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