3.14 – “Whom Gods Destroy”
Plot: Kirk and Spock beam down to a mental asylum for the incorrigibly criminally insane, established as a domed colony on a poisonous planet. They bear a revolutionary new cure for the 15, er no, 16 patients in residence. When they arrive they discover the newest patient, Garth, has taken over the asylum and now intends to hijack the Enterprise, escape, and conquer the galaxy. While our heroes are taken prisoner, can Scott and McCoy back on the ship puzzle out a way to penetrate the planet?
Thoughts I have mixed feelings about this episode. It is colorful and full of surprise and adventure, although perhaps the third act could use more plot complications. There is a charismatic guest star, an Andorian, a Tellarite (those are the aliens that look like Ugnaughts), and only the second appearance of an Orion slave girl in TOS (based on TOS’ reputation, you’d expect to see them more often). Garth comes off like a villain from Batman (1966-1968)–grandiose and a bit silly–but he’s a fun character, complete with a rogues gallery of colorful henchmen. The resemblance to Batman is even appropriate, as the green Marta is played by none other than Yvonne Craig, fresh from her role as Batgirl in Batman’s final season.
On the other hand, the episode is replete with offensive stereotypes. Worst is the sexist treatment of Marta, who is portrayed as decorative and of no use to the men. I cringed when she unconvincingly tries to prove her intelligence by pointing out her skills at poetry, painting, and dance–all women’s arts; she couldn’t possibly be good at science or logic. Yvonne Craig is an excellent dancer–but I would have felt better about enjoying it if the character was more developed. Then, of course, Garth caps off the misogyny by blowing her up.
I always find it curious to see persons with mental illness depicted as supervillains. My experience working with patients committed to inpatient psych wards shows how unlikely this is. When patients get committed it is frequently because they are too disorganized to care for themselves and eat safely–not the kind of circumstance where someone would be prepared to hijack a starship. I guess forensic commitments are a little bit different.
I imagine it would be very expensive to colonize a poisonous planet just to house a small asylum. Do people never think of these things? This does not speak well about the attitude towards mental illness in the 23rd century. Spock’s right, however–15 patients among billions in the galaxy is pretty good.
Spock’s dialogue as he grudgingly admits he and Kirk are brothers, with his arms folded across his chest, is delicious. I don’t know why he didn’t immediately stun the two Kirks at the end and just raise the force field–pretty slow thinking for our science officer. Apparently Nimoy was irate about the way his character was written for the episode, and wrote a letter of protest to the studio about it.
Kirk’s dialogue to Garth, “I am primarily an explorer now,” suggests he has a history as a military commander that would have been fun to explore. Did he serve during the Romulan War?
3 out of 5 disrespected asylum Governors.
Edit: I can’t seem to get this one out of my head. Post-season, I’m retroactively bumping it up to a 3.5.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whom_Gods_Destroy_(Star_Trek:_The_Original_Series)
Leave a Reply to Randi Cohen Cancel reply