“Inner Space”: The Chase
“The Chase” is definitive Star Trek: The Next Generation for me. It’s one of those episodes I find truly iconic, everything I want this show to be and one of the first stories that comes to mind whenever I think of it in passing. There’s quite a lot of those this year.
And yet I’m finding it hard to come up with things to say about it that aren’t obvious. I guess I’ll address the only real potential criticism I can think of straight away: The von Dänikenism stuff at the end is a little bit iffy and arguably anthropocentric, even if it does fit into the continuity of the established Star Trek universe without incident. But that’s sort of the problem with this kind of writing, isn’t it? Science fiction writers can focus on details like world-building minutiae and miss the larger social implications of their work. It must be said, however, that Ron Moore and Joe Menosky cite Carl Sagan’s Contact rather than Chariots of the Gods? and “The Chase” does provide the interesting wrinkle that the protohumanoids were responsible not for the cultures and religions of the species they gave birth to, but to existence itself, theirs being the only intelligent life in that part of the galaxy (and I like the stipulation “this part of the galaxy” because it hedges against the common sci-fi tendency to downplay the immense size of the observable universe: Maybe intelligent life evolved in other forms elsewhere in the universe. Maybe even in our galaxy, like, say, on the other side of that wormhole near Bajor).
I also adore the protohumanoid’s speech: It’s such a beautiful and fitting Star Trek message delivered with warmth and conviction by Salome Jens. And from a Vaka Rangi perspective, it’s even more appropriate: Cherish and respect life, because we are all living beings bound together by consciousness. And it’s entirely fitting that this is a message we hear at the conclusion of a vast, galaxy-hopping adventure (and it’s a testament to how much progress we’ve made this year that I don’t even feel the need to point out how well served the cast is, with everyone getting to show off their skills in an effective and memorable way to help solve the puzzle): It’s a perfectly effective Star Trek metaphor for the very things we voyage to understand.
Jens’ one-scene wonder also showcases what an absolutely killer week this is for guest stars: Apart from her, Norman Lloyd is absolutely wonderful as Captain Picard’s old archeology professor and mentor, and he brings a lovely and moving bittersweetness to every scene he’s in. Just in passing, Professor Galen’s subplot with Captain Picard is a naturalistically flawless demonstration of what’s become such a hallmark of this series: An examination of your life guided by awareness, and acceptance, of the weight of your past on your present self. Jean-Luc’s words to Beverly about the weight of the past resonated particularly with me: I think it’s the best depiction of this theme in the season, and one of the best in the whole series.…