Patterns of Force (episode)

The Enterprise, searching for a missing Federation historian, discovers that the historian has apparently contaminated the cultural development of the planet where he was assigned as a cultural observer to have it follow the societal path of Nazi Germany in the 1930s and '40s.

Teaser
The Enterprise heads for the planet Ekos to retrieve cultural observer John Gill, a brilliant history teacher; Spock and McCoy reminisce about his style of approaching history as a matter of cause-and-effect, rather than dates and events.

While approaching the planet, the ship is attacked by an old-style chemical rocket with a thermonuclear warhead – technology of whose development the planet is not yet supposed to be capable.

Act One
Fearing that Gill's mission has been compromised in violation of the Prime Directive of non-interference with developing planets, Kirk and Spock beam down to Ekos.

They find a culture almost identical to that of Germany during its Nazi period of the 1930s and 40s, down to the uniforms, salutes, persecution of another ethnic culture - in this case the inhabitants of the neighboring planet Zeon, and the concept of the Führer – John Gill himself. Stealing some SS uniforms, Kirk and Spock attempt to infiltrate the Führer's headquarters but are quickly captured.

Act Two
Kirk and Spock are interrogated by an SS-Major; this is interrupted by Chairman Eneg, who chides the SS guard for not realizing that punishment is effective for just so long.

Left with their wounds still open, they find themselves imprisoned with Isak, a Zeon underground member who explains how the Nazi movement began, coinciding with the time of Gill's arrival. Using rubindium transponders planted below their skin before beaming down, the trio manage to escape and return to their base. There, Isak is greeted by his brother, Abrom, and told of the death of his fiancée. In the midst of this, a squad of Ekosian stormtroopers (led by a woman) arrives, intent on arresting the entire lot.

Act Three
When Kirk and Spock intervene to help the underground workers, it is revealed that the woman, Daras (who they recognized from a propaganda broadcast), is an Ekosian member of the underground and the storming was a test to see if the strangers could be trusted - once Kirk and Spock responded to her apparent murder of Abrom by her holding at gunpoint, those gathered realized that the two strangers were definitely on their side and put an end to the farce. Kirk and Spock then reveal who they are and why they are there. They also learn that a fleet of space vehicles is preparing to depart from Ekos to carry the war of extermination to Zeon.

Kirk and Spock accompany Daras and Isak (in Nazi disguise) to Führer headquarters to try and reach Gill; Dr. McCoy joins them in Nazi uniform.

Act Four
Once inside, they listen to a speech by Gill, followed by another from his deputy, Melakon, pledging the destruction of Zeon. The three are able to sneak into a broadcast booth and find Gill, heavily drugged. Partly revived by McCoy, they learn the truth; Gill took matters into his own hands on Ekos, which was in a condition of anarchy. He organized the planet using the efficiency of the Nazi system, but tried to prevent it from sliding into sadism. Melakon, however, began a takeover and began drugging Gill; Melakon has been the real power on Ekos for years. Isak, meanwhile, learns that Eneg is a member of the underground resistance.

With time running out before the Ekosian fleet reaches Zeon, Kirk struggles to revive Gill to a sufficiently coherent state. Gill broadcasts a message halting the invasion and declaring Melakon a traitor. Melakon takes an MP40 machine gun from a guard and shoots Gill through the broadcast booth curtain to silence him. Isak, in turn, shoots him twice with a Luger, killing him instantly. As Gill dies, he tells Kirk the Prime Directive was the right way all along. Meanwhile, Eneg takes control of the government, declaring, "There has been enough killing. Now we'll start to live the way the Führer meant us to live!" He then (presumably) goes on the airwaves with Daras to offer a new way of life for both Ekosians and Zeons. Back on board the ship, Spock expresses confusion as to how a man as logical as Gill could make such a mistake emulating the Nazis. Kirk says the problem was not simply the Nazis themselves but giving any one individual so much power. McCoy remarks how power corrupts, Spock dryly points out several examples from Earth history of that mentality and Kirk cuts off their argument by saying, "Gentlemen, we've just been through one civil war; let's not start another."

Memorable quotes
"Our missiles utterly destroyed the enemy."

"You look quite well for a man who's been utterly destroyed, Mister Spock."
 * - Ekosian Newscaster and Kirk, on the missile attack on the Enterprise

"You should make a very convincing Nazi."
 * - Spock, commenting on Kirk's Gestapo uniform

"Lieutenant? Better see a doctor. You don't look well. Your color."

"Yes. I shall tend to it, Major."

"Lieutenant! Your helmet. Remove it!"
 * - SS-Major uncovering a disguised Spock

"I...don't care if you hit the broad side of a barn. Just hurry, please."

"Captain, why should I aim at such a structure?"

"Never mind, Spock. Just...get on with the job."
 * - Kirk and Spock, before breaking out of their jail cell

"If we adopt the ways of the Nazis, we're as bad as the Nazis."
 * - Isak, after learning of Uletta's death

"Captain, I'm beginning to understand why you earth men enjoy gambling. No matter how carefully one computes the odds of success, there is still a certain... exhilaration in the risk."

"Very good, Spock. We may make a human of you yet."

"I hope not."
 * - Spock and Kirk, on the human thrill of risk-taking

"Doctor McCoy is having difficulty with that uniform, sir."

"Send him down naked if you have to! Kirk out."
 * - Uhura and Kirk, before McCoy beams into the cloakroom

"Note the sinister eyes and the malformed ears. Definitely an inferior race."
 * - Melakon to Daras, on Spock

"Even historians fail to learn from history...they repeat the same mistakes. Let the killing end, Kirk. Let--"
 * - John Gill's final words

"For so long I've prayed for this. Now I'm sorry."

"So was he."
 * - Isak and Kirk, after Gill's death

"It is time to stop the bloodshed...to bury our dead."
 * - Eneg, as the war between Ekos and Zeon (apparently) ends

"Gentlemen, we've just been through one civil war; let's not start another."
 * - Kirk, as Spock and McCoy debate Gill's mistake

Production timeline

 * Story outline by Paul Schneider,.
 * First Draft Teleplay by Paul Schneider,.
 * Revised Teleplay by Paul Schneider,.
 * Story outline by John Meredyth Lucas,.
 * Story outline.
 * Story outline.
 * Story outline.
 * Story outline.
 * Filmed: –
 * Original airdate:
 * First UK airdate

Story

 * No stardate is logged in the episode. Bjo Trimble gave it a stardate of 2534.0 in her Star Trek Concordance, apparently using an earlier script version. This episode was filmed in early.
 * An early draft of this episode had the source of cultural contamination arriving aboard a small "Ambassador class" vessel called the Magellan. The name would be later applied in TNG to the of ships in the mid-24th century.
 * John Meredyth Lucas wrote this episode out of his fascination with the functioning of totalitarian regimes (especially Nazi Germany) and their ability to stay in power.
 * Eneg's name is an inside joke -- it is "Gene" backwards. The name "Zeon" is a take on "Zion", while "Abrom" corresponds to "Abraham", "Davod" to "David", "Isak" to "Isaac" and "Daras" reversed is almost "Sara." With respect to the "Eneg" name, Walter Koenig would attempt to repeat this inside joke several years later when writing for Land of the Lost. It was to be the name of the Altrusian character in that show. However, somehow the name got mistranscribed as Enik.
 * This is the second mention of Nazi Germany in Star Trek, the first being in . However, in, Scotty did compare Sulu's security system to "the ancient Gestapo".
 * Star Trek 12 contains a novelization of this story by James Blish and J.A. Lawrence.

Sets and costumes

 * The headquarters of the Nazi Party in this episode are the redecorated offices of Paramount Pictures during the 60s, including the building where Lucille Ball ran Desilu. Paramount office buildings were also used as locations in, and a short newsreel scene in.
 * The underground area is the same set as was used for.
 * All the Nazi uniforms used in this episode are taken from Paramount's costume storage, and were previously featured in many of the studio's World War II-era films. Many of them featured mismatched epaulets, collar tabs, and other rank-identifying insignia. However, McCoy's collar tabs, bearing a single silver oak leaf, correctly identify him as a colonel, as Kirk had ordered.
 * This episode makes a common mistake about Nazi Germany common to televison takes on the Third Reich. Kirk tells the Enterprise to outfit McCoy as a Gestapo Colonel. The Gestapo were the national secret police force (Geheime Staatspolizei), who were more like the FBI and did not wear uniforms, but plain clothes. Hogan's Heroes often made the same mistake with Major Hochstetter, who wore the SS uniform, but was repeatedly referred to as "Gestapo."

Cast and characters

 * This episode marks the only time, in any Star Trek series or film, that actor Leonard Nimoy is seen on camera not wearing a shirt.

Special effects

 * V-2 rocket footage from World War II Germany is used in the newscast showing Ekosian missiles.
 * In a change from the stock explosions used throughout the second season, an animated nuclear blast was created for this episode.
 * The attacking V-2 rocket on the viewscreen of Enterprise was reused footage of the Orion scout ship from.
 * In one of the (stock) news footage scenes a car with Adolf Hitler accompanied by soldiers is used to represent John Gill as the Führer on planet Ekos. The scene is a use of stock footage from the Nazi propaganda film Triumph of the Will.

Controversy

 * Because the subject matter of the nation's Nazi past was deemed too serious a topic for light TV entertainment, this episode was withheld from broadcast by the German stations that aired TOS until 2011. During the first German run of TOS in the 1970s, many former Nazis were still alive; during the second run in the 1990s, a wave of Neo-Nazi violence was just sweeping the former GDR.
 * Austrian state-owned TV, on the other hand, did broadcast it, although untranslated with German subtitles (translation of the other episodes was done in Germany and bought by Austrian TV stations). Southernmost Germany in range of Austrian TV broadcast thus could watch the episode. In Germany a translated version was aired in the mid 90s, but only late at night. There was a home-video release however, and the newer German DVD and Blu-Ray sets contain the episode. The fact that the episode was only dubbed 20 or so years after the other shows is obvious by the sound of the dubbing voices which have clearly aged. Especially Gerd Günther Hoffmann's (Kirk's dubbing voice in most of the Star Trek TV shows and films, and also Sean Connery's) voice has notably aged and the Kirk in this episode sounds more like the one in Generations than that of the rest of the TV show.
 * The episode's thesis that Germany, and especially Nazi Germany, was the "most efficient" state in history, was popular in 1960s America; it is, however, strongly denied by modern historians that point to the many bloated, competing bureaucracies with ill-defined areas of competence that existed in that period, mostly financed with stolen and expropriated funds.

Remastered information
The remastered version of "Patterns of Force" aired in many North American markets during the weekend of. While the episode required very few new effects, an entirely new shot of the Enterprise phasering the Ekosian warhead was substituted. In addition, Ekos was given a CGI-makeover as a more Earth-like planet, with new orbital shots of the Enterprise, and the rubindium crystal beam was refined.

Video and DVD releases

 * Original US Betamax release:.
 * UK VHS release (two-episode tapes, CIC Video): Volume 27, catalogue number VHR 2379,.
 * US VHS release:.
 * UK re-release (three-episode tapes, CIC Video): Volume 2.8,.
 * Original US DVD release (single-disc): Volume 26,.
 * As part of the TOS Season 2 DVD collection.

Starring

 * William Shatner as Kirk
 * Leonard Nimoy as Spock
 * DeForest Kelley as McCoy

Guest stars

 * Richard Evans as Isak
 * Valora Noland as Daras

Special appearance by

 * Skip Homeier as Melakon
 * David Brian as John Gill

Co-stars

 * James Doohan as Scott
 * Nichelle Nichols as Uhura
 * Patrick Horgan as Chairman Eneg
 * William Wintersole as Abrom
 * Gilbert Green as an S.S. Major
 * Walter Koenig as Chekov
 * Ralph Maurer as an SS Lieutenant
 * Ed McCready as an SS Trooper
 * Peter Canon as a Gestapo lieutenant
 * Paul Baxley as First Trooper
 * Chuck Courtney as Davod
 * Bart La Rue as a Newscaster

Uncredited co-stars

 * William Blackburn as Hadley
 * Frank da Vinci as a Soldier at a party
 * Roger Holloway as a Soldier at a party
 * Sean Morgan as Second Trooper
 * Eddie Paskey as a Trooper
 * Joe Paz as an SA brigadier
 * Basil Poledouris as a Trooper
 * Unknown performers as:
 * SA officials

External link


Schablonen der Gewalt Patterns of Force Patterns of Force ja:TOS:エコス・ナチスの恐怖 Patterns of Force Patterns of Force