- Code of Honor (Star Trek: The Next Generation)
-
"Code of Honor" Star Trek: The Next Generation episode
Lt. Yar battles Yareena in a fight to the deathEpisode no. Season 1
Episode 4Directed by Russ Mayberry Written by Katharyn Powers
Michael BaronFeatured music Fred Steiner Production code 104 Original air date October 12, 1987 Guest stars - Jessie Lawrence Ferguson – Lutan
- Karole Selmon – Yareena
- James Louis Watkins – Hagon
- Michael Rider – Transporter Chief
Episode chronology ← Previous
"The Naked Now"Next →
"The Last Outpost"List of Star Trek: The Next Generation episodes "Code of Honor" is the 4th episode of the science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation.
Overview
Lt. Yar is abducted by the leader of a people, who abide by a strict code of honor, for use as a pawn to increase his own personal power.
Plot
The Enterprise arrives at Ligon II to acquire a vaccine needed to combat an outbreak of Anchilles fever on Styris IV. The crew, having little information on the Ligonian culture, finds it to be similar to that of ancient Africa following strict customs of status. Specifically, while the men in their culture rule society, the land itself is controlled by the women. Beaming onto the Enterprise with their own transporter technology to provide a sample of the vaccine for inspection, Lutan, the Ligonian leader, is impressed by Tasha Yar's status as a security officer. Yar further demonstrates her combat skills for Lutan on the holodeck. After a tour of the ship, Lutan and his party prepare to depart, but abduct Yar as they transport back to the surface. Captain Picard demands that Lutan return Yar, considering the kidnapping an act of war, but receives no response from the planet. After consultation with his officers, Picard determines that Lutan took Yar in a "counting coup" as a show of heroism. Upon communicating with Lutan in a more peaceful means, Lutan gives the crew permission to beam down to the planet and promises to return Yar after a banquet in his honor.
Lutan announces at the banquet that he will make Yar his "first one", surprising not only the Enterprise crew but also Yareena who believed she was already chosen to be Lutan's "first one". Yareena challenges Yar to a fight to the death to claim back the title of "first one"; Picard objects to the fight, but Lutan refuses to give the Enterprise the rest of the vaccine unless Yar participates. The crew investigates the combat ritual and find that the weapons used are coated with a lethal poison, and also that it is Yareena's wealth to which Lutan owes his position. Picard prepares to have Yar beamed to the Enterprise should she be harmed in the battle. As the match progresses, both Yareena and Yar are equally skilled, but Yar eventually lands a strike on Yareena. Yar quickly covers Yareena and orders the transport of both of them to the Enterprise against the demands of Lutan. Aboard the ship, Dr. Crusher reaches Yareena moments after death, but is able to counteract the poison and revive her. When Lutan demands to know the fate of Yareena, Crusher reveals that Yareena died, thus ceding the match to Yar and breaking the "first one" bond. Yareena is now free to select a new mate; she chooses Hagon, one of Lutan's bodyguards, and effectively strips Lutan of his position of power. Hagon lets Yar go and gives the Enterprise their full supply of vaccine.
Notes
- Writer/Producer Maurice Hurley: "A good idea, but the execution just fell apart. Again, if you take that script and if the actors had been told to give it a different twist, that show would have been different. But it became too baroque and fell apart. But the concept of having a guy say 'I have to have somebody kill my wife and this is the person' is a good idea."[citation needed]
- Former consultant Tracy Torme: "I felt like it was a '40s tribal African view of blacks. I think it was kind of embarrassing. Not only was the ending like [original series episode] 'Amok Time,' but it came dangerously close to 'Amos 'n' Andy.'"[1]
- According to actor Wil Wheaton who portrayed Wesley Crusher: "Code of Honor is not an especially good episode, but it's not as overtly racist as I recalled. I mean, it's certainly not as racist as 'Angel One' is sexist, and if the Ligonians hadn't been arbitrarily determined to be entirely African American, it wouldn't have even been an issue."[2]
References
- ^ Captains' Logs (Edward Gross and Mark A. Altman, 1995)
- ^ http://www.tvsquad.com/2008/04/28/star-trek-the-next-generation-code-of-honor/
- Star Trek The Next Generation DVD set, volume 1, disc 1, selection 3.
External links
- Code of Honor at the Internet Movie Database
- "Code of Honor" at TV.com
- Code of Honor at Memory Alpha (a Star Trek wiki)
- Code of Honor at StarTrek.com
- Code of Honor reviewed by Wil Wheaton (Wesley Crusher)
- Code of Honor rewatch by Keith R.A. DeCandido
Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 1 Episodes 1987-1988 Encounter at Farpoint, Parts I & II · The Naked Now · Code of Honor · The Last Outpost · Where No One Has Gone Before · Lonely Among Us · Justice · The Battle · Hide and Q · Haven · The Big Goodbye · Datalore · Angel One · 11001001 · Too Short a Season · When the Bough Breaks · Home Soil · Coming of Age · Heart of Glory · The Arsenal of Freedom · Symbiosis · Skin of Evil · We'll Always Have Paris · Conspiracy · The Neutral ZoneCategory:Star Trek Star Trek: The Next Generation Primary characters Feature films Other topics Episodes · DVD releases · Recurring characters · USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D) · USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-E) · "These Are the Voyages..."Category:Star Trek Categories:- Star Trek: The Next Generation episodes
- 1987 television episodes
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.