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Skin of Evil

  • Episode aired Apr 23, 1988

Marina Sirtis in Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987)

Counselor Troi is held captive on a deserted planet by a slick, black, oily, sentient and immortal puddle of evil. Counselor Troi is held captive on a deserted planet by a slick, black, oily, sentient and immortal puddle of evil. Counselor Troi is held captive on a deserted planet by a slick, black, oily, sentient and immortal puddle of evil.

  • Joseph L. Scanlan
  • Gene Roddenberry
  • Joseph Stefano
  • Hannah Louise Shearer
  • Patrick Stewart
  • Jonathan Frakes
  • LeVar Burton
  • 32 User reviews
  • 13 Critic reviews

Brent Spiner in Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987)

  • Captain Jean-Luc Picard

Jonathan Frakes

  • Commander William Thomas 'Will' Riker

LeVar Burton

  • Lieutenant Geordi La Forge

Denise Crosby

  • Lieutenant Natasha 'Tasha' Yar

Michael Dorn

  • Lieutenant Worf

Gates McFadden

  • Doctor Beverly Crusher

Marina Sirtis

  • Counselor Deanna Troi

Brent Spiner

  • Lieutenant Commander Data

Wil Wheaton

  • Wesley Crusher
  • Leland T. Lynch

Raymond Forchion

  • Enterprise Computer
  • (uncredited)
  • Operations Division Officer
  • Ensign Bennett
  • All cast & crew
  • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

Did you know

  • Trivia When Riker was sucked into Armus, Jonathan Frakes was in fact submerged in a pool of Metamucil and printer's ink. During a break in filming while Frakes was lying on the beach, covered in the sludge, LeVar Burton approached him and said "Frakes, I never would have done that!"
  • Goofs When starting up the warp engine, Lt. Cmdr. Lynch sets the ratio for the matter-antimatter injectors at 25:1, yet, in Coming of Age (1988) it was established that there is only one ratio with matter-antimatter - 1:1.

Lt. Tasha Yar : [her final words] Death is that state in which one exists only in the memory of others, which is why it is not an end. No goodbyes. Just good memories. Hailing frequencies closed, sir.

Capt. Picard : Au revoir, Natasha.

  • Connections Featured in Star Trek: The Next Generation: Shades of Gray (1989)
  • Soundtracks Star Trek: The Next Generation Main Title Composed by Jerry Goldsmith and Alexander Courage

User reviews 32

  • May 19, 2020
  • April 23, 1988 (United States)
  • United States
  • Official site
  • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA (Studio)
  • Paramount Television
  • See more company credits at IMDbPro

Technical specs

  • Runtime 45 minutes
  • Dolby Digital

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http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS1E22SkinOfEvil

Recap / Star Trek: The Next Generation S 1 E 22 "Skin of Evil"

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Original air date: April 25, 1988

This episode contains the following tropes:

  • 13 Is Unlucky : Troi is on Shuttlecraft 13, which crashes under mysterious circumstances.
  • An Aesop : Tasha's death serves as a reminder that our heroes won't always be saved by Plot Armour , and they don't always get to die heroically.
  • Ain't Too Proud to Beg : Troi resorts to begging to try to get Armus to release Riker and offers herself instead, but she otherwise doesn't give Armus the satisfaction. The rest of the crew refuse to beg, as well, despite being commanded to.
  • Armus is trapped alone on a dead world with nowhere to go and nothing to do, never to be reunited with the glorious beings who abandoned him there. Forever. And how he screams when Picard rubs that fact in.
  • Riker, when trapped inside Armus — and worse, when he's outside of Armus, covered in black slime, face frozen in mid-scream.
  • Antagonist Title : "Skin of Evil" describes Armus.
  • Apocalypse How : It's implied (though never stated outright) that the original inhabitants of Vagra II devastated the surface and wiped out nearly all life through their warlike ways, before purifying themselves of their negative aspects. They then left the barren world and left Armus, the embodiment of their cast-off wickedness, as the only thing living on it.
  • As You Know : The Chief Engineer (for this episode) announces his name and rank when Picard hails him, even though Picard would be well aware of who his Chief Engineer is. This is because he's the last in a revolving door of temporary Chief Engineer characters spread across season one.
  • Bait-and-Switch : The camera zooms in on Geordi studying Armus through his visor while Riker is talking. You'd expect that Geordi would reveal some insight about the creature he'd gained from his special sight, but it's really just setting up Armus knocking Geordi's visor off his face as a cruel game.
  • Believing Their Own Lies : Captain Picard says this of Armus when he's been stranded on a planet for so long because its former residents didn't want to have anything to do with him, having shed themselves of him (quite literally).
  • Blob Monster : Armus is a pool of black sludge that can take a roughly humanoid form.
  • Break the Haughty : Picard returns fire to Armus's Kick the Dog actions with words , which are the only thing that can really harm him.
  • Break Them by Talking : Picard's way of defeating Armus; possibly the only way, as he is Made of Indestructium to the point where a direct photon torpedo strike isn't expected to kill him, only to destroy the downed shuttle.
  • Card-Carrying Villain : At the end, while Picard tries to reason with Armus that serving evil enslaves one's mind, Armus has to clarify that he is an actual skin of evil . Despite this, Armus had no choice in the matter .
  • Chekhov's Gun : The holocube with Tasha's funerary message is given to Data, where it will play an important role in the coming seasons .
  • Complete Immortality : Armus. And it is absolute torture for him.
  • Condescending Calmness : Picard does this for good reason, to egg Armus on in order for him to lose his concentration and allow the Enterprise to beam up Troi and the injured shuttle pilot.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle : Armus strikes down Tasha, and she is dead almost immediately—much to the dissatisfaction of Armus, who wanted to see her suffer.
  • Damsel in Distress : Deanna. Trapped in a wrecked shuttle, unable to do anything against Armus. Though her insight does eventually prove significant in helping Picard figure out how to defeat Armus .
  • Dark Is Evil : Armus, made out of pure evil, is an entirely black liquid.
  • Deconstruction : What if the security personnel Red Shirt wasn't some anonymous character but one of the main cast?
  • Don't You Dare Pity Me! : Picard and Deanna both feel some level of pity for Armus when they learn how he came into existence, and just how unimaginably long he's been alone on the dead planet. Armus feels insulted when they offer their compassion, and Troi's pity presses his Berserk Button , causing him to attack Riker. Armus: Pity me?! Save it for yourselves !
  • Dropped a Bridge on Her : Tasha Yar tries to ignore Armus and walk around him, only for it to unexpectedly kill her with a single blow. Gene Roddenberry insisted that Yar's death be senseless rather than a Heroic Sacrifice of some sort. Even the new writing staff that took over in Season 3 thought it was such an awful idea that they specifically wrote " Yesterday's Enterprise " to give Yar a better send-off.
  • The last time we see an Enterprise chief engineer other than Geordi, in this case Leland T. Lynch. None of the remaining first season episodes mention a chief engineer, and when Season 2 begins, Geordi has been promoted to the post.
  • After Tasha is mortally injured, the away team beams up to the transporter room and then carries her to sickbay. In nearly any future episode, they'd have just beamed her directly to sickbay.
  • The ship's crew is gambling on the outcome of the martial arts tournament. Canon would later establish that money became obsolete in the 22nd century. (That said, nothing confirms that they're betting with actual money; it could just be for fun, like the iconic poker games later in the series.)
  • Emotion Eater : Armus needs it to stave off its own suffering.
  • Enemy Without : Armus was created by an alien race who left his world eons ago, possibly to Ascend to a Higher Plane of Existence . He is the result of a process they used to dispose of their collective negative emotions, of which he is the physical manifestation.
  • Evil Cannot Comprehend Good : Armus' questions of the Enterprise crew suggest this. It doesn't seem to get why the Enterprise crew would endure self-sacrifice on behalf of stricken comrades, and a lot of his dialog, when not making threats, revolves around this type of questioning.
  • Evil Is Petty : Armus isn't too bright or clever, and all it wants is to torment people for its own amusement, but in rather pedestrian ways like "make Data point guns at everyone." Everyone else refuses to give it the emotional hand-wringing he desires, which frustrates it to no end, and after killing Yar, their deaths no longer amuse him, he is lonely, and the next worst thing it does is envelope Riker and then spit him back out alive again when it is bored. Data even spells out that "Death is no longer sufficient to eliminate its boredom." Basically, Armus is revealed as an attention-starved bully.
  • Fate Worse than Death : Armus is defeated by tricking it into lowering its guard so its hostages can be rescued, then they blow up the shuttle and drop a warning beacon in orbit so no one will ever get near the planet again. Armus has eternity to himself.
  • First-Name Basis : For some reason, both Troi and Picard refer to the injured redshirt on Shuttlecraft 13 simply as "Ben."
  • Ghost Extras : Yar apparently had no other friends on the Enterprise except everyone in the main cast. You'd think she might have wanted to say something to some of her subordinate security officers.
  • Heroic Spirit : Picard says that the human spirit is indomitable, and that true evil is not Armus himself but the resignation of submitting to him.
  • How Dare You Die on Me! : Crusher goes to extraordinary lengths to try reviving Tasha. Even after one of her staff hesitates, she orders the power on the cortical stimulator increased to try again.
  • I Am the Noun : Picard quotes to Armus that "all spirits are enslaved that serve things evil" . His reply: "I do not serve things evil; I am evil."
  • I Lied : Armus tells Troi that the Enterprise crew won't be coming back. Later... Armus : I lied to you. They came back.
  • Inelegant Blubbering : Armus's screams when Picard is delivering his "The Reason You Suck" Speech sound very much like weeping. Watching it melt back into a puddle is similar to seeing someone curling up in grief .
  • It Amused Me : Armus's stated excuse for killing Tasha and torturing Riker. Deanna realizes that it did not amuse Armus — because she didn't suffer.
  • "It" Is Dehumanizing : Armus takes offense to the crew referring to him as "it" as if to suggest he's not a living being. This doesn't stop him from casting aspersions about Data's own sentience, due to being an android.
  • Kick the Dog : Armus seizes every chance he can get to do this to the away team because he hopes it will amuse him.
  • Killed Off for Real : Tasha Yar. Denise Crosby left the show because she felt her character didn't have enough to do in the episodes. The producers probably felt that there were too many characters anyway and needed to trim the cast a bit, so they apparently took it pretty well. In fact, they worked with Crosby to make her departing episode special—in terms of Star Trek , the show that was responsible for the Redshirt trope. Also, driven home is the fact that Yar's death is somewhat pointless and understated and not the type of dramatic heroic death usually reserved for main characters. Crosby has also stated that she would have stayed if she'd gotten more character-based scenes like Tasha and Worf discussing her performance in the tournament.
  • Laser-Guided Karma : Considering Armus is living a Fate Worse than Death , it gets away with nothing despite ending the episode exactly as it began.
  • Made of Evil : Armus claims to be a skin of evil cast off by titans who thought that by ridding themselves of him, they could escape the bonds of destructiveness. He has zero redeeming qualities. He kills because he thinks it will amuse him. He tortures, physically and psychologically for the same reason. He is literally a black tar pit of hate that was cast off long ago. The only thing that might provoke sympathy is that he had no choice in his creation, and his evil nature is torture for him as well, being in a constant state of undirected hatred and rage.
  • Magical Defibrillator : Averted. Dr. Crusher cranks up the cortical stimulator as high as she can trying to restart Tasha's brain function. Her body jumps from the shock, but she's still dead.
  • Meaningful Funeral : The episode ends with the senior officers on a holodeck, where a message recorded by Tasha in case of her demise is played for them. The holocube that contains the message is later given to Data.
  • No-Sell : Phasers have no effect on Armus.
  • Ominous Obsidian Ooze : Armus, a living oil slick Made of Evil ; while he can take on a roughly humanoid form, he always retains his tarry complexion
  • Powerful and Helpless : Armus murders Tasha, physically tortures Riker, and emotionally tortures the rest of the Enterprise away team in order to gain amusement, yet it doesn't amuse him for long and he can't get them to obey him or break their spirit despite his vast power. Rubbing his own impotence in his face turns out to be the key to defeating him, as Picard discovers.
  • The Power of Hate : Subverted —Armus is a creature literally Made of Evil and this leads the audience to expect that negative emotions would fuel his power. However, being forced to confront and feel his own rage and hate instead of suppressing it makes Armus weaker . Picard fully uses this to his advantage in escaping him. See Talking the Monster to Death below.
  • Puny Earthlings : Armus feels this way about the humans, as his power allows him to kill them with ease despite their force of will. Armus: You humans are puny. Weak.
  • Sacrificial Lion : Tasha Yar's death makes Armus an especially scary villain for the episode, as none of the other main cast are ever killed off in the series by another villain.
  • Sadist : Armus took no real pleasure in Tasha's death because she went too quickly. He wanted her to suffer first and wants everyone else, too, as well.
  • Sadistic Choice : Armus tries to force one on Beverly, saying she gets to choose whether Picard, Data, or Geordi die. It doesn't work because she chooses herself, and he would rather she live with the knowledge she chose which of her friends died.
  • Scotty Time : Picard telling Lynch to get the dilithium crystals realigned quicker so they can save Deanna and her pilot.
  • Senseless Sacrifice : Tasha, in keeping with Gene Roddenberry 's insistence that a security officer would die ingloriously.
  • Ship Tease : Worf encouraging Tasha in her upcoming martial arts tournament, and her smile in response.
  • Shut Up, Hannibal! : See Talking the Monster to Death .
  • Shut Up, Kirk! : Riker: Preserving life—all life—is very important to us. Armus: Why?
  • Stupid Evil : Armus. He tortures the Enterprise away team for fun and then expects them to transport him off world, using threats of more violence as his sole bargaining strategy. Not that he has much of a choice on the matter; as an artificial entity of pure evil, it's literally the only thing he can do.
  • Take Me Instead : Deanna offers herself to Armus to save everyone else, as she's already his prisoner.
  • Talking the Monster to Death : Picard utterly breaks, crushes and obliterates Armus's spirit. Picard: A great poet once said: "All spirits are enslaved that serve things evil." Armus: You do not understand. I do not serve things evil; I AM evil. Picard: (smiling wryly) Oh, no. You're not. Armus: I am a skin of evil left here by a race of Titans who believed if they rid themselves of me, they would free the bonds of destructiveness. Picard: Yes. So here you are. Feeding on your own loneliness. Consumed by your own pain. Believing your own lies. [...] You say you are true evil? Shall I tell you what true evil is? It is to submit to you. It is when we surrender our freedom, our dignity, instead of defying you. Armus: I will kill you, and those in there! Picard: But you will still be here! In this place! Forever! Alone! Immortal! Armus: AAARRRGGHHH!!!!! Picard: That's your real fear. Never to die. Never again to be reunited with those who left you here. Armus: AAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRGGGGGHHHHH!!!!! Picard: I'm not taking you anywhere. Armus: [ Overly Long Scream ]
  • Teleport Interdiction : Armus maintains an energy field around the shuttle that prevents the Enterprise from rescuing Troi and the pilot. Breaking his concentration on maintaining it is key to resolving the episode.
  • Third-Person Person : This episode's entry in the first season's round of finding a Chief Engineer is one Leland T. Lynch, whose gimmick is apparently insisting on using his full name when hailed by the bridge. Picard seems annoyed by this already.
  • Tonight, Someone Dies : The original episodic promo for the episode (viewable on the Blu-ray release) promised that one of the crew wouldn't be making it out alive, with Tasha, Troi, and Riker all being shown in life-threatening situations. It's the first of the three that ends up getting killed.
  • Tragic Monster : For all the evil Armus commits, he had no choice in being created as the thing he is, and is incapable of being anything else. In the end, he is forever stranded and alone on a barren planet with only his rage, hatred, insanity and loneliness .
  • Trauma Button : Calling Armus "it" makes him think of how the Titans cast him off and abandoned him on this world.
  • Vader Breath : Every time Armus speaks it draws a phlegmy breath that makes it sound like it's dying of tuberculosis, in keeping with its appearance as a black sludge monster.
  • Video Wills : Tasha leaves a tearjerking one on the holodeck for the rest of the crew.
  • Villainous Breakdown : Armus undergoes an epic one in the finale, utterly broken by Picard's speech.
  • Wham Episode : The sudden death of a main cast member in the midst of its first season was quite a shock at the time.
  • What Happened to the Mouse? : Troi notes that her fellow shuttlecraft crewmember Ben is still alive and greatly wounded. In the end, both are transported out, but there's no mention of whether or not Ben ultimately survived or recovered.
  • Who Wants to Live Forever? : Armus clearly wants to die and his suffering to end, but is incapable of doing so, instead stuck for all eternity on an empty world with his rage and despair.
  • Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds : Armus, rejected and bereft by a species that just abandoned him and left him alone.
  • Would You Like to Hear How They Died? : Armus taunts Troi about Yar; Troi replies that she already sensed Tasha's death.
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation S1E21 "Symbiosis"
  • Recap/Star Trek: The Next Generation
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation S1E23 "We'll Always Have Paris"

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star trek skin of evil

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The War Without, The War Within

Light and shadows, et in arcadia ego, part 2.

Star Trek Series Episodes

Skin of Evil

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The crew of the USS Enterprise is on a mission to evacuate a research team from the planet Vagra II, a distant planet in the Delta Quadrant. Captain Jean-Luc Picard has been assigned to take the crew to the planet and lead the mission personally. However, upon arrival, the crew is soon met with danger, as they encounter an entity called Armus, an energy-based creature made of an oily substance which appears to be sentient.

Armus has been known to attack nearby ships, and has become a major problem for the locals of Vagra II. When the crew of the Enterprise beams down to the planet, Armus attacks them and captures Deanna Troi. Armus uses the form of a woman, which it uses to manipulate and influence others. It also uses this form to torment Troi by using her worst fears to torment her.

Captain Picard and the rest of the crew must now come up with a plan to rescue Troi from Armus’s clutches. Picard attempts to negotiate with Armus, but its evil intentions are clear. Armus is determined to take Troi’s life, as well as the lives of the rest of the crew, and destroy the Enterprise. In a last-ditch effort to save Troi, Picard leads the crew in a daring mission to penetrate Armus’s protective skin and destroy him from the inside.

The crew is successful in their mission, and Armus is destroyed once and for all. However, the mission has taken a toll on the crew, and Troi’s life hangs in the balance. The crew must now figure out how to save Troi and prevent further destruction from the evil entity.

The crew seeks help from both the locals of Vagra II, as well as the nearby worlds, and are able to construct a plan to save Troi’s life. With the help of Doctor Crusher, they are able to revive Troi and bring her back to the Enterprise. With Armus finally defeated, the crew can continue with their mission and return to their home.

The episode, “Skin of Evil,” is a thrilling action-packed adventure that shows the strength of the crew of the Enterprise, and their determination to protect and save those in need. The episode also serves as a reminder that evil, no matter what form it takes, can be defeated, and that hope can triumph over fear.

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Armus was an entity created by the former natives of Vagra II .

  • 3.1 Appearances
  • 3.2 Background information
  • 3.3 External link

Vagra II [ ]

Armus was born as a by-product, or personification , of a procedure in which a " race of Titans " brought out from within themselves all evil and negative attributes that had bound them to destructiveness. The unwanted substance spread and coalesced into a dank and vile second skin . The race rejected this "skin of evil" and abandoned it on the barren planet Vagra II in the Zed Lapis sector .

Armus dormant

Armus in its dormant state

Armus manifested as a pool of black viscous liquid that could also assume a vaguely humanoid shape. Tricorder scans could not register the substance Armus was composed of, but could only determine that it lacked a neural and circulatory systems , internal organs , and recognizable proteins , and had no known cellular structure . Furthermore, in observing its movements, its means of locomotion could not be determined, as it also appeared to lack skeletal framework or musculature . Initial observations indicated that, though showing no sign of intelligence , much less a brain , the slick showed evidence of thought .

Armus was also capable of enveloping humanoids and incorporating them into the liquid, where they would remain conscious while in liquid form. Armus was capable of then inflicting suffering upon its victims while they were in this state. Armus was impervious to phaser fire, and Data theorized that it could, in fact, feed off of phaser energy. Captain Jean-Luc Picard assumed that Armus was immortal .

After the initial abandonment, Armus was left in a state of undirected rage. However, when the rage was focused, Armus was capable of generating, around itself, an intense undefined force field . With this energy field, it was capable of blocking sensor scans, communications and transporters . It was also capable of using psychokinesis and teleportation on at least humanoid-size organisms within the field. Armus was also capable of inflicting energy discharges that caused synaptic damage to humanoids, killing them. Presumably, this field was also responsible for causing the nearby Shuttlecraft 13 to experience a massive systems breakdown and crash land on the planet in 2364 .

Armus waited for someone to arrive for the rescue of the two shuttlecraft passengers, in order to sadistically torture the rescuers. After killing Lieutenant Natasha Yar with an energy discharge when she tried to walk to the downed shuttle, Armus expected to feel amusement. It also expected that the USS Enterprise -D crew would abandon the rescue effort. Even after they didn't, Armus realized torturing them would never be amusement enough. It wanted passage away from Vagra II, to find the beings that initially abandoned it there. Eventually, Picard was able to distract Armus long enough for the energy field to weaken to a point whereby it allowed beaming the shuttle occupants and Picard off the surface, leaving Armus wailing in fury. Following the beam-up, the shuttle wreckage was destroyed with a photon torpedo to prevent any possibility of Armus using it, and Vagra II was declared off-limits . ( TNG : " Skin Of Evil ")

Despite that interdiction, in 2381 , at Ensign D'Vana Tendi 's suggestion, Beckett Mariner used a submanifold casting stone , which could be used to broadcast voices to a planet, to prank call Armus.

As Armus sat, wishing it had someone to torture , it was surprised to hear a mysterious voice called out its name, then told that it looked "like a big bag of crap ;" this angered Armus, and it demanded that they show themselves. She continued to torment it, calling it a " dummy ", with Brad Boimler adding that they were "touching [its] stuff". Armus then threatened to kill them with "a flake of [its] power ", and exclaimed that he was "a skin of evil", before he became so angry that he stumbled backwards and tripped over a rock and made a splash landing on the ground. Tendi responded by telling Armus that he was, rather, " more like a puddle of *bleep* . " ( LD : " The Spy Humongous ")

Armus was part of Commander William T. Riker 's memories while being infected on the surface of Surata IV and treated in sickbay . ( TNG : " Shades of Gray ")

In an alternate timeline , Lieutenant Yar was not killed by Armus, and was still the security chief on the battleship USS Enterprise -D in 2366 . Guinan , who somehow knew of Tasha's other fate, described it as a " senseless death in the other timeline." ( TNG : " Yesterday's Enterprise ")

Several years after Yar's death, the Enterprise visited Yar's homeworld, Turkana IV . Here Data met and mentioned to Tasha's sister , Ishara , that her sibling was killed by a malevolent entity . He further explained that " [s]he was killed as a demonstration of the creature's power, without provocation. " ( TNG : " Legacy ")

While affected by nitrogen intoxication in 2380 , Lieutenant Commander Andy Billups yelled, " Tasha no! The garbage bag is behind you! " ( LD : " Veritas ")

Later that year, Ensign Mariner, furious over Boimler being promoted to lieutenant junior grade and transferring to the USS Titan , threatened to "feed [him] to an Armus." ( LD : " No Small Parts ")

Armus was well enough known to be a watchword for uncivil behavior into the 32nd century . Haz Mazaro warned his guests not to "act like an Armus" in 3190. ( DIS : " All In ").

Appendices [ ]

Appearances [ ].

  • " Skin Of Evil "
  • " Shades of Gray " (archive footage)
  • LD : " The Spy Humongous "

Background information [ ]

Probert Armus concept

Andrew Probert concept art

Sternbach Armus concept

Rick Sternbach 's concept

Armus was "fondly named after" TNG Season 1 writer and producer Burton Armus . ( Star Trek: Communicator #112, p. 5)

Concept art for Armus was designed by Andrew Probert . ( The Art of Star Trek , p.102) The costume creation was divided between Michael Westmore 's department (to design the head piece of the suit) and Makeup & Effects Laboratories (to create the body). ( Star Trek: The Magazine  Volume 2, Issue 12 , p. 26) The head piece was made out of soft polyfoam with a latex skin over it. It was sculpted by Westmore and Gerald Quist . ( Star Trek: The Next Generation Makeup FX Journal ) Westmore sculpted the head piece around a cast of the actor's head which he had taken. He also embedded goggles into the prosthetic piece, to prevent the black slime from rushing into the actor's eyes. ( Star Trek: The Magazine  Volume 2, Issue 12 , p. 26) There were three mouth holes on the head piece, designed in such a way that fingers could be easily inserted to clear the actor's mouth from the black goo. ( Star Trek: The Next Generation Makeup FX Journal )

The goo was made from Metamucil and black printers' ink. ( TNG Season 1 DVD special features) According to Michael Westmore, the goo was water-soluble methocel material and the ink was water-based. ( Star Trek: The Next Generation Makeup FX Journal )

Armus was played by Mart McChesney and voiced by Ron Gans . Because no oxygen tank was provided to McChesney, the scenes of Armus submerging and rising from the pit of black goo were timed with a stopwatch. ( Star Trek: The Next Generation Makeup FX Journal ) However, the body portion of the costume disintegrated during filming, after reacting with the goo, each day of shooting. Several more costumes were ordered from the manufacturer after the first of two original ones fell apart. Michael Westmore has been unable to find an explanation for the disintegrations, as the goo was supposed to be inert. ( Star Trek: The Next Generation Makeup FX Journal ) " I don't know what else was in it, " admitted Westmore, " because it caused the glue in the costume – very strong shoe glue – to undo itself, and the costume would fall apart. " ( Star Trek: The Magazine  Volume 2, Issue 12 , p. 26)

External link [ ]

  • Armus at Memory Beta , the wiki for licensed Star Trek works
  • 2 USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-G)
  • 3 Star Trek: The Next Generation

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'Skin of Evil': Was it ever explained what Armus was?

Discussion in ' Star Trek: The Next Generation ' started by ReadyAndWilling , Dec 6, 2014 .

ReadyAndWilling

ReadyAndWilling Fleet Captain

Hey guys, I was re-watching this episode and it was great. I loved how Data was trying to figure out what Armus was exactly. Was it ever explained later on in Star Trek lore what Armus was exactly???  

FormerLurker

FormerLurker Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

I think the closest we got was Armus explaining its own existence, ie: all the evil of a civilization cast off and left behind to rot.  

Orphalesion

Orphalesion Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

Armus was one of those very powerful, very abstract (and ultimately very boring) villains that would have fitted better into TOS than TNG, so its no surprise he was never revisited. Still I would have liked to get more explanation as well, particularly I would have liked to see the species that had produced Armus. Weren't his words along the lines of "they became beings of such pure beauty that all who see them are struck in awe"? Some fans have speculated that it was the Q who produced Armus by casting off their evil, but the Q are neither pure good nor are they particularly beautiful (though they might be in their true forms, which we have never seen as far as I know)  

Lance

Lance Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

As noted above, metaphorically he's the waste product of a society which has cast off all evil traits. A kind of physical manifestation of the negativity they've left behind. Physically , Armus is a combination of wet tar and metamucial.  

LMFAOschwarz

LMFAOschwarz Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

Orphalesion said: ↑ Armus was one of those very powerful, very abstract (and ultimately very boring) villains that would have fitted better into TOS than TNG, so its no surprise he was never revisited. Click to expand...

tomalak301

tomalak301 Fleet Admiral Admiral

Lance said: ↑ As noted above, metaphorically he's the waste product of a society which has cast off all evil traits. A kind of physical manifestation of the negativity they've left behind. Physically , Armus is a combination of wet tar and metamucial. Click to expand...
FelizNavidad said: ↑ Lance said: ↑ As noted above, metaphorically he's the waste product of a society which has cast off all evil traits. A kind of physical manifestation of the negativity they've left behind. Physically , Armus is a combination of wet tar and metamucial. Click to expand...
FelizNavidad said: ↑ I thought it was black printers ink (Just watched Journey's End: The Saga of Next Generation so I do know this ). By the way, what is Metamucial? Is that like Pen ink? Click to expand...
I just like refer to Armus as the Metamucil Man because of an infamous interview with Jonathan Frakes where, talking about Skin Of Evil, he lamented having to be submerged "in that Metamucil sh*t".  
LMFAOschwarz said: ↑ I thought it was black printers ink (Just watched Journey's End: The Saga of Next Generation so I do know this ). By the way, what is Metamucial? Is that like Pen ink? Click to expand...
^ I think that's correct. It was a compound mixture.  
FelizNavidad said: ↑ The reason I said black pen ink was because I was thinking about the color. I guess that's what the printers ink provided and the the Metamucil provided that slickness glueish look? Click to expand...

The Old Mixer

The Old Mixer Mih ssim, mih ssim, nam, daed si Xim. Moderator

Wasn't there a garbage bag involved as well?  
FormerLurker said: ↑ I think the closest we got was Armus explaining its own existence, ie: all the evil of a civilization cast off and left behind to rot. Click to expand...

JirinPanthosa

JirinPanthosa Admiral Admiral

Armus is congealed evil. Somebody was saving evil for later as a snack, left it in the fridge too long and it went bad.  

tharpdevenport

tharpdevenport Admiral Admiral

Well, I don't care for the Q explination, but I think it could still work for people who believe it. Maybe the Q did cast off their evil at one point, but with all the power and knowledge they gained, their own wilful ignorance allowed it back in. After all, to paraphrase a great man: Pureness is not passed on from generation to generation in the blood stream.  

jimbotron

jimbotron Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

The shot of Riker descending into the black muck is obviously Frakes doing it, we all know that. But for the shot of his face coming out of the muck, I assume that's a cast of his face? http://tng.trekcore.com/hd/albums/1x23/skinofevil_hd_302.jpg  

Anwar

Anwar Admiral Admiral

Doctor Who had a villain like this once too. A civilization cast off their negative emotions, but the resulting by-product creature of this killed them all until they sealed it away inside a star.  
jimbotron said: ↑ The shot of Riker descending into the black muck is obviously Frakes doing it, we all know that. But for the shot of his face coming out of the muck, I assume that's a cast of his face? http://tng.trekcore.com/hd/albums/1x23/skinofevil_hd_302.jpg Click to expand...
tharpdevenport said: ↑ After all, to paraphrase a great man: Pureness is not passed on from generation to generation in the blood stream. Click to expand...
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Tasha Yar's Death Was Actually One of Star Trek: TNG's Best Episodes

While most critics and fans hate Tasha Yar's death episode from Star Trek: The Next Generation, it is actually one of Season 1's strongest stories.

Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 1, Episode 23, "Skin of Evil" is often regarded as one of the show's worst episodes. Critics tend to rate it poorly and fans usually hate it for killing off the fan-favorite Tasha Yar so abruptly. Even the creators seemed to regret it, frequently finding ways to bring Yar back and crafting a whole episode "Tomorrow is Yesterday" in Season 3 to fix the character's death. Lost in all the understandable backlash and baggage over actor Denise Crosby's quitting is the episode itself. When stripped away from controversy and passion, "Skin of Evil" stands as one of Season 1's strongest outings.

The Next Generation's first season famously struggled to find its feet. As the series improved (starting slowly with Season 2 and into Season 3), it has become conventional to write off all of Season 1 as a bad outing. However, "Skin of Evil" was written specifically to kill Yar after her actor decided to leave her contract. The episode sees an away team land on the desolate planet Vagra II to battle a slime creature that is holding a ship -- including Counsellor Deanna Troi -- hostage. In the fight, security officer Yar is injured, and despite the team's attempts to save her she passes away.

RELATED: Picard's Subtlest Cameo Brings Star Trek's First Lady Back to the Franchise

Why 'Skin of Evil' Is an Underrated Star Trek Episode

"Skin of Evil" is powerful and underrated for several reasons. First, Star Trek has often been mocked for its well-known tendency to leave the impact deaths that stick only to the "Red Shirts" aka the background characters who accompany the heroes down to the planet. A whole film could be dedicated to reviving a main character like in the case of Star Trek III: The Search for Spock , but red shirts would die to prove a point. "Skin of Evil" subverted that trope by having a main character die in the same manner as those countless red shirts that are often treated as death fodder. It also revealed that the series would kill a character if an actor wanted to leave. For another case in point, it's highly unlikely the suspense around Picard surviving the Borg in 1990 would've had a strong impact if Patrick Stewart's contract wasn't up for negotiation.

The second aspect of "Skin of Evil" that gives it power is the nature of Armus, the alien that killed Yar. It is, in fact, a tragic being -- an abandoned monster created by human error. While the episode does not absolve it, it does elicit sympathy, even for a creature that killed a main character. Going back to the Borg, this ability for Star Trek to create sympathy and tragedy even in a villain that irreparably harmed the heroes was crucial to to telling the story of Hugh, the sympathetic Borg from Season 5, or indeed any of the more tragic villains. The climax features a duel of words between Picard and Armus as well, setting up Picard's ability to spot and negotiate with deeper motives in nemeses.

RELATED: Picard Boss has a Blunt Response to Star Trek: Legacy Rumors

Why 'Skin of Evil' Develops the Supporting Cast In Meaningful Ways

Troi to got a showcase in "Skin of Evil" as her role as Counsellor often could strand her on the ship as a psychiatrist. However, the episode revealed just how important her empathic abilities and consultation skills could be in actually defeating and fighting an opponent. Troi's ability to see Armus' feelings and motives -- as repulsed as she is by its murder of her friend -- is key to discovering the creature's tragedy and in reasoning with it. This approach prevented Armus from causing more harm. Deanna Troi is given a chance to showcase her powers and save the day, even in the face of such evil and tragedy.

Finally, there is Yar's funeral and her connection with Data. Where before "Skin of Evil," Yar's seduction of Data in Episode 2 was only a brief bit of comedy. Her touching funeral video by contrast leaves the android contemplating her loss. He keeps her image with him, and it is used in "Measure of a Man" as a proof of Data's humanity. Her touching farewell speech contextualizes her abrupt death. As security officer, she expected it, and knew it could always come that way. Her death is even redone in the Season 3 episode "Yesterday's Enterprise." For "Skin of Evil" itself, Data's curious reaction points to the complexities in him. Lastly, without "Skin of Evil," there'd be no equally impactful episodes like "Measure of a Man", "I, Borg", or "Best of Both Worlds." All in all, "Skin of Evil" is a more important episode than most fans realize.

Skin of Evil Stardate: 41601.3 Original Airdate: 25 Apr, 1988

<Back to the episode listing

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Star Trek: The Next Generation Re-Watch: “Skin of Evil”

Season 1, Episode 23 Original air date: April 25, 1988 Star date: 41601.3

Mission summary

Since not much is going on, Chief-Engineer-of-the-Week Leland T. Lynch decides to polish the Enterprise ’s dilithium crystals; fortunately, chugging along at impulse just means it will take that much longer to pick up shuttlecraft 13, in which Counselor Troi is returning from a conference on “How to Succeed in Starfleet Without Really Trying.” Then sensors read an emergency on the shuttle, interrupting Worf and Tasha’s long-overdue bonding moment—she’s really looking forward to a martial arts competition in a few days, and Worf’s betting on her, even though they don’t have any money in the future. (Or maybe because they don’t have any money in the future.)

The shuttle inexplicably loses power and crashes on the uninhabited planet Vagra II in the Zed Lapis sector. Lynch jams the dilithium crystals into the warp core and hopes for the best, and the ship races to the planet. But something blocks their ability to scan the shuttle or beam up its survivors—debris or something, maybe. Riker, Yar, Data, and Dr. Crusher beam down to investigate.

Shuttle 13 is in bad shape, but the away team can’t approach it because a black puddle on the rocky ground keeps oozing to intercept them. Weird. Data’s totally stumped, but suggests that it could be a living creature. “Very good, tin man,” it intones, and a humanoid shape rises from the muck.

They exchange pleasantries—the thing’s name is Armus—and Riker requests access to the shuttle. Armus declines, and Yar decides to force the issue. The creature zaps her, sending her flying, and easily absorbs the energy from Riker and Data’s phasers. Dr. Crusher pronounces Yar dead, but still spends a while trying to revive her, to no avail. Bummer.

They briefly discuss the senselessness of Yar’s death, then Picard promotes Worf to Acting Chief of Security; after all, he wouldn’t be a true Klingon if he didn’t benefit from his superior’s untimely death. Worf immediately proves himself more competent than Yar by deciding to remain aboard the ship to develop a tactical solution to their problem, while Riker’s team returns to the planet with La Forge, who hopes to offer a different perspective on their slick adversary.

Down on the planet, Armus covers the shuttlecraft to chat with Troi. He tells her that her friends have left her, but she doesn’t believe him. She can sense the creature’s nature and knows that he needs to make people suffer. And, oh look, here’s the away team. It’s play time! When he leaves the shuttlecraft, Worf and Wesley on Enterprise note that his energy levels were lower while he was covering it—a common side effect of talking to Troi—which they may be able to exploit to beam everyone to safety.

Armus keeps messing with them: He makes Data’s instruments fly away and knocks La Forge’s VISOR off his face. What a jerk. Armus slips off to chat with Troi again, and tells her that he is the castoff, concentrated negativity from a powerful and beautiful race—left behind like some sort of… Skin of Evil! Troi’s pity for him only pisses him off enough to drag Riker into himself. There’s only one reasonable course of action—Captain Picard must beam down to the planet and place himself in mortal danger with the rest of his command crew in order to deal with Armus personally.

Armus toys with the away team some more, forcing Data to aim his phaser at Dr. Crusher and making her choose the next person to die. But Picard has realized that talking about his feelings makes Armus weaker, so he convinces him to let the others go. Armus spews out an oil-covered Riker and allows the away team to beam away while he and Picard parlay. All Armus wants is a starship, but Picard insists on seeing Troi first.

As the captain and counselor help Armus confront his troubled past, Worf and Wesley manage to beam up Troi, the injured shuttlecraft pilot, and Picard, leaving Armus behind to scream in impotent rage. They blow up the shuttle to remove his last chance of escape, slap up a “Do Not Enter” warning on the planet, and get the hell out of there. But there’s still one more bit of unpleasantness to get through… Yar’s funeral.

Yar has left a recorded message for each of her “friends” on the holodeck, where she shares the things she learned from and appreciated about each of them. Her last is for Captain Picard.

YAR: If there was someone in this universe I could choose to be like, someone who I would want to make proud of me, it’s you. You who have the heart of an explorer and the soul of a poet. So, you’ll understand when I say, death is that state in which one exists only in the memory of others. Which is why it is not an end. No goodbyes. Just good memories. Hailing frequencies closed, sir. PICARD: Au revoir, Natasha. The gathering is concluded. DATA: Sir, the purpose of this gathering confuses me. PICARD: Oh? How so? DATA: My thoughts are not for Tasha, but for myself. I keep thinking how empty it will feel without her presence. Did I miss the point? PICARD: No, you didn’t, Data. You got it.

She’s not really dead as long as we remember her. What was her name again? Tar?

At last, our long national nightmare is over.

I feel bad that I’m actually relieved at the death of a series regular, but it’s just one more step to getting this show to the TNG I love. Who knows how the show might have turned out if Denise Crosby had played Counselor Troi instead of Marina Sirtis, or if she had remained on the show longer? But as senseless as her death was—about as senseless as the rest of the episode—bigger and better things await her. As much as I dislike Yar in the first season, her mind-bending return to TNG in “Yesterday’s Enterprise ” is one of the highlights of the series for me, as is the creative way they bring Crosby back into the fold as a recurring character. Even seeing her again in “All Good Things…” is a special treat that oddly enough does more to flesh out her character than the entire first season of forced exposition. Truly, absence makes the heart grow fonder.

I imagine that even with the likely rumors that Crosby was leaving the show, or hints that a major character would die, Yar’s brutal, bizarre, meaningless death must have been a shock at the time. Far from a dispensable red shirt on the original series, she’s a character that some people must have grown to like, or at least identify with. Maybe even care about her, a little? As Dr. Crusher works to save her life, viewers might have expected a last-minute miracle, but it would take many more seasons before she would be brought back to life. But hey, I have a more important question: What was that strange mark on her cold, lifeless cheek?

The biggest problem with Yar’s death is that the characters aren’t able to truly deal with it. She dies twelve minutes in and the rest of the episode proceeds pretty much as usual, aside from an excruciating holographic farewell—which must have been ironic for Crosby to deliver since she tells them to dwell on “good memories.” We won’t see anyone wrestling with her loss in any significant way next week, and pretty soon we’re on to a new season; the only person who shows any real sense of loss is Data, who holds onto that holo recording of her. (On a side note, are these really the only people who liked her on the ship? And why is she transparent if she’s a holographic image… on a holodeck?) It’s kind of mean to make her last words on the show, “Hailing frequencies closed, sir,” don’t you think?

Although the “episode where Yar dies” is otherwise basically a write-off—Armus looks and sounds like a monster-of-the-week on The Mighty Morphin Power Rangers , with little more to motivate him than he’s made of evil—it touches on the classic Star Trek themes of immortality, abandonment, and loneliness. But I’m most fascinated by Armus’ probing questions about whether one life means just as much as another to Troi. Though she and Riker insist that all life is equal and deserves to exist, it rings falsely. “Preserving life, all life, is very important to us,” Riker says. “We believe everything in the universe has a right to exist.” Countered by this:

DATA: Curious. You are capable of great sadism and cruelty. Interesting. No redeeming qualities. ARMUS: So what do you think? DATA: I think you should be destroyed. ARMUS: A moral judgment from a machine.

When I saw the explosion on the planet’s surface, for a moment I thought that Picard had bombed the crap out of it to destroy Armus, but it may be an even worse punishment to leave him there forever, alone. I will also note that Picard never lies to Armus; he very carefully avoids promising to transport him off the planet, evading the question and enforcing conditions on agreement before finally flat out refusing him. I appreciated this small bit of morality, in an episode where it’s important for the Enterprise crew not to resort to Armus’ measures to survive.

So in the end, unlike Armus, this episode has some redeeming qualities, but it is further crippled by extra screen time for an overwrought Counselor Troi, as well as yet another example of the captain beaming down into a hazardous situation. Aside from this episode’s ultimate importance to the series now and in years to come, I think we should warn off any who think of approaching it.

Eugene’s Rating: Warp 1 (on a scale of 1-6)

Best Line: PICARD: You say you are true evil? Shall I tell you what true evil is? It is to submit to you. It is when we surrender our freedom, our dignity, instead of defying you.

Trivia/Other Notes: The original title for this episode was “The Shroud.”

Jonathan Frakes was submerged in Metamucil and printer’s ink for the scene in which Riker is absorbed into Armus. At the time, LeVar Burton reportedly told him, “Frakes, I never would have done that!”

Yar was originally killed even earlier  in the episode, with less emphasis on her death. Roddenberry felt that her death was fitting for a security officer.

Marina Sirtis sheds real tears for Yar during the memorial scene; she and Denise Crosby had become close friends. The cast was very sad to see her go.

According to Ron Moore, Yar’s character was brought back in response to fan and staff reactions to her death. (Another perspective might be that they hated her so much, they killed her twice.)

Writer Joseph Stefano was a veteran of the 1963 science fiction anthology series  The Outer Limits –and it shows.

Previous episode: Season 1, Episode 22 – “ Symbiosis .”

Next episode: Season 1, Episode 24 – “ We’ll Always Have Paris .”

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About Eugene Myers

34 comments.

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I can only speak for myself, but as I remember it the news that Crosby was leaving was well known and the episode had no tension for me. In fact I have always hated the ‘CPR of the future scene’ because no one else get it. Before and after anyone who dies will simply be dead, not heroically but futile attempts to revive them. I do remember wondering who was that had cast off Armus, oil slick of evil. They could not have been as noble and good as they proclaimed to leave such dangerous evil lying around unguarded, ready to pounce on any passing shuttle. (And I’m still voting the Organians) This episode also had the tired cliche of the captain ordering repairs faster than the estimate. Lynch is a pretty crappy engineer if he tells the captain 20 min, but it can be done in three simply by ordering it.

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Hey, don’t you go dissing The Outer Limits . The original was a great show and Stefano wrote some decent episodes for it. Unlike this one. (Although maybe Stafano’s original script was better.)

There really aren’t any redeeming features, are there? The sets are bad, even by season 1 standards. Hell, they’re bad by TOS standards. The McGuffin is stupid. Yar’s death is stupid. About the only thing going for it is that Troi sort of almost does her job. She actually does a little head-shrinking on Armus and it sort of works for a while.

As far as LeVar Burton’s comments about not being willing to roll around in Metamucil and printer’s ink: Man, he should talk. Every time he takes off the VISOR and has to put in those solid white scleral shells I cringe. I’ve got a serious eye thing, and just the thought putting those in or taking them out makes my skin crawl.

Obviously, the main topic here is Yar. It was pretty well known that Crosby was leaving the show and there was talk they were going to kill her character off, but to make it such a meaningless death, one that didn’t even really advance the plot in any way, turned off a lot of people, even those who didn’t like Tasha. I almost think this was the producers’ way of punishing Denise Crosby for not liking what was being done with her character, talking publicly about it, and finally asking to leave the show because of it. “Yesterday’s Enterprise” could be seen as an apology of sorts, giving Yar a good death. But then they went and took that away from her, too. I did like Sela though.

Aside: I went to Memory Alpha to look up Sela’s name and they had a photo of Yar’s goodbye hologram. My first thought was, “That’s the “§&%ing Windows 95 default desktop background!” Then I realized Win 95 was still 7 and a half years in the future. Now I’m just puzzled.

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I hate this episode. I know it’s cause she wanted to leave, but I do believe her character could have been a real genre-breaker for the time, a tough, competent, and yet still attractive and clearly a woman. Instead we got Miz FEEEEEEEELINGS and two versions of Doctor Cares-a-Lot, and all the decisive, action-oriented roles went to men, all the way until Ro Laren shows up, way too late.

Instead they misused her, shoved her aside, gave her the horrid background, and never gave her (Crosby) the chance to grow as an actor that some of the other less…initially gifted…of the actors got (*ahem*FrakesSirtisWheaton*ahem*).

And we went back to the groundbreaking (not) situation of having the old white man be in charge, the next-oldest white man 2iC, the white-man-painted-green as third/Braino, one Black man as a sexless differently abled engineer/helmsman, another as the always-violent-before-talking brute, and the two women in charge of caring for heart (Crusher) and soul (Troi). I’d stopped watching by this point, but when I saw the show later I loathed them for making it.

I really like a decent death – if she’d done something heroic, ANYTHING, in the death scene, it would have been much more tolerable. I can take a pointless death when the dying one chooses it. But to just have this pointless act, out of nowhere, with no opportunity for anything to make it a “good” death? That’s a crap way to get rid of a character intended to be important to the show, and especially the only mould-breaking character of the bunch. :/

@3 Caitie Well said, though I’m not sure Pulaski counts as a Doctor Cares-A-Lot. She’s a rather less pleasant female stereotype, but we’ll get to her. I’d also quibble with your inclusion of Wil Wheaton in that list. He had already turned in an outstanding performance in Stand By Me . One that had actually left me slightly optimistic about his character before the show began. He, more than anybody else, may have been a victim of the writing. Looking back, I feel like the writers really hated the Mary Sue-ness of Wesley, especially while Roddenberry was leaving his greasy fingerprints all over everything, and they took it out on the character as best and nastily as they could.

I can concede on Wheaton; I may be influenced by my current view of his current self, of whom I have rather less stellar an opinion than many seem to.

But I’d say Pulaski is exactly that: she only turns grumpy (like Bones did) when she’s thwarted in her intense drive both to help people and to ignore her own needs in doing so. She regularly risks her own life to do so,, making her a form of the self-sacrificing mother figure that is so, so common (oh, ye gawds, Supernatural and its MOMMY ISSUES!). I like her, personally more than Crusher, because at least she’s not almost always nice to people, which the lovely Ms. McFadden often is.

Plus, y’know, Diana Muldaur. Who’d been in two of the most awesome episodes from the old series! :D

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I fell asleep watching this–twice–and laughed out loud fairly continuously through the eulogy. Maybe I’m a bad person.

An oil slick was never, ever going to be a believable character, and an alien with no motivation other than “well it’s just evil” does not a villain make. In any case, if you KNOW you have a nasty environmental hazard down there holding one of your people hostage and killing another one, why would you let the captain beam down . In fact, why would you let ANYONE beam down. I’d just send down a hologram, or Data, or a sack of turnips. That’d probably piss him off and tada! Emotional drano.

For a group of allegedly compassionate, progressive spacefarers, what they do to Armus in the end is the height of cruelty. If he’s so dangerous and so alone, just put the thing out of its misery. Don’t condemn it to another million years of isolation.

As for Lt. Tar: what the hell. I understand on an intellectual level why Roddenberry was interested in showing someone dying in the line of duty. But as an emotional viewer, that was absolute crap. You can have someone die on a routine mission but can they maybe do something ?!?! It doesn’t even have to be a cliche kind of heroism. It can be a private, personal kind of heroism that defines her. But nothing about her death contributed anything to a) the episode; b) her character; c) the progression of the series; or d) the emotional development of the other characters. Eugene is right, no one has to face her death except for a lengthy three-minute presentation. There’s no wrestling with what that death means, how the other characters weigh the risks they themselves take every day, or whether that mission was worth losing a friend over. It’s just senseless and emotionally vacuous.

The eulogy: where is the rest of the crew?? ST has this problem a lot, where they think that the people you see on the bridge are the only friends anybody has. Either there’s a strict caste system going on, or it’s seriously contrived writing. (One of the few things I liked about DS9 was that people had all kinds of friends in all areas of the station.)

I also just don’t buy that I’d want the rest of my friends to hear what I have to say to each person individually. For one, I know I’d feel a lot more special if my dead friend send me a personal note than just lumped it into a bucket checklist to be read in front of everyone. I cannot BELIEVE that the writers had Tasha thank Troi for teaching her how to be feminine. Just wow. The real problem here is that Tasha thanks people for who they are using adjectives to describe their virtues–virtues we have never seen in action . If the series had bothered to show instead of tell, there’d be no need for any of that sequence. If the show had actually put these people in situations that highlighted the qualities Tasha imagines in them, we would feel the force of her goodbye without her having to say it. As it is, it feels like the hollow desperation of a hack writer getting his digs into a character he loathes one last time.

Rating: Impulse power.

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Ding-dong, the witch is dead.

Aw, that’s not fair. Tasha probably wasn’t really a witch. But—like the Witch of the East, upon whom Dorothy’s Kansas cottage falls—the only thing we really knew about her is what others said about her.

“An outstanding officer.” Never saw it. Never saw it, before her stockinged toes curled up and withdrew under the house the writers threw down on her in a cyclone of terrible scripts and casting choices.

Though they changed the division colors, Tasha goes out in the most pathetic and meaningless manner of the lowest ranked Red Shirt. Ever.

The closest this gang rape survivor ever got to a characterization was when she got roofied on polywater and set out to hornily hunt down the ship’s biggest battery-operated sex toy, a fully funktional positronic phallus. Cmdr. Data—evidently only pretending to be drunk just to get lucky like a frat boy, since no other explanation was offered or made sense—leaped at the idea of joining in on the date rape of a junior officer. Horrid, just horrid.

The next stab at characterization was when this gang rape survivor was captured for Idi Amin’s (or was it Mobutu?) love slave harem and forced into some saucy girl-on-girl action. Again, horrid.

Women’s issues in TNG get handled with the same clumsiness as other issues of social justice: An arrogant fiat at the outset that such problems do not exist in the STU, followed by a sludge of scripts that indicate (directly or indirectly), yes, they do.

One wonders if she could have been written any better, given the era and the emphasis. It probably is worth contemplating how different the show would have been had she stayed, and not in a good way.

My guess is, there would have been more “girls, they wanna have fun” playfulness among the Troika, more Risa-style risquiness. You saw a glimpse of that dark future when the girls laughed at Riker’s disco diaper in “Angel One.” The excellent Michael Dorn would have remained longer in the background… but not forever because, in one of the unwritten rules of SF screenwriting, alien warriors are more fun to write about than rape victims. And writers can handle the character issues better there, too.

As for the rest, a TNG Season 8 Tweet cast it best:

A Tasha Yar clone hails the ship; the crew turns off the lights and pretends they’re not home.

@ 1 bobsandiego DeepThought and I both shouted at the engineer when ordering him to go faster miraculously forced faster results. Engineering does not work that way!

And yeah, the attempted zombie resurrection is just weird.

@ 2 DemetriosX I wear contacts, so that doesn’t bother me…

I had forgotten that Yar dies like five minutes into the episode. There’s really no purpose whatsoever to her demise.

@ 3 CaitieCat and @ 7 Lemnoc Honestly, I’m glad they didn’t go whole-hog on Yar and try to do anything with her. Forget the potential. They basically revamped her character for DS9 as Kira, and that was a disaster. Kira’s hard-nosed and doesn’t take shit from people, which would be good, except that her character is always wrong , and they even gave her a little rape gang planet past of her own, and her mommy had Stockholm Syndrome. And she’s the love object for several other characters and mostly exists to motivate others’ mistakes. But mostly she’s wrong. When Eugene and I watched DS9 a few years ago we realized too late that we should have kept track of the number of times she offers a solution or idea that the entire crew shits on because, well, it’s usually idiotic and motivated by emotions.

I love a good death myself, which is probably why I can tolerate traipsing through the forest enough to love Lord of the Rings . Imagine how much more powerful this episode could have been if Yar had chosen her death.

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Time for me to buck the trend, I guess.

I’m a big fan of anti-drama. All main characters should be in jeopardy, at all times, and that can only be demonstrated by offing a few of them now and again. The flaw with this episode isn’t that Yar was offed suddenly, for no reason, and with no preamble–that was the awesome part–but that she got her interminable dying speech anyway.

This felt like a TOS episode, both good and bad, and I was pretty satisfied with it. I never felt Yar needed a “proper” death, and never really cared that much for “Yesterday’s Enterprise.”

I suppose if I’d kept up with entertainment news more, I’d have known something about Crosby’s departure, but instead it came as a complete surprise–which is probably the best way to have seen the episode.

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Ah, the episode that gave Denise Crosby her best role: playing a holographic image on that little device which Data keeps. Seriously…everyone must know by now that I dislike Lt. Yar and hold Data in utter contempt most of the time, but when he resigns his commission in “Measure of the Man” and pulls out that holographic memento of Lt. Yar for a few seconds, I actually tear up a little bit, even knowing that the basis for Data’s sentimentality is in one of the worst TNG episodes ever made.

I’ve also never liked Dr. Crusher much but she demonstrates a quality in this episode that is lacking both from Dr. McCoy (however much I may adore him) and from his regrettably inferior (but still appealing) copy Dr. Pulaski: she does what I expect a doctor ought to do when a patient flatlines, which is to rush around frantically and do everything possible to save him or her. We joke about McCoy’s habit of saying, “He’s dead,” but really it’s not that funny. I don’t think any doctor worth his or her salt would merely check a dead man’s pulse and pronounce him a goner without at least trying to resuscitate him first. McCoy and Pulaski hardly ever bothered but Crusher, with Lt. Yar, tries everything she can. I like that.

OK, so maybe she wasn’t the best doctor, but…man, I’ll never understand the hatred for Dr. Pulaski. She had ten times Dr. Crusher’s force of personality and so what if she was mean to Data. Someone needed to be mean to Data, considering how everyone else indulged his antics.

I must be the only Trekkie who loathes Sela. She was horrible, sorry. Cursed with all of Yar’s worst qualities–smugness, stridency, wooden line delivery–she was never blessed with anything to redeem her at all aside from that fact that we’re supposed to feel something for her because she’s sort of kind of a renascence of Tasha Yar, complete with the ghostly echo of her affinity for Data.

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@9 S. Hutson Blount

All main characters should be in jeopardy, at all times, and that can only be demonstrated by offing a few of them now and again.

That’s true, and it’s something a lot of shows don’t have the guts to do. Even Joss Whedon flinches a bit, but the deaths in Serenity go a long way toward providing an actual sense of danger for the remaining characters in the final minutes of the film. I admire that.

And though I agree wholeheartedly with what everyone else has said about Yar’s farewell speech, I dig the idea that crew members have recorded these messages because they could be killed at any moment. Though I did wonder how often she had to update it. That’s one of the tricky things about lumping all the messages together.

@10 etomlins

I must be the only Trekkie who loathes Sela. She was horrible, sorry. Cursed with all of Yar’s worst qualities–smugness, stridency, wooden line delivery

Ah, but those traits are perfect for a Romulan security officer! I didn’t like Sela exactly, but I was intrigued by her and like what she represented to the Enterprise crew.

Sela remains aggravating because of the might-have-been factor: despite all that setup, they decided to make her a buffoon. I don’t have the same antipathy for Denise Crosby that seems to be prevalent here, but she in no way compared to Andreas Katsulas’ Tomalok for scenery-chewing awesomeness.

OK, so maybe she wasn’t the best doctor, but…man, I’ll never understand the hatred for Dr. Pulaski. She had ten times Dr. Crusher’s force of personality and so what if she was mean to Data. Someone needed to be mean to Data, considering how everyone else indulged his antics.

Actually, watch Pulaski in “Unnatural Selection” and you will see the fiercest ever dedication and sacrifice a doctor ever made for the life of her patient(s).

Hate to say it, but one of the things that probably made Pulaski shine as a character was she was older and therefore ipso facto not a sex object, and therefore the writers could focus on things other than her boobs and hair. They actually had to treat her as a person—you know, have a conversation with something other than her chest—and they did.

I must be the only Trekkie who loathes Sela. She was horrible, sorry.

You’re not alone there. All of the wood and clumsy delivery, unredeemed by any sort of humility and joy the Good Guys are required to emit in order to be, uh, good.

Sela’s story arc just heaps more dung on the bio of Tasha Yar. The rape camp victim did not die an honorable death after all, but was captured alive (presumably allowing the Enterprise C tech to fall into the hands of the enemy) and forced to copulate with her captors and bear their seed. Again, horrid.

I dig the idea that crew members have recorded these messages because they could be killed at any moment. Though I did wonder how often she had to update it.

Yes, it’s something I and my friends do for one another all the time. I’ve found a Tumblr blog works really great for the constantly evolving declarations and obit ;-)

@ Caitiecait Of course Yar could have been a good or even great character, but not with this writing crew.It didn’t help that Ms. Crosby was at best a mid-level talent and so given horrid lines she couldn’t save the character from becoming nothing more than a joke, but the prinicple fault lies in the lines and not the star. You can still have the anarchy world background, but you have to think what does that mean to the character and how would it color her view of people? No one would survive on such a planet without a group. period. Loyalty to the people who have your back would be paramount, not to ideals, but the concrete people guarding you while you sleep, eat, and go to the bathroom. Anyone outside of the group is always suspect. Treason is the greatest sin. No one is innocent. Eat well today because tomorrow you may starve. Be proactive, because those who wait are lost. These are some of the things someone like Yar would have learned very early on. Now take her out of that envirnment and put her in Starfleet. SHe’s unlikely to be super dedicated to the ideals of Starfleet, but more loylal to her crew and even to the particualr crew memebr who mentally map to her gang. She’s going to be more suspcious of strangers, more questioning of the state motives of those encountered, and more of a prove it to me kind of person.

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@Bob #15 Yes, yes yes yes yes and yes. This is a huge flaw in the writing of this show — it never bothered to think about things. It was just “BAM! Rape gang planet! Okay, backstory done, now she does whatever the plot requires this week… just like everybody else!”

Another index of the weak writing in this episode is something we’ve been seeing as a theme for the last several episodes this season — the writers have no idea what to do at the beginning that isn’t filler. We had the space light show last week, now this week we get to Thrill! as Routine Starship Maintenance Happens At An Inconvenient Time! Maybe next week the check-engine light will come on and the Enterprise will stop to have some transmission repairs before the plot starts. Seriously, why is this in the episode? I’ll tell you why — because these writers’ idea of “character” was to have Picard shout at people, and because they had no idea whatsoever what story they were trying to tell. It was just some stuff that happens anyway, so why not put some nonsensical tech the tech crap at the beginning? Nonsensical, by the way, *on its face*, because you don’t stop and overhaul anything when you’re on the way to meet someone. Why would you do that.

In light of all this, while I suppose Tar could’ve represented a great genre-transgressing opportunity for the show, in reality it just wouldn’t have played out. Whether the writing or the direction or who knows what, Dorn was already taking stage from Crosby, and with the amount of fat in these episodes we just wouldn’t have had enough actual events to develop anyone without getting some of the characters off the bridge. In the hands of better writers, absolutely, Yar could’ve been a tremendous asset; but it just didn’t work out that way, and it’s entirely to Dorn’s credit that he’s able to make a character out of practically nothing and really start to shine.

I mean, this stuff goes all the way down to the level of direction and blocking. Look at how the away team fans out after they’re first thwarted by Arnis. You can almost see them walk to assigned positions because they were told to stand there so they’d all be visible on the cameras. Nothing is happening organically , and it’s a miracle that this show survived long enough that it eventually started to.

@2 DemetriosX

Hey, don’t you go dissing The Outer Limits. The original was a great show and Stefano wrote some decent episodes for it.

I was more making fun of the fact that Armus looks like a throwback to the monsters on that show, but I never felt the stories compared favorably to The Twilight Zone . I keep meaning to re-watch The Outer Limits , though.

I’ll also say that thsi is not my idea of stroy telling either. To me a story about a character making a decision, one that cannot be revoked once made. How does th character change in the lead up to and in the aftermath of making that decision? This is the heart of story and drama, all else to me are puzzleboxes. That’s what this was, a puzzlebox. How do you get past Armus. It would have made a medicore game session and it made a very weak story. No ONE made in hard calls here, no one at all.

the writers have no idea what to do at the beginning that isn’t filler.

To be fair, I think TV storytelling was going through a bit of a transition in this period. You had the earlier period in TV storytelling where nothing happened that did not further the main plot, and a later period that presented A & B (and even C & D) parallel storylines to mix it up and keep viewers guessing. Then you have this period with a bit of misdirection, before the plot narrows and settles down to the main storyline.

The Simpsons have often made fun of this, moving from story trope to clichéd story trope (on the way to spend the night in a haunted house we got stuck in the car wash and won the state lottery. Oh, look, a cat stuck in a tree!).

And I imagine that, this early in the series, the writers were actively (desperately?) planting seeds and hooks for future stories. And some of this stuff (very little, but more in Season Two) does evolve into future plot points. You can’t do that stuff at the end of the story, and you really shouldn’t do it in the middle when the plot is developing and underway. So that leaves only the beginning.

All that said, none of the writing here seems particularly taut, and there’s a kind of torpor throughout this season.

Honestly, the only reason this series survived was because we at the time were starved and grateful to have it! I mean, we had shit like “Man From Atlantis” and “Bionic Woman” and “Greatest American Hero” passing itself off as the pinnacle of the highest aspirations of science fiction.

@17 Eugene Nah, Armus isn’t anywhere near the quality of the monsters on Outer Limits . Armus isn’t anywhere near the quality of the monsters on Lost in Space . For me he falls somewhere between the Horta and the rock monster. Or maybe down around that awful gorilla-robot hybrid from Robot Monster . Janos Prohaska couldn’t have saved Armus.

Comparing Outer Limits and Twilight Zone is almost apples and oranges. Or maybe it’s more like the difference between a story for Analog and one for F&SF. TZ came to rely a little too much on the twist, which actually can lead to a lack of surprise for a critical viewer. OL had some terrific stories, including 2 by Harlan Ellison which are fantastic. The first season is better than the second, but both are worthwhile. Stefano also wrote a little film called Psycho . I’d love to see what the original script for this abomination looked like. I bet it was miles better.

@20 DemetriosX

It does seem very much like an Outer Limits kind of story, though. You have the “bear” Armus, who is depicted as terrible and terrifying through most of the episode, and then everything is inverted and the bear is suddenly a pitiable creature trapped in conditions not of its making. You can almost hear the voiceover as the ship departs, delivering whatever moral can be gleaned here.

Yes, yes, could have been much better, much more dimension, but it does follow that OL pattern of surprising us with suddenly human monsters. What it’s lacking, that OL was excellent at, is presenting us with a human antagonist that is the story’s true monster. Maybe that’s what got ripped out, as you suggest, of the script and rendered it without a center.

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“That’s true, and it’s something a lot of shows don’t have the guts to do. Even Joss Whedon flinches a bit, but the deaths in Serenity go a long way toward providing an actual sense of danger for the remaining characters in the final minutes of the film. I admire that.”

You want meaningful and surprising deaths for characters? You need go no further than the Ron Moore version of “Battlestar Galactica” which I very much liked. I was expounding the virtues of the show to my then boss, and loaned him the first season while the third was airing.

Although I didn’t want to give any unintentional spoilers, I did mention to him as he borrowed the second season from me ( he and his wife watched the entire first season in two days! ), “Not to give anything away but don’t get too attached to any particular character.” That series was just brutal with making you care for a character then unexpectedly offing them. I can’t think of any SF series from even less than a decade earlier that was so unflinching and cavalier about killing off main and supporting characters. In a way it was brilliant, as it really made you care and worry about the fate of these people. When a lead was wounded or in danger, by god, they really COULD die. They even resisted magically curing the Laura Roslin character’s cancer…even though they led you to believe they might.

Anyway, back to this pointless exercise. I was reading articles and fan mags about the show when it originally aired, and Denise Crosby’s leaving the show was one of the worst kept secrets in Hollywood. In fact the news was leaked so far in advance of the actual episode that I was tuning in to each episode for weeks, even a couple of months, wondering if “this one is the one where she dies”. Her sudden death had very little impact on me at the time. I did get a bit choked up by the memorial scene, but I too thought it was hokey, and a bit too warm, fuzzy and sentimental. I kept wondering when she actually spent that much time with these people to get so attached to them.

As for Pulaski’s bad rap; it’s not that she was unlikeable, it’s because she was so obviously a dead-on McCoy clone. If she had held ANY other position than chief medical officer I think she would have been more accepted. I liked her okay, but I cringed at the too obvious McCoyisms ie: not getting along with Data/Spock, Being afraid of the transporter, being stubborn and unafraid to stand up and call the captain on his bullshit…etc.

Why not give some of these traits to the other main characters and liven things up a bit? Why make her the only cantankerous main character? I understand they needed a new medical officer, but why replace a woman doctor with a female “Bones”? To me it’s almost sexist to replace a departing female character with another female. It’s like replacing a black actor with another black actor, just to keep the ratio in balance. That’s not progress…it’s tokenism.

Imagine if Pulaski had come aboard as the permanent no-nonsense chief engineer ( would have sucked for Geordi, but… ). Wouldn’t that have been a nice message for young girls watching the show? You don’t have to be a ‘caregiver’. You can aspire to do something technical and be good at it too! Of course, if they’d done that, she probably would have been Scottish and drank too much too.

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I watched the Bolero part of Allegro Non Troppo then The Fifth Element to prepare for this. (The animal nature of Man and the Ultimate Evil) In the Bolero part, Man’s nature is mocked but only at the end after we see what has come of his turning to a different path while the rest of life marches on. In Fifth Element, the Perfect Being calls Mankind’s worth into question (and much of what we’ve seen and laughed at to that point supports her question) but she comes to see that Mankind – with flaws – is better than ultimate Evil and is worthy of being saved. See. Stories dealing with the dark side of human nature can work and be entertaining.

Then we have this episode. I dislike this episode so much that I’ve taken to calling it Skin of Awful. We have this pool of evil cast off by someone, it holds someone hostage, it kills someone and the rest have to figure out how to get away from it. That’s not a good story idea, that’s only a weak collection of story elements. The three main questions these elements lead a thinking person to ask are “Who shed this evil?” “Why did they just leave it out like this?” and “What happened to them?” Not addressed. Bringing these into the mix could have sparked some life into this story.

I don’t see the Organians as being the source of the mess that is Armus. And who they were didn’t have to be all that important if the writers would have looked to the TOS episode The Enemy Within to develop the answers to the second and third questions. The people who shed Armus left it out because they no longer had the drive or will to harm it. Their civilization declined – weakened with indifference – then passed into obscurity. Imagine the conversation Kirk would have had (knowing this) with Armus. Armus becomes confused then calls out “Norman. Please Coordinate.” Well, maybe not that line but you get the idea. Armus could have become confused or could have become more arrogant. Either way, it could have added something to the story.

Instead, we got this annoying skin of awful.

I’ve been thinking about McCoy’s simple “He’s dead, Jim” and the statement that this is the only time we see Crusher attempt to revive someone. As for McCoy, that probably says more about the state of medicine in the mid-60s than anything else. Closed-chest, portable defibrillation was still pretty new and certainly wasn’t part of the general consciousness. The expectation was likely still that once your heart stopped beating, that was it.

As for Crusher, this may be the only time we actually see her working on someone who is apparently dead, but there are several times she calls for an emergency beam out to sickbay. There may not be screentime for it, but there is at least an implication of extraordinary measures. And we do see her fight for patients who are in life-threatening situations, sometimes even having to fight against the patient himself (like Worf).

@dep1701 #22

You want meaningful and surprising deaths for characters? You need go no further than the Ron Moore version of “Battlestar Galactica” which I very much liked.

I have to say, I don’t think I can agree with this. I recall only two or MAYBE three “meaningful and surprising” deaths; one of those was a minor player, another was actor-initiated (the performer in question wanted to leave the show to pursue a movie career), and the third [spoiler redacted]… I mean they kill off a lot of Cylons starting right from the beginning, but the whole point of Cylons is that they come back, so those deaths aren’t meaningful.

…but I think I’m digressing a bit…

I vaguely remember that heroic measures were employed to save the life of the Russian physicist Lev Landau, who clinically died at least once after he was smashed up horribly in a motor accident in the ’60s some time. I can’t remember where I read about it though.

There are economies to be taken in teleplays, I realize, so for a Star Trek doctor to pronounce someone dead after doing nothing–or perhaps after making a single hypospray injection of go-juice–is perhaps just a way of speeding the story along. All the same, it contributes to the problem of depicting futuristic medicine when you get the inadvertent sense that an ordinary 20th century sawbones would strive harder and employ better tools to save a life than the supposedly more civilized and medically advanced doctors of the future.

On a different thought: I’m more of less a fan of “Yesterday’s Enterprise” despite its flaws, e.g. using Guinan as all-purpose plot glue. But it should have been enough of an answer to the question of Tasha Yar’s shabby exit from the show–if it was shabby. I never felt myself that the mode of her death was particularly insulting; it’s not like she was killed by a random accident, she was killed by a genuinely powerful and dangerous being. And Lt. Yar at least died in the line of duty. Yet “Yesterday’s Enterprise” plays into the whole idea that Yar’s death was a joke. Was it? I honestly don’t see it.

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Ick. There are so many things wrong with this episode, especially for someone who really wanted to see Yar go away. I actually disliked her even more than Wesley and I’ve never been a fan of the show bringing her back. Yesterday’s Enterprise is, for me, much the lesser for it. And I hate her Romulan spawn.

So despite my lack of appreciation for either the character or the actress, I still think the death is crap. The thing is, all the other main characters at one time or another (often several times) have “died” in exactly the same sort of senseless manner and have been deus ex machina’d back in one way or another each time.

And the funeral service hologram thing always irritated me. It’s a little like being drowned in syrup.

Otherwise I kind of think an entity that’s composed of evil isn’t all that terrible an idea. It might have been interesting if they’d done it completely differently. And I thought the swallowing Riker alive bit had the potential to be kind of freaky if I were actually capable of taking the episode seriously.

@26 Deep Thought

“I have to say, I don’t think I can agree with this. I recall only two or MAYBE three “meaningful and surprising” deaths; one of those was a minor player, another was actor-initiated (the performer in question wanted to leave the show to pursue a movie career), and the third ”

Well, maybe I was wrong by referring to lead characters. But it seemed like BSG would flesh out supporting players ( particularly the pilots and technical crew ) and then just as we got to know and/or recognize them…WHAM. They’d be gone. Look at Cally ( who I generally found whiny and annoying ). She went from being Chief Tyrol’s subordinate and friend, to his wife and mother of his child, then she’s killed by Tory. Then there was Billy ( the one who wanted a movie career…hmmm doesn’t seem to have gone much of anywhere ), Dualla (aka Dee, whose suicide really shocked me ), Gaeta, the president’s spiritual advisor, Jackhammer, Kara’s hotshot rival pilot ‘Kat’, Ellen Tigh – before she’s revealed as a cylon, and so many others whose names escape me at the moment.

To equal that body count, “Next Gen” would have had to kill off Barclay, Ro Laren, Nurse Ogawa, the Bolian barber, Robin Lefler, the ensign who spilled hot chocolate on Picard, Guinan…hell, pretty much everyone of any significance except Picard and Data. TOS would have had to kill off everyone from Scotty on down to Yeoman Rand.

My point was more that when the characters died on Galactica, you cared more because they had had some fleshing out, and recurrent screen time and a lot of the time you didn’t see it coming. Yes, they were at war and casualties were to be expected, but you usually didn’t see that kind of carnage on SFTV, unless they were nameless extras, who might have had a line or two.

Yar’s death was barely affecting at all and she had been there, promoted as a main cast member, for nearly an entire season. She was little more than a cipher. Even if Yeoman Rand had been killed off on TOS, rather than just disappearing without an explanation, her death would have had more of an impact than this death scene did.

@27 “Otherwise I kind of think an entity that’s composed of evil isn’t all that terrible an idea. It might have been interesting if they’d done it completely differently. And I thought the swallowing Riker alive bit had the potential to be kind of freaky if I were actually capable of taking the episode seriously.”

While I may have a bit more sympathy for Yar ( and like her return and sacrifice in “Yesterday’s Enterprise” ), I agree that the gothic horror aspect of an entity composed of pure evil is an interesting idea.

What might have made this episode more compelling would have been if Yar had been the one sucked into Armus. Then we could have seen the being absorbed into her, basically taking her over ( shades of “Lights Of Zetar”, I suppose ). Then she/it could have still been as absolutely nasty, uncooperative and evil…still exerting force to keep Troi and the pilot trapped. Then through some clever writing ( I know, asking a bit much at this juncture ) have the only way to defeat the alien and save Tasha from an eternal hell of being manipulated and ‘owned’ Armus be that one of the Enterprise crew have to kill Yar themselves. Perhaps Tasha could even assert her desire to die rather than live that way.

Then you would have had moral dilemma, guilt, drama, sacrifice, and shock. things Roddenberry wasn’t allowing at this point. I know it would have been a cliched story ( “Lights Of Zetar” with a pinch of “Where No Man Has Gone Before” ) , but it might have been more meaningful than this episode.

Of course I’ve been wrong before.

Man, Lights of Zetar used to scare the HELL out of me when I was a kid. That creepy voice, and the face making that weird croaking noise, and changing colours, and dying? Guh…*shudder*…it scared me more than the weird monster that was sucking people under it in an Eagle on Space:1999 once…

@31 “Man, Lights of Zetar used to scare the HELL out of me when I was a kid. That creepy voice, and the face making that weird croaking noise, and changing colours, and dying? Guh…*shudder*…it scared me more than the weird monster that was sucking people under it in an Eagle on Space:1999 once…

I’m with you. the possession effects in “zetar” used to creep me out too ( as did the ‘erased face’ bit in “Charlie X’ ).

LOL. that monster in “Dragon’s Domain” nearly got “1999” banned in my house. When the series was first being aired in ’75, my youngest sister wanted to come in my room and watch “1999” with me. Just so happened that “Dragon’s Domain” was the episode that was being aired. Since it was a first run show, I had no idea it was going to have those graphic effects in it. She ended up having nightmares that night, and I got in trouble for letting her watch it!

Funny thing is, I’d probably LOL at the creature in Dragon’s Domain (thanks for that, btw, I didn’t know the name obviously), but it had me freakin’ and peakin’ for a few weeks.

That, and some giant spikey turtle monster in a Japanese monster movie, that I saw walk up concrete steps in an apartment building or something, and then HATED EVERY FIRE ALARM EVER AFTER THAT. And since we lived in the projects where pulling the alarm was more or less the best form of entertainment we could afford…;)

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I’ve been conducting a re-watch of Doctor Who alongside the Star Trek franchise, and this episode feels like it would have played better as one of the Doctor’s exploits. He’s always facing down ancient evil and monsters of the week.

As for Yar, I think the randomness of her death would have been less of an issue if the episode didn’t seem to be all about killing her off. If they’d cut the space cpr scene or whatever that was and replaced the silly hologram goodbye with a briefer standard Starfleet funeral, this episode wouldn’t have been nearly as bad for me. It still would have felt pointless, but that’s better than awful.

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Den of Geek

How Star Trek: The Next Generation’s Killing of Tasha Yar Became an Awkward Mistake

The underwhelming death of Denise Crosby’s Tasha Yar was a mistake that Star Trek: The Next Generation took years to correct.

star trek skin of evil

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Denise Crosby as Tasha Yar in Star Trek: The Next Generation, "Skin of Evil."

“[I] died a senseless death in the other timeline. I didn’t like the sound of that, Captain. I’ve always known the risks that come with a Starfleet uniform. If I am to die in one, I’d like my death to count for something.”

Denise Crosby’s Lt. Tasha Yar, Star Trek: The Next Generation ’s inaugural chief of security, managed—due to some alternate timeline trickery—to take that legendary meta-minded dig at her own death from two years earlier in the Season 1 episode, “Skin of Evil.” With that episode having originally aired on April 25, 1988, the anniversary is a good occasion to look back on the controversial behind-the-scenes circumstances that resulted in poor Tasha’s unspectacular, abrupt, red-shirt-like fatal encounter with an alien tar monster on a cheap-looking set.

“Skin of Evil” was the 22 nd episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation ’s inaugural season—just three episodes away from the season finale. Consequently, with audiences at this point having stuck with the show for seven months since its September 26 premiere, the death of a main cast member certainly felt like a stakes-redefining kick against procedural complacency. However, those who had been following industry trades, and read the then-fresh, spoiler-teasing cover story exposé in Starlog magazine , titled “The Security Chief Who Got Away,” pretty much already knew that Crosby was on the outs with the series. Thus, the prevalent question going into Season 1’s final few episodes was not if Tasha Yar was leaving the Enterprise D, but how . Well, said how would prove to be one of the most controversial, lamentable moments in Star Trek history .

Crosby denied the growing rumors of her impending exit during contemporaneous interviews published before “Skin of Evil” aired, but she had indeed quit the series, mostly due to the lack of character development given to Tasha Yar. While she was given a backstory of a rough upbringing on the lawless abandoned Earth colony, Turkana IV, Yar’s only real moment in the spotlight (besides her famous seduction of android Data in “The Naked Now” while under alien viral influence) had been Episode 3, “Code of Honor,” in which she became the amorous focus of an authoritarian alien leader, and would be forced to participate in a campy fight to the death with the leader’s outraged first wife. Thus, dealing with the show’s notoriously demanding schedule, and faced with the believed prospect of spending years soullessly saying “hailing frequencies open,” Crosby put in a request to be released from her contract, which creator Gene Roddenberry granted.

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Unfortunately for Tasha Yar, Roddenberry’s acquiescence would come with a shocking caveat: a sudden and underwhelming onscreen death. “Skin of Evil,” directed by Joseph Scanlan, written by Joseph Stefano and Hannah Louise Shearer, set things up with a rescue mission after an Enterprise shuttlecraft containing Counselor Deanna Troi and pilot Lt. Ben Prieto crashed on the barren planet, Vagra II. Accordingly, Yar joins an away team consisting of Cmdr. William Riker, Lt. Cmdr. Data, and Dr. Beverly Crusher to the planet surface, on which they encounter a powerful, tar-like creature that calls itself Armus.

There, Yar quickly loses patience as the creature continues to block their rescue effort, and tries to move past it, resulting in an attack that sends her flying backwards, leaving her tar-marked face lifeless on the ground as the essence drains from her body; a condition even beyond the help of subsequent emergency efforts back on the Enterprise. Thus, Yar’s arc, for what it was, had come to an anti-climactic conclusion; a fate attributed to the dangerous nature of Starfleet service, especially for someone in security. However, said fate allegedly wasn’t inspired by any artful motivations.

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So, why did Yar’s exit go down this way? Crosby recounted in 1993 behind-the-scenes book Trek: The Next Generation Crew Book that “Gene [Roddenberry] really felt that the strongest way to go would be to have me killed. That would be so shocking and dramatic that he wanted to go with that.”

However 1992’s Trek: The Unauthorized Behind-The-Scenes Story of The Next Generation , alleges that the “Skin of Evil” script—as with other Season 1 episodes—was secretly tweaked and/or rewritten by Roddenberry’s lawyer, Leonard Maizlish, who held an ambiguously-defined full-time staff position on the series. The purported rewrite, which would have been illegal in the Writer’s Guild, was believed to have been designed to deny any dramatic or sentimental value to Crosby’s character. With Roddenberry having recently lost creative control of the Star Trek movie franchise from Paramount Pictures, Maizlish may have been there to protect his bottom line, in this case ensuring that a dead-and-forgotten Tasha would leave no incentive for a potentially-costly new contract for Crosby down the line.

Nevertheless, “Skin of Evil” concluded with an emotional sendoff for Yar, with a memorial service—consisting of only the main cast member characters—set on the holodeck, where the late security chief posthumously delivers well wishes to her colleagues, notably a weeping, possibly guilt-ridden rescuee, Troi (actress Marina Sirtis was reacting to Crosby’s set presence off-camera). Yet, Crosby still had to endure the show’s apparent power plays, even after said memorial, since the show’s out-of-sequence production schedule resulted in her having to shoot one last appearance for her death episode’s immediate predecessor, Episode 21, “Symbiosis,” which also provided another famous Tasha Yar moment, in which she delivers a ham-fisted, Just-Say-No-era anti-drug speech to Wesley Crusher when addressing the episode’s alien drug pushers. It’s a bit of trivia that Crosby would use in a now-famous 2019 Twitter dunk on controversial executive producer Rick Berman.

Oh friend, my final scene on @StarTrek was not in SKIN OF EVIL but SYMBIOSIS which was filmed out of order. You came to the set to thank me and brought a cake, then ceremoniously ripped off my Communicator badge saying “you won’t be needing this anymore.” Don’t remember? — Denise Crosby (@TheDeniseCrosby) February 4, 2019

While Crosby’s post- Star Trek aspirations wouldn’t quite pan out the way she had likely envisioned, save for a co-starring role in 1989 movie Pet Sematary (she’s more recently banked an impressive array of TV appearances on shows like The Walking Dead and Ray Donovan ), her apparent status as persona non grata on the Enterprise wouldn’t last long, and she would make a monumental return as Tasha in 1990 Season 3 episode “Yesterday’s Enterprise,” in which a temporal anomaly alters the timeline for the Enterprise D, creating a reality in which the Federation is fighting a war with the Klingon Empire, and an anachronistic Season 3-era Yar is very much alive. Pertinent to the episode’s time-bending meeting with predecessor vessel the Enterprise C, Yar—after learning of her main timeline death from Guinan—would transfer to the embattled historical ship (after the earlier-quoted speech,) to ensure that it fulfills a sacrificial destiny to prevent a war that wasn’t supposed to take place, finally giving meaning to her death.

“Yesterday’s Enterprise” was so well-received that it facilitated more Yar-adjacent material, first with the 1990 Season 4 episode, “Legacy,” in which the Enterprise crew go to Tasha’s home, Turkana IV, and become embroiled in a scheme concocted by her bitter estranged sister, Ishara (Beth Toussaint). However, a prominent Crosby comeback would dominate Seasons 4-5’s two-part cliffhanger storyline, “Redemption,” when she played Commander Sela, the daughter of the “Yesterday’s Enterprise” alt-timeline Tasha Yar and a Romulan general to whom she was forced to become a concubine after the Enterprise C’s war-preventing act.

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In a twist of fate, Crosby, once an underutilized outcast crew member, had been positioned to play one of the show’s most memorable villains, since Sela is a ruthless, unwaveringly loyal servant of the bellicose Romulan Empire, and displays her own heartlessness when revealing that her mother, alt-Tasha, was killed while trying to escape with her as a child.

Additionally, Crosby reprised the role of prime-Tasha in Picard’s Q-conjured pilot-era flashbacks of 1994 two-part series finale “All Good Things.”

Denise Crosby as Commander Sela on Star Trek: The Next Generation.

Historically, it seems clear that a series of myopic mistakes rendered Denise Crosby’s Star Trek journey more circuitous than necessary. However, the result was a character arc that stands the test of time. Plus, not for nothing, the fantastical nature of current spinoff series Star Trek: Picard could easily facilitate a contemporary Crosby comeback—either as Commander Sela (who eventually became a Romulan empress in the non-canon story of video game Star Trek Online ) or even as alt-Tasha, whose alleged death was never confirmed onscreen. To put it in the parlance of the late security chief, such a comeback would be a jewel for fans.

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Star Trek: The Next Generation

“Skin of Evil”

1.5 stars.

Air date: 4/25/1988 Teleplay by Joseph Stefano and Hannah Louise Shearer Story by Joseph Stefano Directed by Joseph L. Scanlan

Review by Jamahl Epsicokhan

Review Text

A shuttle carrying Counselor Troi (and some poor guy named Ben that the episode doesn't care about because he doesn't also have awesome boobs) crashes on a planet. The away team beams down to rescue the survivors but encounters Armus (Mart McChesney), who initially resembles a miniature tar pit. He turns out to be an intelligent, albeit hopelessly embittered, being who can rise up and take humanoid form, and who has a voice that sounds like Megatron, only deeper and meaner. Maybe he's Unicron.

He also has the power to do ... well, whatever the plot requires him to do, including killing people at will and creating forcefields that prevent the beam-up of the shuttle survivors. Armus' biggest claim to fame is that he kills Tasha Yar, who dies a rather ignominious death, which is ignominious in no small part because of that goofy splotch on her cheek during the ER sequence — one of few TNG season-one moments to actually use hand-held cameras. (Things must really be bad when the hand-held cameras come out.)

You know, there really should be a "Skin of Evil" drinking game where you drink every time Armus rises up into humanoid form from his tar pit or descends back down, or every time he covers or uncovers the crashed shuttlecraft. Because it's a lot. If anyone sells that game, I expect royalties. Armus is occasionally amusing, simply because he's such an incredible bastard that you almost have to like him — or else hate Troi for trying to disarm him with her psychobabble. Come to think of it, maybe I'd just rather hate Troi in this episode.

The battle of wills (wits?) with Armus goes on for too long and gets too repetitive. (Did I mention that the scenes of Troi trying to counsel Armus really tried my patience?) The episode, at the very least, does not try to redeem Armus, and leaves him stranded and as unhappy as ever. Yar gets a holodeck funeral, which is well-intended, yes, but way too cloying and pushy. But what else would you expect from TNG ?

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Comment Section

125 comments on this post.

I actually thought "Skin of Evil" was a bit better than most seem to make it. The sudden death of Tasha, while somewhat anticlimatic, was still a shock. The Troi/Armus scenes weren't as powerful as they wanted to be, but the funeral scene for Tasha at the end was fine, I felt. And, as you pointed out, the episode "does not try to redeem Armus, and leaves him stranded and as unhappy as ever," which is another thing I liked about it, including Picard's great line("I'm not taking you anywhere") and his following log entry revealing that the shuttle has been destroyed to prevent Armus from leaving and declare Vegra II off limits. Of course the best part is that this 'lemon' led to the 'lemonade' that was "Yesterday's Enterprise."

Mostly spot on, but I have to disagree on "skin of evil". It isn't perfect by any means, but such a bastard of a villain is rare for tng, especially season 1. And yar's death is admittedly meaningless, making this episode further removed from season 1 foppery. Plus it holds interest if unevenly due to the high tension. 6/10

Using Jammer's scale, I would give this 3 stars. It was entertaining, did not have a cheap ending, was truly sci-fi, and did demonstrate some human values (stand up to evil, not give in to it). I wish Starfleet would have learned a lesson from this incident though. Their hand phasers were ineffective -- their backup weapon? Nothing! Starfleet should have immediately did some R&D on different types of weapons! Somewhat frustratingly, this same situation happened again later (e.g. hand phasers ineffective) and Starfleet never learned! These humans more advanced than 20th century my foot!

The only redeeming quality of this episode is the death of Tasha Tar, imo. I was done with the driving force of the plot by the third time the bad guy raised and uttered its 'uugh' and 'aargh' for what seemed like forever. At least we got plenty of meme material: Riker's 'Data, something's got meeee!'- and Picard saying at one time 'forever... alone'. Now, how convenient that when they see Tasha' holographic will, she only talked about the few guys that were there. No more friends? what a sorry life she had.

"A shuttle carrying Counselor Troi (and some poor guy named Ben that the episode doesn't care about because he doesn't also have awesome boobs)" So true! First, Beverly asks Troi is she is all right. But no question for poor Ben. Then Picard teleports into the shuttle, and Ben is still in the same position, Troi didn't even try to put him in a more comfortable one. And when the Enterprise beams up the shuttle's crew, we only see Troi's beaming, and not a single moment for Ben. The funeral scene was overplayed and way too corny. And only the protagonists were there? Why not any other crewmen? Didn't she have any friends in security team? Best part of the episode is the fact that Worf takes her place as Chief of security. Tbh, I won't miss Tasha at all. Go Worf!

Armus is a novel adversary. Yar's death comes almost too soon and is unexpected. But voltage (microvolts)?? If anything, Yar's prerecorded message that assumes nobody's moved to new assignments is a tad contrived and mawkish... and, of course, has the Windows XP wallpaper in the background... TNG really was ahead of its time. The questionable pacing between the mush-fest with Troi, Picard's stern attitude, and Armus' trickery with the crew, and not to mention newly-appointed Worf coming across a little too cowardly to be believed... 2.5 of 4 stars, despite being remarkably watchable...

P.S. Great bit about the boobs; Yar did have the best...

I go back and forth on this one, and I was all set to agree with the 1.5 rating, but I think I'll go up to 2. This is a bad episode for Yar, and poorly paced. But Armus as a total bastard actually works well for me -- as well as the central idea of him being cast off from being the worst of a society. I think that one could even argue that Armus is a parallel to Yar -- Tasha came from Turkana IV, which was, indeed, a planet formed up of the worst of the worst of humanity and the Federation, and she managed to pull herself into being a good person with Starfleet's help. Armus is what Yar could have let herself become -- consumed by loneliness and not unjustified anger, letting the worst traits of its background define it and taking that out on others. It's somehow particularly tragic that he kills Yar, but on some level it makes sense that he targets her, since she represents the thing that Armus cannot do, which is rise above the circumstances of its creation. (Note: I don't mean that Armus literally recognizes these traits in Yar or anything -- it's more of a point of thematic interest.) I find some of the scenes between Armus and Troi fairly engaging, actually, and Armus' attempt to torment the crew by, for example, having Data point in various directions with his phaser, works for me too. It still ultimately does not work -- the episode is padded out because there simply is not enough material here, and it's hard to get through the funeral scene which is where the episode's emotional stakes actually are. And yet, there is something here.

I think this episode went a long way to establishing the camaraderie between the crew that would eventually give TNG its special atmosphere. Also, it was 'good' to see a death handled like it actually meant something, rather than nameless people just disappearing off. A tad weak, yes, like other season 1 TNG, but certainly not awful, and definitely a little meaningful, more so than in many other sister-series episodes at this point of time, even our Jammer's beloved DS9, and certainly more so than VOY. I'd go for at least 2.5.

So who drops his phaser into Armus when Riker gets sucked in? It really looks like Data's holster is empty. Clutzy android. Overall its a pretty slow episode though I'd give it 2.5 stars at least as its still more dramatic and important to the show than most of the first season.

I must be one of the few people who actually liked Tasha and wish she'd stayed around a lot longer. TNG's first season was, let's be honest, pretty dire and seems horribly dated now in every respect; consider how much the other characters developed in the subsequent six years, something Tasha never got the chance to do. I think she could have become a great character. After all, even Picard was quite weak in season 1. Anyway, one of the most widely criticised aspects of Skin of Evil is that Tasha's death was 'meaningless'. I actually see this as a plus point. The Heroic Sacrificial (tm) Death has been way, way, WAY overused in sci-fi - actually in all genres of fiction - and I for one get quite tired of it. I loved that Star Trek was brave enough to give such a swift, pointless and arbitrary death to a main character. Because the painful reality is that most sudden deaths are just like that, and I really appreciated seeing Star Trek reflect this for once.

Reverend Spork

The only good thing about this mushy episode was the death of Tasha Yar, and not because it was done well. Yar was not only a fairly non-descript character, but her presence kept Worf largely in the footlights. Denise Crosby's departure turned out to be a boon for Michael Dorn, as Yar's death paved way for a much larger - and satisfying - role for our favorite Klingon. episode? One star.

I just finished rewatching this episode after a long time. I have to say, despite vividly remembering not being too keen on it when i first saw it, it definitely left a better impression on me now. Despite the age of TNG, the visual effects still work reasonably well which definitely helps on an episode that relies so much on them. After all, Watching Armus do it's thing is undeniably central to this episode. Reading the comments, i also fully have to agree with most statements, especially rob's. It is quite refreshing to see an actual unredeemable villian in star trek for once. One might argue many more were to follow but although that may be true upon their introduction, in most cases, later developments in the franchise destroyed that aspect for most adversaries. Even the borg tended to display some human elements by the end of Voyager (geesh, thanks Berman). I also have to agree with the, admittedly pointless and low-key, death of Tasha be fitting for the episode and the character of Armus, making this a strong point. Even so, it's never a good sign when the initial impression wasn't good. Still, in retrospect, i'd have to rate this one 3 on the jammer scale.

"DATA SOMETHING'S GOT MEEEEEEEE" Nuff said.

Well, I have to disagree with the J-Man on this one. A solid 3 stars for me. This is *the* episode that made the world of TNG seem real. Tasha Yar dies and there's no miraculous fix. ("Yesterday's Enterprise" doesn't count because it's an alternate timeline and she dies again ultimately.) None of the major players of any Star Trek up to this point ever really died, not even Spock. This episode shattered that precedent. And the loss is felt throughout the rest of the series. Episodes like "The Measure of a Man", "The Bonding", "Ethics" and "All Good Things…", proved she was not forgotten by our heroes. Compare this to the exit of Kes on Star Trek: Voyager. Could they have toned down the funeral to make it less maudlin? Sure, but it's still heartfelt (Marina Sirtis was not faking the tears). Other things that work: *Counselor Troi saves the day in this episode. She's actually useful and she does it by using her counseling skills! *The scene where the crew is upset in the briefing room and are talking all at once. Picard taps on the table to remind them that they have to focus on the mission. *The scene where Picard was pushing Armus's buttons was nicely played, and just as he beams away says: "I am not taking you anywhere"--as if passing sentence on the creature for Tasha's murder. Very pulse pounding… *…which brings me to Ron Jones memorable score that injects true passion to the episode. As it has been stated, it's such a stark contrast from the later seasons. *And finally, this is a well directed and edited episode that and moves smoother than a lot of the saggier episodes of TNG's first season.

grumpy_otter

Everyone has pretty well covered the strengths and weaknesses of this episode--I wanted to bring up something different. The legend around Trekland is that Denis Crosby became increasingly dissatisfied with her diminishing role and made the choice to leave the show in the first season. However, as best I understand, that assumption is based on comments Crosby made after the fact rather than any official statements. While re-watching Season One, it occurred to me that Crosby's role was purposefully diminished because she was an appallingly bad actress. Far Point was rough for everybody, but all the actors except Crosby seemed to find their niche by the midpoint of the season. Sirtis toned down the theatrics, Spiner became less glib, Stewart became less grouchy. Crosby just stayed stilted. Even in Yesterday's Enterprise, her line delivery seemed very fake. Trying to accept she was some kind of kick-ass warrior was painful. I tried to find any comments from the production staff regarding her departure--it seems they stayed silent, which would suggest to me they were trying to be kind and allowed her to leave for the reasons SHE thought. But if she'd been great, I imagine they would have fought to keep her. I don't hate Crosby--in fact, I am kind of glad her success was limited because it gave her the incentive to do the excellent "Trekkies."

I thought Crosby was ok as Yar. I always saw the character as "damaged"...her brutal childhood left her a loner who is slow to trust and cannot forgive. She would have no friends of lesser rank, and very few, period. Ironically, Sirtis originally read for that role (then named Marla Hernandez), and Crosby read for the role of Deanna Troi.

I think Yar could have been my favourite character but a show like TNG was the wrong vehicle for her backstory. Not to knock TNG, I honestly love it and DS9 in totally different ways, but the show just wasn't the right format for a character like hers. You need time to see just how damaged she would be and how little trust she lacks, and see her grow to accept her childhood and go in new directions. I do think she was poorly cast though. I think I read they initially had a Vazquez from Aliens type character in mind. But a blonde Vazquez? Maybe if she had been a reboot Starbuck kind of person, but Denise Crosby was just all wrong. I can't comment too directly on her acting, but I see she's about to appear on The Walking Dead (at 57!) so we can see if she got better with age. And let's face it, first season scripts didn't give her much to work with. It's a shame, I can imagine an alternate universe where her character really found her feet and became awesome.

Crosby was in an episode of Dexter a few years ago. She did well, but I couldn't help but snigger at the irony that her character showed up, only to be killed. It may be in her contract.

Latex Zebra

@Elliot - Denise Crosby is the female Sean Bean.

We haven't focused enough on Armus. Intriguing: a being composed of 100% negativity ... of all a society's negative aspects ... and putting them into one big glop ... and then dumping it on to an uninhabited planet never to interact with other beings. Can we do that with us? Please? Also, should we feel sorry for it? (alone, angry, etc.) It can't change, but, should we anyway?

I actually thought this ep was not bad. Tasha's death was terrible and anticlimatic, but I kind of liked the rest of the episode. It felt like an old TOS script, right down to the captain's speech which helped defeat Armus - much like "Day of the Dove" when Kirk and Kang basically laughed the evil alien off the ship. The worst flaw was the manner of Tasha's death. She should have gone out with phasers firing, rather than dying meaninglessly, which was lampshaded in "Yesterday's Enterprise" - I like to think the writers were admitting they screwed up here. Considering that it's now relatively commonplace for TV shows to kill off prominent characters just for shock value, I wonder if this ep started a trend. The voice of Armus reminded me of the voice of the Beast entity in the Doctor Who two parter "The Impossible Planet"/"The Satan Pit".

The best part about this episode was the series loosing a misscast/horribly written full time character. On to Worf as head of security!!

What stuck with me about this episode was the final scene between Data and Picard. Data: "My thoughts center on how I will miss Tasha. Did I miss the point of the funeral?" Picard: "No. You got it.". Subtly reinforced one of the central core elements of TNG: Data learning about humanity as a literary method for studying it. And also one of the scenes that subtly thrust Data up there next to Picard as the central characters of the show.

"Now, how convenient that when they see Tasha' holographic will, she only talked about the few guys that were there. No more friends? what a sorry life she had." Most people would be lucky to have as many true friends--significant enough to be personally addressed in a 'funeral' record--if that's what they all were to her. And the natural presumption would be that they were there *because* they were so addressed.

@Carrots: Isn't that the plot of Ghostbusters 2...? Anyway, I don't... hate this episode. I don't think it's GOOD, though. The constant showdowns grow tiresome, and nothing really feels like it's progressing anywhere until the end of the hour. Tasha dying early on (I forgot how early) works, giving the show a bit of a jolt that becomes legit creepy when Riker gets pulled into the tar (although that could just be 6-year-old me talking, who was terrified of Armus). Armus himself is menacing at times but comes off as childish at others. I suppose that's the point, but a bit more nuance there could have made it more interesting. I'm not asking for Dark Knight's Joker, but... something more than "I AM A SKIN OF EVIL". I will say that I found Armus's backstory fascinating, though, in that mix of truth and myth sort of way. It's not on par with the Vorta backstory from DS9 (not even on the green, actually), but it has that same idea as a kernel-of-truth-wrapped-in-a-creation-myth. Admirable, but probably less thought out than I'm giving it credit for. Ugh, look I want to hate this one because of how ridiculous it comes off but I'm really having a hard time actively disliking it. Its heart is in the right place and I think the hour has that subtle horror vibe that makes early TNG unique among the rest of Trek (see also: "Where Silence Has Lease", "Time Squared", "Q Who", and "The Royale"). 2-1/2 stars. Recommended but with a huge glaring asterisk to remind you that this is still TNG S1 we're talking about.

A year ago (almost to the day), my father was driving to work, lost control of his car and crashed into a truck. He was killed instantly. To quote Guinan, it was « an empty death. A death without purpose. » I am sharing this for it may help you understand my change of opinion regarding this episode. Sure, Armus is still one of the most uninteresting and implausible villains in the entire Trek canon. I feel bad for Lt. Prieto who may as well be wallpaper. I also fell bad for Frakes having to be covered in printer’s ink and metamucil. Apparently LeVar Burton went over to him after they shot it and said « I would never have done that! » But the sudden death of Tasha is arguably the bravest moment of the season, if not the series. Having her go out in a blaze of glory would have been a hoary cliche. Most deaths in real life don’t have a purpose, they’re just a result of circumstances. It’s a gut-punch that stays with you and makes you realize how precious life is. It even makes up for all the silly « redshirt » deaths in TOS, because you can imagine them being ‘real’ people too. This episode is also an opportunity to gaze at Patrick Stewarts amazing acting chops. No matter how bad the dialogue is, he can make you believe it. His "Au revoir, Tasha" brought a tear to my eye. So 3.5 stars for Tasha’s death, 1.5 stars for Armus. Overall grade: 2.5

P.S. Even in the remastered version, Tasha still has that fake-looking blood sploch on her cheek. This is an instance where I feel the Okuda's tenet of preserving the original artist's intent went a bit too far.

Thanks for that, Nic, especially for sharing about your own harrowing experience. I agree that the concept (if not necessarily the execution) of Tasha dying randomly is not a bad idea at all, and true to life.

I agree with Nic. The fact the death is "meaningless" is the point (as in the case of Course Oblivion - though I'm not a fan of that episode, I do appreciate what they were going for with the ending). I was 7 when I saw this episode and it had a profound impact on me. Like Conspiracy a few episodes later, it's marvellously un-Trekkian - irredeemable badness exists and good people die for no "meaningful" reason. There's a unsettling rawness and viscerality to both episodes that I find very effective and powerful.

The episode is mostly stupid, but noteworthy for setting up the premise that even main characters can die permanenently (a premise which would never be followed up on for the whole series) and for the touching memorial service scene. And by touching, I mean extremely depressing. Just how sad is it that Yar, a woman in her early 20s who usually appeared friendly and rather upbeat to the other crew members, had a prerecorded message for her friends to be read out after her death? Yes, the life on an exploration vessel can be dangerous, but I have never seen anyone else on the Enterprise do such a thing. I guess it's one of the damages Yar received from her upbringing on Turkana IV, where death was probably ever-present. Still, how sad is it that in her message, the only people she addresses are her fellow bridge officers, whom she has just known for a few months? How lonely is this woman? How broken is her relationship to her sister, whom she doesn't even mention (well, obviously the writers hadn't come up with the idea of her sister until much later)? How sad is it for Data, who thinks that their drunken romp in "The Naked Now" gave them a special connection (which will be brought up again in "The Measure of a Man" and "Legacy"), that she doesn't say anything about their relationship? And of course: How sad is it for Geordie, who had the hots for Yar in "The Naked Now" and "Hide and Q", that she is the first in a long list of failed romantic encounters during his seven year run on the Enterprise? I guess I'll go cry myself to sleep now...

I never interpreted the final Holodeck scene as being a "recording" that Tasha made when she was alive. My feeling was that they programmed the Holodeck to say what they thought she would want to say. It certainly explains why she only adresses those who are present, and why the message is a tad impersonal.

Of all the ways to kill off a main character, this had to be the absolute worst. The whole concept of Armus was just absurd, his scenes with Troi are beyond annoying, and having him swallow then throw up Riker was just plain ridiculous... About the only thing good about this episode was getting rid of Yar, as she was pretty irrelevant since Denise Crosby was never given much to do (save that awful episode Code of Honor). This allowed for Worf to play a much more prominent role, a great benefit to the show... I did like the last scene, it was well written.

Diamond Dave

OK, at its heart this is an episode with all the production values of a TOS episode, a ridiculous villain, horribly stilted dialogue and terrible acting. And yet, and yet... it actually manages to kill off a major character, which in today's Game of Thrones world is now becoming a cliche of its own but back then was an incredibly ballsy move. And the way it was handled - in such an abrupt and arbitrary way - is particularly noteworthy. I remember being rather affected by the funeral back when I first saw this as a kid, but today it now seems rather mawkish. So it's a terrible episode then... but a brave one nonetheless. 1.5 stars.

Dax's death should have been more like this, she should have just died with one of those sparky computers going off, rather then the big villain killing her in church.

In re watching this first season, I'm really starting to appreciate Worf more and more and Michael Dorn's abilities.

I liked this episode. It's a solid 3 star outing for me. I couldn't stand Troi and her inane psychobabble for most of season 1, but in this case it actually worked. Given a near omnipotent foe with no obvious weakness, her insights into his psychology were actually pertinent and his response was at least plausible. I liked how uncompromising the episode was with Armis being portrayed as this sadistic bastard - quite a change from the moral grey zone most Trek characters (even villains) have occupied. I thought Armis himself (in terms of his appearance) was a creative idea, far more interesting than the typical ridged forehead humanoid, and Armis's brief descriptions of his origin left me intrigued. The cast off skin of a "race of Titans"? Wow, cool. I thought Tasha's death could have been handled better, but the hollow and flippant manner of it did nicely set things up for Yesterday's Enterprise.

I'm gonna miss looking at Denise's butt. She definitely had the best body on the show. Armus: cool concept. I wish us humans could dump our evil skin.

At the time the rumor was that Crosby was fired from TNG because she had posed in Playboy. I thought that was a pretty lame reason to fire her, but I never particularly liked her or Yar anyway, so I never missed her. I never thought she was all that attractive anyway.

Perry-the-guitar-guy

Despite its many flaws, "Skin Of Evil" sticks in my brain as most memorable, not because of Tasha's death, but because of the Armus character. As a physical embodiment of the concept of evil, it takes my imagination to science fiction nirvana. Far more interesting to me than the intricacies of Klingon politics. isn't that sort of what STV The Final Frontier was about? A powerful force, locked away, without redeeming merit? A favorite theme of Roddenberry's, that we should avoid being ruled by our emotions. Now that we are once again being blanketed with political nonsense, I would certainly vote for rounding up all the evil and shipping it off to a distant planet.

I don't think there's anything not to like in this episode except maybe the red bloch on Yars face, i think it's an unforgettable episode, 4 stars

Andrew Taylor-Cairns

This episode always gets me, but it sneaks up on me. I think Armus is a terrible villain, and I think a lot of the scenes on the planet were bland and repetative. Yar's death was a bit botched, even if I do agree with idea the writers had to give her a random death. The type of death a security officer should face all the time (as it did in TOS all the time). Two things save the episode for me. After Yar died, Armus asks Data what should happen to him, Data says "I think you should be destroyed." The way he says it almost shows emotion, and I loved that moment. It hints back to the almost special relationship they had after having sex during The Naked Now. Of course, her holo-funeral at the end hits me every time. I don't know why, being as Yar was only in season one, and her lack of development was one of the reasons Crosby left was the lack of development. Nevertheless, talking to each character gets me misty eyed. I always wonder what Yar could have been like in Michael-Pillar-TNG in season three. You know, besides changing the timeline back to how it should be.

A very amusing bit of trivia -- even though this episode is where Tasha dies, it actually was not the last Yar-episode filmed -- that was "Symbiosis", the episode that aired before this one. If you look at Symbiosis, Denise Crosby's very last moment on a Trek set was near the end of that episode, during the scene in the cargo bay. As Picard and Crusher are leaving the cargo bay and the door is closing behind them, you can see Tasha jumping up and down in the far background and "waving goodbye". Very funny -- check it out.

Nothingoriginal55

Hey at leadt they didn't try to make Star Trek II The Wrath of Armus...just sayin...

CyberianGinseng

NCC-1701-Z says:"The worst flaw was the manner of Tasha's death. She should have gone out with phasers firing, rather than dying meaninglessly, which was lampshaded in "Yesterday's Enterprise" - I like to think the writers were admitting they screwed up here." I seriously doubt it. The character Yar was literally off-screened, once again summarily dismissed. So basically all they did in that episode was bring back the character just to be killed off summarily once again in TNG: "Redemption II." Basically, they killed the original character to give Crosby a half decent character to play, which was all she wanted in the first place. Hence, the way news of her death is delivered as a foot note from the new character. This means that literally NO ONE on TNG is sorry about the manner of the original character's death or they wouldn't have done it twice and even MORE dismissively the second time.

I remember this episode above most others. While it's apparent defining moment was Yar's death, it was really Troi's emergence. We can debate if Sirtis took full advantage of the gift, same with Worf who also benefitted, but the counseling she did, starting with "Liar!" was some of her best acting.

@BobT I had never saw that before with Denise waving, and although I had heard the story before, I never knew exactly where to look. Hilarious indeed!

Well there goes any pretence at science fiction. Actually Armus could go into partnership with venom from spiderman-basically the same thing. Tasha's death-I have to accept that it was supposed to be meaningless. The funeral scene was great-Tasha's hologram manages to patronise all the other crewmembers present as well as remind us what a one dimensional person she was. It wouild have been so much better if she had come out with a few home truths: eg: "Deanna: I never liked you with your massive knockers all over the place/"

"Still, how sad is it that in her message, the only people she addresses are her fellow bridge officers, whom she has just known for a few months? How lonely is this woman? " She might have recorded several messages to other audiences and her will said "play this one for these people you invite, play this one for that lot separately, e-mail this one to those people, etc.".

Also, they could easily have memorial tech that recognizes who is present, and plays only segments addressed to them, or to a general audience. Tasha might have recorded a dozen other segments we didn't see, because those people weren't available to attend. Maybe they got their own custom screening later.

Apparently I'm a simpleton. I actually thought the villainous gooey moving tar pit was really creepy - especially when it sucked Riker into itself, and his screaming horrified face showed on the surface for an instant. When it moved, the Skin seemed thin, but when it took Riker it appeared depthless. It had a good viscosity, too. And Picard was intense all the way through. I kinda liked the cartoony red splotch of Tasha's cheek too. It was an Armus-mark. It didn't try to look like anything seen on earth. Bye Tasha! You could have been a great character in a hundred other scifi shows. But tormented dark heroes didn't really have a place on early TNG,. And on later TNG there was only room for one.

Obviously this episode will be one of the most memorable because of Yar's death but it's a pretty silly one for me. Armus is pitiable, yes -- but I'm not a fan of episodes with these aliens with undefined powers. It's hard to accept what is legitimate about its actions. There's little frame of reference and so a solution can always be conveniently manufactured. Armus's games are ridiculous, boring -- but if it is meant to evoke pity then it works. Troi's psychobabble is actually useful here in pinpointing how Armus came about -- which is an interesting concept (that all the evil can be shed from beings etc.) I agree with Jammer's overall rating of 1.5/4 stars here. It is a slow-paced, mediocre episode.

Every time I see this episode I can't help but think that I'd have liked it more, if the villain didn't look so stupid. He's worse than most of the hokey energy blob enemies in TOS... add the cliche bad guy voice and attitude of a stroppy teenager makes him actually worse than Trelane. The first time I saw this episode (about 15 years ago) I'd seen quite a lot of the later seasons but hardly any season one episodes and wasn't surprised that Yar died... and then was a bit confused to see a long funeral scene for a what I thought was just another redshirt. On the whole, though, there is nothing particularly interesting about this episode. Yet another all powerful alien that the crew have to try to stop. Having watched TNG again from farpoint in order, I actually feel that it was quite clever to give Yar a resdshirt style pointless and quick death. It *somewhat* gives more jeopardy to the rest of the series knowing that they are willing to kill off recurring characters... not that they ever did again. Yar was one of the most potentially interesting characters but with such poor writing and bad acting, writing her out actually improved the show by letting Worf and Geordi move around to different positions for the later seasons. That the writers find (mostly awful) excuses to bring back Crosby and a quick glance of her imdb page, I'm guessing choosing to leave is one of her biggest regrets.

I am introducing my daughter to TNG.. (She is 12 and not an especially discerning viewer, so she is loving the first season. I tell her it gets even better.) We just reached "Skin of Evil." I am charmed by a scene I had forgotten: the opener with Yar and Worf discussing her upcoming martial arts competition. Worf expresses respect to her fighting skills, quietly telling her she is favored in the ship's pool. Yar is surprised and pleased - almost girlishly - with his laconic Klingon compliment. She beams at him, and you can kind of see in her the slightly insecure young woman who few up unloved in a brutal colony - a woman who later sought out Data for "tenderness and joy", and who despite her outward toughness is socially uncertain and a bit of an outsider (rather like Worf). It's a spark of chemistry that Season One generally lacked - and does much to counteract the crying and the sexed-up silliness of Yar's earlier outings. I wish the Worf/Yar friendship could have been developed better - maybe over another season or two. Seems like a wasted opportunity. Also, when a dead Yar is beamed back to the ship, there's a shot of Worf on the bridge, stoically trying not to show his feelings. That's a nice touch. Since this is her death episode, I am going to say it: Crosby's face is stunning and she has great hair.

Tara - I'm pretty sure Denise Crosby later said the ironic thing was that if she'd gotten more scenes in earlier episodes like the one where she and Worf discuss the tournament, she'd never have left.

Startrekwatcher

3.5 stars. To this day I remember where I was and what I was doing when I saw this episode and Yarbdied. It left me in shock and reeling. It happened so early in the episode and then expecting Beverly, who could heal anything, to revive Tasha doesn’t/- I was floored. This was stunning to me as a viewer. This was back when television didn’t just ‘off’ a character to create water cooler chatter the way modern shows do it on schedule every few episodes in a season. This was also when tv shows would give the deserved due to the aftermath of the death rather than running onto the next plotpoint and never looking back I have heard over the years people criticize Yar’s death as disapppinting or not being heroic enough. I don’t agree. Most deaths are abrupt and senseless—not occurring in battle or trying to save someone. That made this episode all the more sad and tragic I thought. The way Armus just waved his hand and flung her in seconds to her demise. No pomp. No circumstance I also thought the episode did a good job with Armus. He was truly menacing and terrorizing with his sadism(dragging a helpless Riker into the tar covering his body and filling his mouth, removing zgeotdie’s visor and moving it away from him each time he got close) and his magical powers (controlling Data At Will pointing the phaser at each away team member one by one) left anyone who beamed down to the planet in real danger and at Armus’ mercy. Even after Yar died I still believed that there could be more casualties among the main cast like riker or Troi—the weekly trailer helped add to this concern I also thought the weakness Armus possessed was a good one created by the writers and played nicely into his nature. I also thought his origin story was very unique and TOS-like—being the discarded ugliness and evil of a race who wanted to achieve pure beauty The funeral service for Yar was well written and executed taking place in a rather inspired idea in the holodeck in a nice pastoral setting featuring a pre-recorded message from the late Tasha yar. Which carried genuine sentiment and emotion in a very sincere manner data’s final observation to Picard about the nature of loss was quite appropriate and perfect way to end the hour The whole episode really did feel like not your-standard-episode-of-the-week. It was a little darker and heavier and really stayed with me after it ended. It felt like an Event episode—not just because a main cast member was killed off but the jeopardy generated and Armus felt like a true extraordinary threat. 3.5 stars

Thunderchild

I think Ro Laren eventually became the character Yar was intended to be.

I can hardly believe I'm saying this, but I think I've realized that this episode is meant to be a possible criticism of the perfection of the TNG crew and Federation society. Armus says that a society of beings wanting to perfect themselves and eliminate their worse parts literally did so, by shedding their evil instincts and becoming beauteous things. When I heard this it occurred to me that this is exactly the manifesto of TNG's world, much more so than TOS ever claimed. In TOS no one claims to be perfect, and although Earth's values have advanced and peace is considered a virtue, individually people still have foibles and don't pretend to be perfect. On TNG, though, their pretensions of being nobler creatures are much more pronounced, and Skin of Evil seems to me to strike directly at the heart of that: if you renounce all the darker sides of humanity and try to shed them, they *will not* disappear, but will end up simply being shunted somewhere else, possibly somewhere unexpected. And the more repressed and ignored these darker parts are, the stronger they'll actually be, especially when they unexpectedly appear and boil to the surface. I think this is a surprisingly disturbing episode despite having essentially no story, and despite the fact that Yar's passing is fairly unremarkable. In a funny way Armus reminds me of The Incredible Hulk, insofar as he's pure unadulterated pain and rage with no possibility of reasoning with it, and the only possibility of survival is to avoid or escape him. In both cases, despite the threat level, you end up pitying them rather than wishing them ill, because they just can't help it and are only the way they are because they're victims of circumstances beyond their control.

Is it just me or is Denise Crosby mailing it in this last episode, knowing she was gone? The first scene on the bridge with Worf she seems to have this smirk on her face. Easy in retrospect to say she made a mistake leaving, but I think she would have been canned anyways as the producers wanted to get rid of 2 of the female leads. Still would have been better to have canned Sirtis and kept Crosby on as chief security officer, with Worf as 2nd.

Sarjenka's Little Brother

Even with the flaws, this was a big episode for the "Star Trek" franchise. The original series never killed a main character, and you knew they wouldn't. It was always "red shirts." So you knew Kirk and company were never really in jeopardy. That always took much of the tension away. But with "Skin of Evil," now we know a regular on the cast member can be killed off. And it can happen in a flash. At the beginning of an episode. Even though they never did it again on "Next Gen," it was always in the back of your mind that it was a possibility. A few other disjointed thoughts: -- Call me sappy, but I liked the memorial scene in the Holodeck. Tasha's closing remarks were rather inspiring and really helped define the best in each of the remaining characters. -- I never thought her death was "an empty death" or one "without meaning." She died trying to rescue two Starfleet officers. What could be more heroic than that. -- I was sorry to see Denise Crosby and Tasha go. We were just beginning to see the potential there, I think, in "Arsenal of Freedom." -- However, without this death, we wouldn't have had one of the best episodes of the entire "Trek" franchise: "Yesterday's Enterprise." -- Personally, I think this was Troi's best moment up to now, engaging the creature psychologically. It may have been a miscalculation to say "you have my pity." -- My biggest problem with the episode is the same one I often have with these strange, powerful beings. LIke someone said, its powers (and weaknesses) seemed to be whatever the plot called for at that moment. It can transport the crew in and out of the shuttle, control them, etc., yet needs to a hitch a ride in a spacecraft? And I wasn't enamored with the whole "skin" of evil concept. I wonder whether the whole thing would have played out better with a true human villain -- say a Hannibal Lecter type who had escaped a Federation prison. He could be hideously disfigured during the escape, and the episode could be called "Face of Evil."

I have a soft spot for this episode for several reasons. First of all, the oily goo that Armus is made of just plain looks cool, and gives the cheap man-in-suit some visual dimension. Also rarely mentioned is that this was co-written by Joseph Stefano who was one of the main writers for The Outer Limits. This is basically an S1 episode of TNG with an Outer Limits style monster. Armus also bears a slight resemblance to a Dr Who villain (mainly in the angry and electronically modulated way that Armus talks). I like it for being very tonally strange in that way. TNG rarely gets ghastly and when it does you get some memorable images like Riker's Frozen Han Solo face. Therefore this episode gets an extra star and half just for being engagingly weird. Minus half a star for Tasha saying "hailing frequencies closed, sir" at the end. The rest of the funeral is barely tolerable and goes on too long, but is forgivable because this show is sort of corny anyway and Tasha was an important character who still had a lot of payoff yet to come.

Re: Armus' powers. Armus is essentially a bully, so I was OK with his powers being arbitrary (just enough to be really mean to everybody, just mysterious enough that you won't know what he'll do next). His ability to teleport Picard into the shuttle was the only real head-scratcher.

Lastly... what does Armus' sad origin say about the beings that created Armus and left him behind in the first place? Isn't creating and leaving a sentient being like that behind (like so much toxic waste for others to stumble across) a really unethical thing to do? The creators of Armus are probably more interesting than Armus himself is. A plot point about what happened to them afterwards would have been nice to explore (I'm guessing that it didn't work in the long run, the aliens found they still had evil within them after all, etc etc).

I loved the post earlier about the “wrath of Armus” it would be an Armusgedden!

Mike Shanahan

I thought "skin of evil" was one of the most enjoyable shows in the whole series. I loved Armus the smartass alien. The way he spoke was great. It's very polarizing for most people, some hate it some love it.

Either wesley crusher or the chief engineer are wrong. Having just watched the last few episodes this was immediately obvious since it was mentioned specifically in Coming of Age. (copied from transcripts I found online) Skin of evil: COMPUTER: That procedure is not recommended. LYNCH: Understood. Now. Prime matter-antimatter injectors. Set ratio at twenty-five to one COMPUTER: Ratio set. Coming of Age: COMPUTER: Last question on the hyperspace physics test. If the matter and antimatter tanks on a Galaxy class starship are nine tenths depleted, calculate the intermix ratio necessary to reach a starbase a hundred light years away at warp factor eight. Begin. WESLEY: Once as I realised it was a trick question, there was only one answer. MORDOCK: Yes, there is only one ratio with matter antimatter. One to one.

Peter Swinkels

Not great, but just one and a half star? To each is his own I suppose.

This episode is straight up terrible. 1 star for putting Yar out of her misery. She clearly didn't want to be on the show and her performance showed it. The writers never did her justice up to this point and certainly didn't in this episode. And Troi crying in the shuttle, pleading to the blob man.. Ugh. Ironically this episode is worse than "Justice." It may be better than "Code of Honor," but that's not saying much.

This was a much better episode than I had expected. I remember being quite shocked when I saw it as a kid, expecting Yar to be revived by the end of an episode. A sudden main character death really wasn't to ever be expected at the time. I admire the decision to make her death sudden and senseless. In a realistic Trek universe a bridge officer's death of this nature would not be an uncommon event. I don't share Jammer's weariness at the Troi scenes, and to me they proved to be the real strength of the episode, highlighting what an essential part of the ensemble Troi is. As I've re-watched the series I've noticed that Troi's contribution has been more significant than I remember. It's clear that Roddenberry considered that the exploration of the inner world (superficial as it often seems to be) should carry great weight. *Yes*, she does make rather a lot of obvious remarks, but her opinion is clearly important to Picard's decision making process. It's actually quite remarkable that, considering bridge seating arrangements, she seems to carry as much significance as the First Officer. I wonder if other ships have a similar set up? We certainly never see it in any other series of Trek. @BobT : that is my new favourite bit of Trek trivia; I can't wait to show it to someone else!

I'm rooting for Armus.

Ding dong the witch is dead.

I think this episode has a few things that I've personally noticed but no one had mentioned. I was rather unsettled about how I felt about Armus. I should have felt utter disgust and hatred but instead I felt pity for it. The reason why I didn't hate it, is because it is more human than it liked to think of itself. It did not act cruelly and viciously just for pure enjoyment but because of it is hurt and angry, these are emotions that humans feel which might cause them to act cruelly towards someone else. Secondly, those who said that Troi is saying psychobabble nonsense, clearly have no idea about psychology. I was skeptical of Troi at the beginning of season 1 but then I realized the importance of her role in the team. The team of the spaceship Enterprise undergo through many situations which are stressful and tricky. Troi is there as a mediator, she can understand how her team mates feel and respond to certain difficult incidents as well as reading the enemies' intentions, and that is why she is very important. Moreover she had said herself that she is a training psychologist and she has shown her expertise when she dealt with Armus. The death of LT Yar was anticlimactic but it makes sense, when you're on duty and fully knowing you're going to undertake dangerous missions, the possibility of dying during action is very real. My only complaint about this episode is the holograph Lt Yar making her speech is rather convenient. I also love the interaction at the end between Captain Picard and Commander Data. CMD Data is so far my favourite character and I just love the theme about him an android who is trying to understand what's like to be human.

"You're a lonely pile of goo who doesn't deserve any friends and who was only written to off Tasha Yar in the most benign way possible." "Noooo, YOU CAN"T DEFEAT ULTIMATE EVIL THIS WAY> IT"S TOO EASY." "You are wrong. And to prove it, I'm going to leave you here crying." Later in the holodeck … Tasha Yar: "Geordi, Deanna, Beverly, Data, Riker Captain … did I leave anybody out? Anyway, I just want to say SO LONG SUCKERS! AND SO LONG TO YOUR LOSER SHOW WITH IT'S LOSER STORYLINES! IT WON'T LAST LONG!"

Not a horrible episode, so......2.5 stars, I think. Basically, not quite good enough to get 3 stars, but watchable, interesting, involving, and, unlike some, it did not drag.

@Eliot: We clearly don't understand psychology because we find many Troi scenes to be over the top and ridiculous? You can have your opinion but why the holier than though tone? She has her moments throughout the franchise but in season 1 she was awful. She provides gems like, "I don't know how...but...this is real" or "Captain, this is real." Gee thanks couselor. She's like a kindergarten teacher. Just because we can appreciate her role throughout the 7 season run, it doesn't make up for the cringy, tin foil hat cheesiness that was on display in much of season 1. I would think most Trek fans can grasp the concept of "psychology."

Best part of the episode: The Enterprise is racing to rescue Shuttlecraft 13, piloted by a black guy in a redshirt. And it’s the white, female main cast members who dies a pointless death! I seriously hope Ben put all Latinum on the Federation lottery that week...

@Martin...much to my recent surprise, breaking the "black guy red shirt dies, pretty white girl lives" trope had been done in TOS. I had not really watched TOS since my Mom used to record them off TV reruns onto VHS tapes when I was little and I'd watch a few of her favorites. That started me as a fan but Next Gen was the Trek I truly grew up with and knew well (and all the series that would follow). And while I loved the TOS movies (well, at least the evens lol) I always thought TOS series was a bit too hokey to take the time to rewatch. But my husband finally started binging on Netflix and I caught many I'd never seen. I think the ep was called "By Any Other Name". Was actually kinda shocked when they broke cliche.

@Danni Indeed it was done on TOS, not sure on the episode title, but the one where the Kelvans turn everyone into novelty sugar cubes, the two redshirts on the planet, one black guy one white girl, get the cube treatment, and it’s the white girl that gets dusted. I was surprised that time too, especially since Kirk must lose only about half a dozen women under his command, and probably nearly 100 men.

Kind of shameful how this episode equates having dark skin with evil.

@ Omar, Don't you think it's more likely they were going for a concept like "oil leads to violence", rather than "black things are evil"?

6/10 the planetary setup with the glow and rocky landscape is so TOS. I don't think this has much to offer. How could the beast be so powerful and so not powerful.

I like this one. Armus behaves in a manner befitting of an embodiment of evil - his motivations make sense as far as such things go. You’re torn on how to feel about him and even feel pity for Picard leaving him behind. Data’s suggestion - that he should be destroyed - is probably the kindest solution. 2.5 stars

"Skin of Evil" is TNG doing TOS' "Plato's Stepchildren. In "Plato", a powerful ruling class subjects our heroes to torture, humiliation, and degrading activities, most with a psycho-sexual element. The episode attempts to capture an evil that is entirely arbitrary, sadistic and a product of unchecked power. "Skin of Evil" does something similar, and has one of Trek's most interesting scripts. This script can be divided into 4 sections. The first section is terribly acted, written and directed. It simply involves our heroes beaming down onto a planet and discovering an evil creature which resembles black oil. You can tell this stuff reads ominously on paper, but the on-screen execution doesn't work at all. The episode's second section involves the black oil creature killing, torturing and humiliating our heroes. All done for the alien's sadistic pleasure, our heroes are quite literally dragged through the mud. We also learn that the alien creature is a kind of exorcised evil, banished from a civilization which refused to be corrupted by it. Very creepy, though again, the execution is terrible. The third section of the episode, meanwhile, is excellent. Picard beams down and has a long discussion with the alien. This is brilliant, Picard - a man of virtue, and his own steadfast principles and ethical codes - on a simple soundstage, going toe-to-toe with a puddle of black goo which represents everything he strives to escape. Light vs Dark, Good vs Evil. It's a very good sequence. The fourth section of the episode is conceptually interesting. Here we get an extended funeral sequence, whose warmth and humanity is designed to be the inverse or opposite of section two. Instead of torture, black oil slicks and disconnection, we get love, family and green, rolling hills. Unfortunately the mirroring effect doesn't quite work, because the writing , directing and acting are all subpar. So a bad episode, but a daring one, and a fascinating one, and a structurally original one.

@Trent, I agree this episode is interesting, though bad. I think the Armus/Yar contrast (part 2 VS part 4) is meant to also bring out the difference between Picard et al and the Titans who expelled and left Armus behind. Yar was on a "worst of humanity" planet which represented all the traits that had been mostly expunged, but Starfleet took her in rather than leaving her to rot in her anger. (That the colony in general is left to eat itself alive is another issue.) Yar was given the chance to grow and participate rather than have her existence denied. And even in death, she is not abandoned, but given a final message from beyond the grave, and not forgotten. The season emphasizes how far humans have come, but this episode underlines the importance of not expunging and "abandoning" evil - - and anyone who still has this evil - - but facing it, every day. I think also that's related to why Picard tells Armus he is not evil, but that evil would be to submit to Armus. Even here, delivered by Stewart with gravitas, I don't know that it quite "works." But I think the concept is that Armus' self-aggrandizing view of itself as evil is a self-pitying and confused definition of evil. Only beings in tremendous amount of pain (the ep seems to be saying) are so completely consumed with sadism. Real evil on individual basis is to give in to Armus, which I think means to give into the belief that evil is an inevitable force rather than a weakness, a failure to continue fighting. Armus is then more a "skin of existential despair," a black pall of depression that kills by extinguishing the ability to fight back. That he picks Yar to kill seems arbitrary from the outside, but symbolically she was the most at-risk from her history. Troi the psychologist tries to fight it with words and Picard fights it with indomitable will.

William said: "Yar was on a "worst of humanity" planet which represented all the traits that had been mostly expunged, but Starfleet took her in rather than leaving her to rot in her anger." Wow, that's probably the best stuff I've ever read on this episode. I'd never noticed those parallels before.

Other Chris

@Ari Paul "I'm rooting for Armus." Perfect.

Thinking about it, Picard should really have ordered Armus destroyed at the end. It would seem not only safer but kinder to just put him out of his misery (he could hardly help being what he was, after all). Plus you just know some idiot is going to let their curiosity get the better of them sooner or later, barge past the warning buoy and give Armus another chance to wreak havoc.

The monster was hokey, and the story was slow moving and not very interesting. However, the ending ceremony was a nice send off for Yar, after such an ignominious and senseless death. I also liked the death scene in Sick Bay, how Beverly tried so hard. Though it's called Skin of Evil, it seems to be not so much about Evil as it is about loneliness and isolation vs community and relationships. I suppose the moral of the story is that loving relationships keep us out of Evil's grasp and keep even Death from fully defeating us. It seemed unnecessarily dangerous, and also cruel, to leave the creature alive on the planet. They should have left him some means by which to off himself. A slightly below average ep, except for its significance as the first ST ep to feature the death of a regular character. That gives it enough of a boost to hit average to slightly above, IMO. They could've made a "The Wrath of Armus" follow up movie outta this one. Benedict Cumberbatch as Armus, natch.

Having now read the review and comments: --The Troi vs the monster parts were the best parts of the ep, provided some interesting info instead of the endless repetitive scenes of the monster trying to upset our brave crew. --I liked that Tosha's death was so sudden and senseless and arbitrary. I liked that the best of 24th century medicine could do nothing for her. They get blindsided, they get reminded of their own powerlessness and need for each other, and so do we. I might have to actually spring for CBS all access so I can watch "Picard." Stewart is so very good.

HackFarlane

Armus cracks me up. This episode is actually fairly entertaining because of him--he's just such an irredeemably evil bastard that you almost root for him. For bonus points, he was even created that way! His only regret about killing Tasha Yar was that she didn't suffer enough before dying. Yikes. The fact that he's such an unbelievable, over-the-top asshole almost creates an amusing campiness here. I also liked how arbitrary Tasha's death was. Before 24 came along, deaths like these were fairly shocking--a main character isn't supposed to die like this, only redshirts. I wonder if, when this episode aired in 1987 or 1988, before the Internet was a big thing, was the audience even aware that Denise Crosby was leaving the show? I know there were probably UseNet boards, but I'm guessing the average audience member may have been blindsided and had no idea that Yar was about to be killed off. Showing the immediate aftermath of her death as a conference in the observation lounge was a good choice--we see that it was a punch to the gut for these officers, except for stoic Worf and Data of course. Leaving Armus alone for eternity (supposedly) seemed to be a justifiable sentence for him, as much as many would rather see him blown to smithereens. With nobody ever to screw with, his entire reason for being is moot, and he'll have to live with that forever.

@HackFarlane: "Leaving Armus alone for eternity (supposedly) seemed to be a justifiable sentence for him, as much as many would rather see him blown to smithereens. With nobody ever to screw with, his entire reason for being is moot, and he'll have to live with that forever." I don't think there really is a justifiable sentence for Armus, given his origins. He was evil by design and never had the option to be otherwise. Yet he's still a sentient being capable of suffering. I just feel it's the best thing for him and the whole galaxy to end him then and there.

Armus has the demeanour and behaviour of a cartoon villain, and could be hilarious if the script didn't insist on attempting to treat him seriously. And making him responsible for the death of a major character. Which is a hell of an anticlimactic exit for her, I gotta say -- having a random out-of-nowhere death actually works for the character, I feel, but for heaven's sake, Armus is basically a comedy caricature. Tasha's pre-recorded monologue is basically the best material she's been given. It suggests more of a character and more of a dynamic with the rest of the crew than Season 1 ever shows us. Real shame.

The funeral scene at the end is way too long. I just had to rewatch with my mom (her first viewing so i have to suffer through shows like this again.) and i was just cringing the entire time. It seemed like she had a "personal message" for everyone on the ship. Why did she not have one for Ben or the tea drinking transporter guy?

Armus the malevolent puddle was a daft sort of villain, and it would have been better if they'd done that differently ( it would have been easy enough) but aside from that the episode was fair enough. Tash's death was a shock, but I agree with people who thought that was the right way to do it - that's how death happens. In a way the fact thay killed a main cast member that way, and then recognised it as a real loss was a kind of nod of apology to the casual way the Original Series knocked off so many "redshirts". I felt the goodbye scene on the holodeck was actually well done, and added something to the chemistry of the survivors. Data's little scene with Picard added to both characters.

Not a favorite episode for me. I did just watch the last part today. Picard ordered the downed shuttle craft destroyed which was next to the creature. Was this just a rated G way to cover up that they killed this monster? It looked like a photon torpedo which would destroy everything in a many kilometers radius.

I always agreed with Roddenberry on this one— reality is 99+ percent that a security officer would die this way. The sudden slap in the face is sickeningly real. The weird splotch even works for me. It’s one of those bizarre things that happen in the real world — it’s so insane, it reflexively makes you want to grab on to “this isn’t real, lol, this can’t be happening.” Unfortunately, however, Armus isn’t realized very well. The oil slick thing is fairly effective, but the humanoid former is lousy, as is the voice. This could have been helped if maybe they had something like a Nagelum line.

And watching it again, it just grows on me. There’s the spectacular tragedy of Armus, and Troi is great here. And the self willing sacrifice of the crew is admirable and very believable. And there’s the ultimately victorious Picard ploy. But a really hair raising bit is Data damning this creature— that he believes should be destroyed! Arguably early installment weirdness, but that’s rather powerful. And the fate of Armus is more powerful than what happens in Star Trek V. Can this creature be destroyed? Should it be? It would like to be...

Hi all. Long time lurker on these boards, first-time poster. It seems a strange episode to comment on first: I rate this episode at 2-2.5 stars on Jammer’s scale, and it’s far from my favourite. Yet I feel I have something to say about this episode that I don’t think has been touched upon enough (though William B. has mentioned it – love reading your reviews, by the way!). This episode fails in its execution, but you catch glimpses of what could have been a great treatment of two closely related themes: Depression, embodied in Armus, and grief, as played through Yar’s death. I started to write out all my thoughts and it got a bit long, so I’ll just post what I have about the depression aspect, and maybe later add a coda relating to Data’s moral judgment of Armus, the resilience of the crew, Troi’s role as counsellor, and Yar’s death if there’s any interest and if I have time. So, let’s take a look at Armus. Here is a creature that both asks for pity and rejects it. (“I was abandoned here by a race of Titans,” practically begging for your sympathy; on having it shown, “I do not want your pity!”) Here is a creature who tortures people for no apparent reason – not even because he much enjoys it. Here is a creature who knows full well that he is the (literal) embodiment of all that is wrong and bad with the noble race that birthed him. These facts are not unrelated. He has all the hallmarks of depression. Most of all, he has the unshakeable sense of his own absolute worthlessness, which is the *sine qua non* of depression: he hates himself, and is certain that he is abhorrent by virtue of his very being – and therefore beyond redemption. The other things which follow from that: The inability to take pleasure in anything, even the extreme acts of cruelty he inflicts, so meaningless and unenjoyable and tedious that they do not even have the vicious savour of sadism. Instead, like the world he has been left on, everything is empty to him. He does not deserve anything, certainly not enjoyment. Indeed, his only strong emotional responses to anything are to comments made about him, as when Troi tells him, “You have my pity.” It’s too much to handle, it’s too against the grain of what he thinks about himself. Armus is entirely self-consumed, embittered, and wallowing in it. And symbolically, too, what better device for conveying depression? A black pit that sucks you in and causes you pain on a desolate planet. A humanoid form rises up from the sticky black tar and is absorbed back into it, the tar (depression) completely consuming the man. The very stickiness and blackness of it. A force that catches you off guard and pulls you in, as the shuttlecraft is at the beginning. The state of depression he symbolises is played out through Armus’s use of his powers. A reviewer earlier paralleled this episode to TOS’s “Plato’s Stepchildren,” which is apt to a degree, but only in an inverted sort of way. That episode was about the cruelty that emerges from immense outer power, from the sense of absolute superiority it endows coupled with the means to enact it; “The Skin of Evil” is about the cruelty that arises from inner powerlessness the conviction of absolute inferiority given expression. Armus tries to sublimate his self-anger and self-hatred into sadism and psychopathy directed at others, but the attempt fails, as it must: the more outward power he exerts – killing Yar, blocking the transporter, enveloping Riker, toying with Data – the more inner powerlessness he feels. The more he does without eliciting any sense of achievement, without filling the void of his own sense of self, the more painfully pronounced the gap between his empty inner life and the meaningful outer world becomes and the more insistent he becomes. Look at his actions for evidence. He quickly kills Yar. “It was too easy,” he says. The voice distortions probably didn't help, but a great actor would have conveyed the disgust and existential despair in that line – he wants a challenge, a purpose, something to make him feel *alive*. But being detestable, he can think of no purpose for himself except to exert control over others. *Do as I will!* he insists, *and give me the esteem I will not give myself! I shall use you to fill this void!* Of course, the crew do not, and that upsets him further, and proves his intrinsic hatefulness to himself yet more; but even if they did submit, the result would be the same. Armus insists on his own misery, because, while he absolutely does not want it, he cannot conceive of himself as anything other than creature who deserves misery. (An aside: I agree with criticisms that Armus’s powers are too undefined and arbitrarily powerful here. But having a highly powered being was integral to the plot to serve this basic theme – not just, as is often the case, to produce jeopardy for the sake of artificial dramatic tension and giving the crew something to do. However, unlike the immensely powerful and occasionally Lovecraftian energy beings in other Trek entries, attempting to be alien and inhuman beyond our understanding, Armus is essentially human.) So this, the impenetrable wall that depression builds that can be dislodged only by uprooting the very foundation – the unwavering and axiomatic belief in one’s own worthlessness – I think the episode gets very right. What, then, are we to make of the ending? “You are not evil, but submitting to you is,” Picard says. That’s about right, in the sense that submitting to the voices of sorrow and despair does prevent us from making us into more perfect version of ourselves and can make us into bad people. It carries, I suppose, a laudable message of relief for anyone hearing Armus’s call: having these dark thoughts does not make you an evil person. Then the Enterprise abandons Armus and exiles him for eternity. It’s not that this ending makes no sense. First, prosaically, the episode has to end somehow, and they only have 50 minutes to wrap it up. Second, if Armus’s origin story is to be believed, he is *truly* irredeemable. He is the Platonic, demonic manifestation of one of our darkest sides. No attempt at redemption could have worked, and the Enterprise’s decision was the only rational one. Fine. Still, I think a more sophisticated take was possible (which, had it been taken, might have improved the bad pacing of this episode). Implicit in this utterly, ineluctably vile set-up of Armus is the notion that our ”evil skins” really do exist as something separate that can be shed, and that they have no essential part in our humanity. Armus is portrayed as sapient and sentient, but, despite his pain and suffering (and notwithstanding his evil actions), he is not afforded the rights living beings are normally extended in TNG; ergo, he is not really, essentially, a life-form. Silicon crystals were given more regards just a few episodes ago. As it stands, if you take the reading given above, the script basically says: “You’re depressed? No worries, that’s an inconvenient outgrowth, not really part of you or your humanity! Just chop it off and leave it behind and never go back there again! Easy! What more could you want?” But can the dark regions of the soul really be so easily cordoned off? What if the script were to go full-on in abandoning this tidy separation of the light and the dark sides of our being, as it almost seems to do at a few points? What if, out of sheer compassion and a sense of the dignity of life, the Enterprise crew had treated Armus fully as a sapient, sentient being, one worthy of the inherent dignity and respect that status would afford him? What if, despite Armus’s inhumanity, they had insisted on treating him with humanity? Certainly, they could not have abandoned him again, for it would have been an act of unspeakable cruelty. What if Picard had said, ”You are not evil, but choosing to submit to you is. But you do not have to submit to yourself.” – thus echoing the inner struggles we all face? What if, in the face of Armus’s murderous, meaningless pseudo-sadism, they had offered him forgiveness – not unconditional, not without condemnation of his previous actions, but with faith in his capacity for redemption? And what if Armus had, after his initial resistance, he had, after all, responded to that? Would this not have been a better blend of realistic darkness and the optimism and values of Trek? (There would have been an interesting follow-up episode there, too, seeing what happened to Armus’s progenitors after they shed their evil side. It could also have played homage to TOS’s “The Enemy Within.”) Anyway, I’ll stop there for now.

@ Custodian, Nice write-up! I would especially like to comment on this thing you said: "But can the dark regions of the soul really be so easily cordoned off? What if the script were to go full-on in abandoning this tidy separation of the light and the dark sides of our being, as it almost seems to do at a few points?" You got me thinking, and I am wondering whether the race that shucked off its evil side might not be an allegory for the Federation itself and what it claims of itself. Compared with TOS, and I have mentioned here and there, I feel like TNG seems to be saying that humanity's dark side has been overcome. In TOS the dark side was present, but their awareness of it allowed them to overcome it when necessary. The Enemy Within was a good example of saying you can't excise the bad parts - you even need them - but you can learn to make them work harmoniously rather than in conflict with your better goals. They need an outlet, but it can be a positive outlet. Here in Skin of Evil we have a race that tried to banish their worse parts completely; but they didn't eliminate them, since they cannot be eliminated. What they did was relocate them, to a remote place where no one can see them. That strikes me very much as being a criticism of the race that tried that. Not only is the Enterprise paying the price for their little experiment, but the part of themselves they excised is itself suffering eternally as a result. It would be as if they took Evil Kirk in Enemy Within and locked him in Tartarus as some kind of eternal damnation, rather than re-integrate him with Good Kirk. Making Evil Kirk suffer would be just as contemptible as making anyone suffer, no matter what his qualities are. Now Armus may be suffering as a result of *what* he is, rather than what anyone is doing to him, but I suspect the point here is more than the separation itself is the cause of Armus' torment. Being rejected by the beings of whom he was a part, his only recourse is to wallow in pain. The fault is then theirs, not his; he cannot do anything but suffer. Going along with the depression angle, which I find interesting, the idea here might be that once you've labelled the worse parts of you (for argument's sake let's call depression and other negative feelings "worse") as bad and worthless, it's hard to experience them and feel anything other than worthless. Or pretend they're not there, or bury them, and they will reappear in other ways and at unexpected times, and be even worse. Instead of being an occasional bad impulse, they will take on a life of their own and become a skin of evil. The problem becomes exponentially worse when you think you can shuck it off. So could it be that Skin of Evil is a repudiation of TNG's claim that humanity has finally overcome jealousy, hatred, and the rest? Could it be that Armus would be a good case in point for Q the Judge to point to in showing that humanity cannot ever stop being imperfect in this way? I think the improvement that is possible which we could look forward to - call it Enemy Within part 2 - is that the re-integration of the bad parts is done so well that we are not afraid to confront the dark parts of ourselves and in a way love them anyhow; to make them want to be better, rather than to be ashamed and afraid of them, and even worse, to hide them. So maybe the answer to Judge Q isn't that we have done away with our capacity for atrocity, but rather than we are now much much aware of our capacity for atrocity. Not that we have left it behind, but that we have finally embraced it as really being there. Owning that reality is probably the way to progress.

@Peter G. Thank you! I’m glad you found my piece worthwhile. It seems we’re coming from a very similar place. I’m currently rewatching all of TNG – I watched it through a little over a decade ago as a teenager, and I’m returning to it now to see how the reality holds up to my nostalgic memories. Whilst it’s holding up pretty well on the whole, even in the S1 doldrums, one of the things I’ve found jarring so far is the frequent insistence that humanity has, in the 24th C., utterly transcended its previous barbaric ways and base impulses to reach a more enlightened state. I’ll call this TNG's “humans transcending humanity” (HTH) thesis. One offender that comes to mind is in the “Lonely Amongst Us”, where Picard comments that the Antican and Selayan (sic?) races still argue over things like “god-concepts” and ”even economic systems” and that humanity has basically gotten over itself in those regards. This is absurdly naïve, and insulting to the very real human tendencies and fundamental truths which undergird those disagreements in real life. (Not to mention that practically infinite energy and the ability to supply materials needs at whim makes economics *a lot* easier.) When I was younger, I found the notion of the exorcism of all things unpleasant enchanting and hopeful, but now it now strikes me as deeply condescending and hypocritical. Much store is placed by series in the need to be humble in the face of the universe and the unknown, but apparently, that humility does not require the acknowledgement of human imperfection and foibles – or our eternal susceptibility to them. No, 24C humanity has overcome all of the challenges within, and once faced, they do *not* need be overcome again, and again, and again! And more: there can be no good thing in anger, envy, jealousy, hatred, and the rest, so humanity has outgrown all those feelings! The veneer of optimism belies a real pessimism: humanity, to become better, must cauterise part of its soul. But the frightening fact of being human is that the very impulses which make us human drive both the best and the worst in us. You don’t get to shuck out the bad part and keep the good, to use your palpable turn of phrase. It’s not that I don’t appreciate virtue of hope and the prospect of human betterment; indeed, I share those ideals, and much of the time, I think Trek, TNG included, strikes the right note in conveying them. But the incarnation of those ideals as portrayed in parts of TNG S1 strikes me as utterly false to life, a magicking-away of the problem by time, not a solution arrived at through hard-won wisdom. Humanity has evolved, the series says optimistically, but neglects that optimism devolves into the most unbelievable escapism when it repudiates reality. I have a sense they tone down on this in later seasons, but I guess I’ll have to wait and see. So, I totally agree with your analysis of humanity and how Q the Judge should have been confronted, and I like your interpretation of the episode as a repudiation of TNG’s HTH thesis, though I’m not sure it holds up in practice. I think, if it were a more nuanced episode, it could have cast it into doubt. Certainly, per the observations in your comments, the potential is there in the story per se. As it actually stands, though, I think it serves to reinforce HTH. More could have been made of Armus’s indestructibility, and more could have been done to help him. In the end, the Enterprise crew merely circumvent him and reject him again. They force him to face his pain, but they do so only to save themselves and Troi and the disregarded lieutenant, not out of any great regard for his suffering. Suffering which, ultimately, they leave him to for ever. Humanity, after all, has overcome those things, and can afford to leave them behind. ~ As for the depression angle, perhaps I’m reading too much into it, and I don’t know whether the episode’s writer would have called the “darkness” by that name as such, but it spoke to me very clearly from experience. ~ There’s much more that could be said about all of this, but I’ll stop wearing your patience – I’m sorry that I had no time to make my response shorter. If you have more to say, I’d be very happy to continue the conversation, but advance warning, I may take a while to response – I’m finishing off my PhD dissertation at the moment and it won’t write itself!

What is up with the chief engineer in this episode who keeps identifying himself on the com as "Leland T. Lynch"?

core breach

1. starting an anitmatter reactor without going through the AT LEAST a friggin checklist... give me a break, totally irresponsible, could have easily blown up the ship... 2. nobody cares about the other pilot that was in far worse condition than troi 5. ok, denise didnt wanna stay on the show... why kill her? 4. torpedo at the end WAS NOT aimed at armus... are you kidding me? id like to hope worf secretly aimed it "correctly"... ughh total: negative 3 stars.... ...ok , even with all that its still far better than code of honor, which gets negative infinity stars from me

Skin of Evil TNG season 1 episode 23 "So much frustration. It had to get rid of me.” - Riker 3 stars (out of 4) This is the first permanent death in Star Trek. For a show that at this point was more than 20 years old, that is hard to fathom. But no main character had ever died before Tasha. And till we came to Jadzia, no main character died after her either. That alone makes this episode unique. Add to that a few key pieces, like the evil Armus, and Worf’s promotion ("I will remain on the ship. The object here is not to engage the creature in battle. The goal is the safe return of Counsellor Troi and Lieutenant Prieto. I can best accomplish this at the Tactical Station.”), and this is really a good episode. At no point in watching it was I ever bored. Tasha had a tough run of things, which is fairly unique for a character on Star Trek. Even Spock, who we might think had a tough time because he was a half-breed, was still the son of one of the most powerful men on Vulcan and in the Federation. Riker may not like his dad, but his dad was a superstar. Wesley’s dad died, but it was in the line of duty, and his mother had a stellar career. Tasha’s life was uniquely difficult. Even Worf, an orphan sure, at least had a foster family who obviously loved him very much, and was there for him when he needed their emotional support. Tasha had no one. I can’t imagine what it must have been like growing up as orphans on a planet with rape gangs when she - and her sister - were both very attractive women (h/t @William B). Obviously it hardened them. It made them fighters. But at a terrible emotional cost. She was never able to fully escape that life of violence. Tasha didn’t join Starfleet to become a scientist, or an engineer, or an explorer, or a doctor, or a legal JAG officer, or a logistics officer, or a communications specialist. She joined in security. She probably knew that her life expectancy was short. She was always off on dangerous missions. No wonder she was so horny. In a lot of ways, Tasha seems to me to be an early model for Kara Thrace, on nBSG or Shane Vansen on Space Above & Beyond. Maybe @DavidK is right, and TNG just wasn’t the right show for these types of women. Armus was a fantastic twist on alien-of-the-week. Starfleet is always trying to make common cause with aliens, no matter how bad they might seem. I remember Eddington’s speech to Sisko, Eddington: Hell, you even want the Cardassians to join. You're only sending them replicators because one day, they can take their rightful place on the Federation Council. What will they do when they meet actual evil? The closest the original series came to meeting actually evil aliens were The Gamesters of Triskelion. There an alien race had gradually shed their bodies and were left only with pure intellect - just brains in a jar. To entertain themselves, they tortured innocent people, making them fight against each other to the death. Here too Armus is the product of shedding. @Custodian hints at what might have been shed (both his posts are really worth scrolling up and reading!). And @Peter G. darkly hints at what the Federation might be shedding to create it’s perfect paradise (Star Trek:Picard, anyone?). As we learn, ARMUS: I am a skin of evil left here by a race of Titans who believed if they rid themselves of me, they would free the bonds of destructiveness. and ARMUS: They perfected a means of bringing to the surface all that was evil and negative within. Erupting, spreading, connecting. In time it formed second skin, dank and vile. In a way, both The Gamesters of Triskelion and Skin of Evil rest on the same theory, that beings are not born evil, they don’t evolve into evil. Rather, evil is what is left when you strip away all that is good. Evil is within, and it is balanced by everything else that is within. Evil causes great harm when it is isolated from the rest of a person. Armus, alone on that planet, is the literal isolation of that evil. Tasha signed up for Starfleet to fight evil, to protect the great civilization that had saved her from all that was evil out in the real world beyond the paradise that is the Federation. As she said back in Encounter at Farpoint, TASHA: I grew up on a world that allowed things like this court. And it was people like these that saved me from it. This so-called court should get down on its knees to what Starfleet is, what it represents. Tasha died at 30, without a husband, a child, loved ones, or even close friends beyond her professional colleagues. Beyond those professional colleagues, not one of the 1,000 people who lived on the Enterprise came for her memorial service. She was in a dangerous line of work, and no doubt that was one reason she had planned her own funeral at such a young age. But perhaps another reason is that she didn’t think there was anyone else around who would have planned her funeral if she fell in the line of duty. If she treated every person she had been close to as coldly as she did Data, is it any wonder? As @Tara points out, there is just the slightest hint in that cute scene between Tasha and Worf that she might actually have just about started to learn how to make friends. That only adds to the tragedy of her death. Compare that to how Ro and Riker behaved with each other after their liaison in Conundrum. @Martin, yeah, Ben is the luckiest black dude in Trek since "By Any Other Name.” When Spock was thought dead for good, the crew and visitors on the ship were there at overflowing capacity for his send off, https://youtu.be/9_8nY_LQL3w?t=72 On DS9, even a woman who no one had ever met in person had an overflowing room of people there for her wake, https://youtu.be/yryqc8RETgE?t=31 And on TNG, Geordi and Ro got a cool funeral, though they weren’t even actually dead, https://youtu.be/3oO3tUVLpIM There’s Riker, playing the bone for Ro. But nothing for Lieutenant Natasha Yar. Her funeral was a work event, attended only by the bridge staff - not even personnel from her own security team were on hand. If Armus ever dies, perhaps he will be one of the few entities in the galaxy even more alone at the end than Tasha. Au revoir. As @Sarjenka's Little Brother seems to be saying, this episode was definitely “something to write home about.”

It's not as bad as I remembered and the tribute to Tasha was great I just wish it happened in season 3. Not because I particularly cared for the character or loved the actress just that with an ensemble cast this large we only got a few Tasha-heavy episodes. Her biggest moments in the show was being kidnapped by a, shall we say, problematic society in terms of how it feels like a representation of actual human civilizations. That and the uncomfortable invocation of 'rape gangs' a couple of times including in an episode with a heavy sexual component. The goodbye ceremony was fantastic but it failed to deliver any type of emotional hit because we just hadn't had enough time to really get close to the character. Had the actress decided to move on from the show a couple of years later, however, it would have been a landmark moment in TV because I can't recall any show with major deaths like hers would have been up to that point.

Lots of good stuff, albeit with lots of weaknesses: * Data arguing with Armus * Data telling Armus he should be destroyed is rather eye popping * The attempts to resuscitate Tasha feels way more real than usual in Trek * The officers becoming momentarily unhinged in the conference after Tasha’s death

Beard of Sisko

When this episode went through the Blu Ray remaster, they should have at least tried to redo Armus as originally conceived since they now have the technology to do so. No, this isn't me trashing on an older effect because it's outdated, I'm trashing the effect because it was unconvincing even in 1988. I agree with Jammer that they did the right thing by avoiding the cliché of redeeming Armus. When it comes down to it, he is literally incapable of benevolence because he's made of nothing but evil impulses. The episode isn't great but it's better than most of Season 1, which isn't a very high bar.

Frake's Nightmare

Wesley's jumper - it's the ersatz stripey staff top.

“Jean-Luke ..... sssssssssss .... sssssssssss ...... I am ...... ssssssssss ...... your father...... sssssss” Awful. Ridiculous. Absurd. As bad as I remember, including the sentimental farewell of Tasha. Darth Vader as a sentient oil slick. Oh please. Does any Trek episode get as bad as this? No more to say. 0 stars. Bring on Paris, PLEASE.

Oh yes! Tasha waving goodbye in Symbiosis... Thanks for pointing that out, it was worth catching it. (Smile)

So this episode is a lesson in the subjectivity of ratings and the importance of each person's unique relationship with art, be it TV, film, or music. My father was a product of the Depression, came from a working class family, and was nearly 50 when I was born. He believed in hard work and self-discipline and despised the very idea of television. We never had one except for a very brief experiment, and that TV quickly ended up in the garage (I dreaded when teachers would assign "fun" homework like a report on a TV show). My dad died after a long and dehumanizing fight with cancer when I was 12, in 1987. My mom then got us a TV, and a dog. There were 5 of us and one of her -- she needed the help. And let's not underestimate the therapeutic value of either... So because of the timing, Star Trek TNG was certainly one of the first shows that I started watching religiously. I hadn't yet been jaded by years of TV, and the TNG crew was, to me, like an extended family that I could join week after week. They still are to some extent, and every five years or so I find myself craving a revisit to the past. When Skin of Evil first aired, it was so shocking that Tasha Yar not only died, but STAYED DEAD, that to this day it's perhaps the only early episode from the first season that i distinctly recall watching. In those days, too, major characters NEVER got killed off. I don't think there's any way to convey that impression on someone watching 30+ years later (certainly not post-GOT), and definitely not if you already knew Yar would die. As a boy, I felt that the Armus character was full of menace, terrifying, and believable, I remember being moved deeply by Yar's farewell holographic speeches. I would have thought that Skin of Evil would be considered one of the "great" TNG episodes, and yet everyone pans it. I've avoided rewatching it for that reason, but finally gave in. It's like there were two people watching -- the innocent little boy still coming to grips with the death of his father, and the man who is now nearly as old as his father was when he was born. Suffice it to say, although I now see all the flaws in the Skin of Evil, and there are many, it doesn't matter what I think of the episode now. It was a 4 star episode for me when it aired, and in the story of MY life, the objective quality of the episode viewed in 2021 is completely irrelevant.

Just out curiosity, Ben, is it your voice that is heard in the documentary Trekkies? Because someone in that film tells Denise Crosby a similar story about Skin of Evil.

@ Top Hat That's funny -- no, wasn't me, and I haven't seen the documentary. I think I will now, so thank you for bringing it up. And as I also see from Startrekwatcher's post a few years back (among others), I wasn't alone in being impacted by this episode. It's fascinating how being imprinted with something at a young age can retain its effect through life. BTW I still do identify with my childhood experience -- Tasha's death still surprised me (because I didn't remember it happened so early in the episode) and the funeral scene is still effective. I still think Armus is a very dark and complex character by Trek villain standards, and the Troi scenes with him are well done. Obviously, though, there are other aspects that could have been better-executed. But like I said, those quibbles are all in retrospect and don't dilute the power of the original experience.

The Chronek

Count me among those who were impacted by Skin of Evil when it first aired and among those who still consider it a good episode. I was in middle school at the time and my family was about to move several hundred miles away from where I lived at the time, so I suppose I was going through some stuff that made me latch onto Trek in general and this episode in particular. Seems like others felt similarly. This episode originally aired before the internet was THE INTERNET. This was before spoilers were easily available before the episode aired. Tasha's death was arguably the most shocking main character death for me. Spock's death in TWOK was the climax of the film. Jadzia's death in DS9 seemed inevitable thanks to the internet. And the less said about Trip's death in Enterprise, the better. Tasha died about 15 minutes into this episode. I'm ok with the senior staff being visibly upset at the first staff meeting after Tasha's death. Why wouldn't they be? She was a colleague, she was a friend, and in many of their missions, I'm sure they were accustomed to dealing with someone a bit more reasonable than Armus. I'm also ok with Data saying that Armus should be destroyed. I think it fits with his journey to become human, at least the darker aspects of it. I also think it fits with his being an android, sizing up what Armus is, what its role in the galaxy is, and deciding that the galaxy is better off without Armus in it. Just cold, computational calculation. Tin Man, indeed. Troi is given some good work here, looking for any weakness in Armus. It's arguably Sirtis's best work as Troi during the TNG. Picard, as usual, is wonderful. A couple of years ago, before Picard aired, I made a list of TNG episodes to watch with my wife, who had not watched much Trek, but who also wanted to watch Picard with me. I thought it was important to show who Picard was on TNG, what he stood for, and what his relationship was with his crew, most especially Data. I think Skin of Evil was a great showcase for Picard. It showed his courage, it showed his dedication to his crew, and the conversation between him and Data after Tasha's memorial showed a bit of their relationship. So, yes, Skin of Evil gets my recommendation.

I like how in the middle of an emergency the chief engineer has to keep identifying himself as "Leland T. Lynch" with every communication with Picard. I could swear Picard came close to rolling his eyes. How pretentious.

@Nic, tjabk youbfor sharing such a personal and powerful ztory.ay Ibask how you have coped since then? Iblost my Dad and grandparents @Niall, Why don't you like Course Oblivion, if I may ask? @Ben D. So are you saying you think Armus was a good and original villain and not a cartoon?

@Leif, Heh, oddly enough, I was thinking of Course: Oblivion while reading more comments. I was thinking this episode was ripe for a sequel. Many possibilities, such as Armus escaping, or the Enterprise encountering those who left him behind, or even if Armus somehow attached part of himself to Riker (who he enveloped) or Picard (so he transported). Then I was thinking that was never done because the episode wasn't highly regarded, but then I thought Voyager "Demon" got a sequel! It does feel a bit strange that they didn't try to help Armus in any way after they left the planet and presumably safe. It does seem like the TNG thing to do. I think that arose because while Armus actually did have potential for a character, in reality he was just part of a contrived means to an end. Good point above that it would be nice to improve Armus's humanoid appearance for the remasters. That dripping tar look is high school drama production quality-- in 1988 and earlier. The distorted eeeeevil voice is what really puts the "contrived" icing on the cake here. In case you missed his appearance, actions and dialog.

TheRealTrent

Beard of Sisko said: "When it comes down to it, he is literally incapable of benevolence because he's made of nothing but evil impulses." It's probably telling that this episode was written by Joe Stefano, who wrote Alfred Hitchcock's "Psycho". The black oil here is a bit like Norman Bates, his malevolence something that's imposed on him by his family, and something he can't quite control. I always thought this episode deserved to be revisited or remade. The idea of aliens "purging all their worst traits" and abandoning it on a planet as a sadistic pool of evil sludge is real cool. And the idea that this sludge delights in murdering and torturing those it captures, or holds hostage, has a exploitative, B-horror movie vibe that's rare in Trek. You can do something really dark, intense and interesting with this material. The key would be to strip it right down (this episode has too many cheesy distractions). Like DS9's "Heart of Stone", where Kira is slowly consumed by expanding crystals, all you need is a crewman being engulfed slowly by black oil, and your hero captain negotiating with it and desperately pleading with it for 40 minutes.

"It's probably telling that this episode was written by Joe Stefano, who wrote Alfred Hitchcock's "Psycho"." WHAT WHAT OH WOW YOU ARE RIGHT. That is...shocking that I never heard this mentioned before. They got the screenwriter of one of the most famous movies of all time for one episode and it was "Skin of Evil." Remarkable. I guess if they are going to kill a blonde character....

@TheRealTrent I didn't know the Psycho writer did this episode. Now that I think about it, I do see some similarities between Armus and Bates, although I doubt Bates was evil from the moment of his birth. Armus was condemned as soon as he came to be.

I wonder if the people who say the memorial service was mawkish have ever been to a real one. They ARE mawkish. People want to say something "meaningful," and most people don't have the literary skill to do more than repeat cliches. It's forgivable. Data's question at the end was one of the highlights to me. (The other highlight was Troi's counseling session with Armus, where she finally got some decent lines.) The problem is that when you can state a character's entire psychology in a single line ("they loaded all their evil into me and then left me!") it's hard to make a good show out of it. And the special effects for the character were terrible - he literally looked like a man in a tar suit. When he was raging at Picard, he should have been whipping around into a tornado or something, but the actor just stood there. And what they made Frakes do and say was just embarrassing.

Bleh I am becoming the fanboy of this one. At least 90% of the problem is Armus's "bwahaha eeevil" voice. His body is a painfully obvious man in a dripping suit, but that effect wasn't THAT bad for S1 or even S2.

Gilligan’s Starship

@Silly - yes the the biggest problem in this ep is the execution of the VFX & the Armus creature itself ( the electronic music score is a bit dated as well). But it’s written rather well: as many have discussed, Troi is great in this one; Worf’s little speech in the conference room about why it’s better for him to remain onboard the Enterprise is refreshing because it puts a twist on the usual format of “let’s all beam down and take care of the situation together” scenario; and the look of shock and disbelief on Picard’s face when Crusher announces Tasha’s death shows how utterly helpless & ineffective they all feel. The fact that they didn’t make a grand show of Tasha’s death does make it more horrifying because you’re thinking, “she can’t REALLY be dead…right?” I thought the holographic speech Tasha gives at the end was well written, too. All in all, a tense little thriller. And Ron Gans’ voiceover is fine by me as I enjoyed him in his multiple appearances on Lost In Space—it was over the top, yes, but I enjoyed it.

SpaceTime Hole

What happened to the “race of Titans”? Armus is an unforgettable baddie. The visual/musical sequences where Riker is gobbled up & puked out are fantastic.

This was a fantastic episode. Even the now cheesy special effects don't detract from how good it is. The biggest problem is the nature of the villian doesn't match up to his actions. Pure and irredeemable evil would not play 'hide the visor' and give up on threatening to execute someone after 1 minute. Realistically, Armus should have sadistically tortured and / or murdered multiple people, not because of the pleasure it would give him, but because it would rob those people of what is most precious to them. Oddly enough, Armus committed far fewer crimes than the Crystalline entity, and was given less chance at redemption.

Gosh this ep is just awful. Back then, Crosby wanted out of her contract, so it appears they tacked the pointless death and hopelessly cheesy funeral onto this stupid B movie plot about an evil alien that looks like an oil slick and roars a lot. Troi trapped in a shuttle whining a lot under red emergency lights. Why why why???

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5 Controversial Star Trek: The Next Generation Scenes Nobody Likes To Talk About

Work pilots shuttlecraft

For all its philosophical contemplation of the human condition and nuanced exploration of sociopolitical issues, the "Star Trek" universe is not without its more bizarre moments. From problematic tropes and cheesy practical effects to poorly executed social allegories, sometimes the optimistic humanist message gets a little bogged down in questionable writing and production choices. And like every other series in the Trek canon, "Star Trek: The Next Generation" has its share of controversial scenes. A few are so cringy or even downright uncomfortable that some fans don't even like to think about them, let alone talk about them.

Sure, "The Next Generation" is loaded with epic Jean-Luc Picard moments and triumphs of holodeck LARPing. But even in one of sci-fi's best franchises, things like weak character send-offs, misguided attempts at handling complex sociopolitical issues, and inconsistent character development can occasionally creep in. Hang on to your bat'leth as we take on five controversial scenes in "The Next Generation" that no one likes to talk about.

Pulaski's final scene in Shades of Gray

The only clip show episode in "Star Trek: The Next Generation" — the finale of Season 2, "Shades of Gray" — is widely considered one of the series' worst episodes. It begins with Commander William Riker (Jonathan Frakes) and Geordi LaForge (LeVar Burton) conducting a geological survey that goes south when Riker is stung by a sentient swamp vine with nightmarish retractable blue claws. Almost immediately, Riker begins to suffer from numbness and paralysis that Dr. Pulaski (Diana Muldaur) attributes to a neurotoxic virus. To save him, Pulaski has to use giant brain needles that stimulate his darkest memories, giving viewers a Wonkaesque trip through the show's most dramatic Riker-centric nightmare fuel.

After working tirelessly to bring Riker back from the brink, a relieved Pulaski gives Riker a quick update on his condition. When the camera pans away, we never see her again — and fans of the good doctor hated it. Although Muldaur later told People  that she did not enjoy her time on the series, it would still have been nice to see her character get a proper send-off rather than a weak clip show denouement.

Yar's pointless death in Skin of Evil

In terms of terrible send-offs, it doesn't get any worse than Tasha Yar's death scene in "Skin of Evil." Like Diana Muldaur, Yar actor Denise Crosby didn't have the best experience working on the series. Crosby explained to StarTrek.com , "I was just stage dressing. I chose to leave instead of just being satisfied with that." Roddenberry agreed Yar's death would add depth to the series. For a complex warrior like Yar, that should have meant some an epic emotional send-off. But instead, she was unceremoniously bodied by a sentient black puddle out of seemingly nowhere.

After a shuttle transporting Troi crash-lands on the planet Vagra II, the investigating away team encounters the literal embodiment of evil in an ambulatory slime calling itself Armus. When Yar demands Armus let her people pass to their shuttlecraft, he smacks her with an energy shock, killing her instantly. Despite a heroic effort on Crusher's part, the medical team is unable to revive her. Worse, Armus shortly reveals he did it for kicks.

Armus's sadistic attack was one of the most hated moments in "The Next Generation" — so hated that even Yar acknowledges it in the alternate timeline of "Yesterday's Enterprise." After a spacetime rift causes Guinan to encounter a reality-shifted Yar who never died, alternate Yar laments that she "died a senseless death in the other timeline."

The bros discuss Troi's reproductive rights in The Child

Science fiction loves a good mystical pregnancy and unfortunately "Star Trek" is no exception. The Season 2 opener begins with the ship's counselor becoming impregnated by a tiny purple energy orb the ship encounters while floating through space. And things only go downhill from there.

Empath that she is, Troi immediately realizes something is up and contacts Dr. Pulaski, who in turn tells Picard that Troi is pregnant. Cut to the briefing room for what may very possibly be one of sci-fi's best metaphoric representations of the controversy over women's reproductive rights — even if it is one of the most problematic scenes in "Star Trek." As a distressed and sullen-looking Troi sits alone at one end of the conference table, Picard announces — without context — that she is pregnant to the top-ranking members of his bridge crew.

Pulaski launches into an explanation about the embryo's alarmingly rapid fetal development. But the crew's reactions are equally alarming. Despite having learned Troi is expected to give birth in 36 hours, Riker demands, "Who's the father?" After Picard announces, "Our purpose here is to determine what is to be done about this," Worf, Data, and Riker — three male officers — argue over whether they should abort the fetus, study it, or abort it and then study it. Although no one seems particularly interested in Troi's feelings , she assertively interrupts them, declaring her intent to carry the baby to term.

Soren's post-conversion change-of-heart in The Outcast

"The Outcast" is another example of a problematic "Next Generation" effort at tackling social commentary, giving "Star Trek" fans one of the most depressing scenes in the franchise. The episode revolves around the Enterprise's interactions with the androgynous J'naii while assisting them with a rescue mission in a pocket of null space. Riker teams up with J'naii named Soren who secretly identifies as female — something that's forbidden in her society. And because Riker can't help but Riker, he immediately finds himself in a situationship with her.

While discussing their mutual feelings, Soren warns him, "On our world, these feelings are forbidden. Those who are discovered are shamed and ridiculed." Worse still, J'naii who are caught breaking gender norms are forced to endure conversion therapy. "Only by undergoing psychotectic therapy and having all elements of gender eliminated can they be accepted into society again," Soren reveals. After a moving speech where Soren declares she doesn't need to be cured but instead needs understanding, Soren is carted off to conversion camp. By the time Riker and Worf stage a rescue mission, she's already been reprogrammed, telling him, "I was sick. I had these terrible urges, and that's why I reached out to you." While the conclusion was sadly pretty true to what many experienced during this era, this disappointing outcome is one of many reasons the episode wasn't universally loved in the LGBTQ community.

Desperate Riker gets murderous in Parallels

One of the most controversial "Next Generation" scenes comes in "Parallels." Upon returning victorious from a bat'leth tournament, Worf is thrust back and forth between alternate realities aboard the Enterprise. It's a pretty cool concept, with the audience experiencing the trippy reality shifts from Worf's perspective. In one reality, Worf is a commanding officer, and in another, he is married to Deanna Troi. He and the crew must work to solve the mystery of what's happening to him while gaining different pieces of the puzzle found in each distinct reality. They ultimately discover a quantum gateway to infinite realities determined by individual choices.

When the fissure destabilizes, realities begin to merge, causing dozens of Enterprises to appear on the viewscreen. As they realize Worf needs to travel back through the fissure in his shuttlecraft, the Enterprise crew faces an unusual enemy: themselves. While every other Enterprise agrees to the plan to seal the fissure, one begins to attack Worf's shuttlecraft. A disheveled Riker appears on the screen declaring that they refuse to return to their world, where the Borg have taken over. When the two ships exchange fire, Riker's is destroyed. For many Trekkies, this brief encounter was one of the few moments in the franchise so disturbing it rivaled  the controversial decision to terminate Tuvix in "Voyager."

star trek skin of evil

Star Trek's 10 Best Monster Episodes

  • Star Trek embraces peace but also explores monster movie elements for some thrilling episodes.
  • Shows like Voyager & Next Generation weave classic monster movie themes with sci-fi twists.
  • Even as monsters take center stage, empathy remains a core theme in the Star Trek universe.

Star Trek has a message of peace and tolerance and seeing beyond the surface, but it's not above doing an all-out monster movie from time to time. From its inception in 1966, Star Trek has taught audiences not to judge alien species by appearances . For example, Star Trek: Voyager villains Species 8472 were terrifying, Alien -inspired creatures, who turned out to be benevolent aliens that had been driven to violence by the actions of the Borg Collective. Earlier episodes like Star Trek: The Original Series ' "Devil in the Dark" revealed hidden emotional depths to a creature that was ostensibly a disgusting rock monster.

Despite Star Trek 's message of empathy, sometimes the writers can't resist creating scary monsters and super creeps. Star Trek has always drawn on the history of science fiction, and the big monster movies popularized by studios like RKO are no exception . Over nearly six decades, Star Trek TV shows have drawn on classic monster movies like The Thing From Another World and King Kong , giving them a Gene Roddenberry-style twist.

10 Times Star Trek Went Full-On Horror And Gave Us Nightmares

Star trek: voyager, season 2, episode 15, "threshold", story by michael de luca, teleplay by brannon braga.

Star Trek: Voyager 's notorious salamander episode , "Threshold" begins as an exploration of theoretical transwarp barriers and becomes something more akin to The Phantom of the Opera or King Kong . When Lt. Tom Paris (Robert Duncan McNeill) breaks the transwarp barrier, he begins experiencing some bizarre side effects. Breaking the transwarp barrier has triggered a strange evolution in Paris' body, which turns him into a salamander, who decides they need a mate in the form of Captain Kathryn Janeway (Kate Mulgrew).

...the monster movie elements ensure that "Threshold" is never boring.

There are some obvious monster movie parallels in "Threshold", from the way that the reptilian Paris carries an unconscious Janeway like the Phantom of the Opera to the body horror of the Voyager helmsman's transformation. The climax of the notorious Star Trek: Voyager episode, in which the "monster" that is now Paris fights off the crew to take Janeway as his mate, is pure King Kong . It's a Voyager episode that is rightly panned for its lack of narrative cohesion, but the monster movie elements ensure that "Threshold" is never boring.

Star Trek: The Next Generation, Season 7, Episode 19, "Genesis"

Written by brannon braga.

Star Trek: The Next Generation season 7, episode 19, "Genesis" is essentially The Island of Dr. Moreau set aboard the USS Enterprise-D. Captain Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) and Lt. Commander Data (Brent Spiner) return to the Enterprise to discover that the crew has devolved into various terrifying monsters. For example, Lt. Reginald Barclay (Dwight Schultz) is de-evolved into a spider-like creature, while Lt. Worf (Michael Dorn) devolves into a savage proto-Klingon that tries to kill Picard. The cause of these transformations is a mistake made by Dr. Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden) while reactivating a cell that would have given Barclay immunity to the flu.

Gates McFadden injects what could have been a very silly story with genuine tension.

Although the science is just as dubious as Star Trek: Voyager 's "Threshold", Star Trek: The Next Generation season 7, episode 19, "Genesis" has the benefit of being much more atmospheric. Interestingly, "Genesis" was directed by Dr. Beverly Crusher actor Gates McFadden , who injects what could have been a very silly story with genuine tension. The climax, where Picard tries to fend off an attack from a prehistoric Worf, while Data tries to concoct a cure using the DNA of Nurse Ogawa's unborn baby, is well directed by McFadden, giving this daft TNG outing an exciting monster movie vibe.

"Genesis" was the only episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation to be directed by Gates McFadden.

Star Trek: Every Actor Who Also Directed Episodes Or Movies

Star trek: the original series, season 1, episode 26, "the devil in the dark", written by gene l. coon.

"The Devil in the Dark" is a classic Star Trek monster episode , because it hinges on Captain James T. Kirk (William Shatner), Lt. Commander Spock (Leonard Nimoy), and Dr. "Bones" McCoy (DeForest Kelley) learning to understand a creature beyond their understanding. Investigating a supposed monster that is attacking a mining operation on Janus IV, they soon discover that the titular " devil in the dark " is no monster, but a mother protecting their young. It's thanks to Kirk and Spock's open-mindedness that the miners manage to avert the destruction of the entire Horta race .

The scene in which Kirk has to reason with the baying mob invokes images of the villagers with torches and pitchforks in the climax of Universal's classic monster movie, Frankenstein .

From a visual effects perspective, the actual Horta in Star Trek: The Original Series may look hokey by today's standards , but it tells a story about the need for empathy. TOS' cave monster isn't able to communicate with the miners, and so has to resort to violence. Similarly, the miners want violent recriminations from the "monster" that killed their colleagues. The scene in which Kirk has to reason with the baying mob invokes images of the villagers with torches and pitchforks in the climax of Universal's classic monster movie, Frankenstein . Thanks to Kirk, however, the Horta has a happier ending than Frankenstein's monster.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Season 2, Episode 12, "The Alternate"

Teleplay by bill dial, story by jim trombetti and bill dial.

In one of Constable Odo's best Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episodes , a mysterious monster stalks the corridors of DS9 late at night. It's believed to be the mysterious sample that Odo (Rene Auberjonois) and scientist Dr. Mora Pol (James Sloyan) brought back from the Gamma Quadrant. However, in reality, it's Odo, who is under the influence of mysterious alien toxins, and the stress of seeing his "father" again. "The Alternate" is a fun Star Trek spin on Robert Louis Stevenson's The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde , that has some genuinely unnerving moments of horror.

Odo's monstrous alter-ego is less Mr. Hyde, and more like the titular Blob from the classic 1958 sci-fi monster movie.

Odo's transition into the monster toward the end of the episode is horrifying to watch as he rants and raves while struggling to remain in a solid state. Odo's monstrous alter-ego is less Mr. Hyde, and more like the titular Blob from the classic 1958 sci-fi monster movie. Interestingly, Dr. Julian Bashir (Alexander Siddig) doesn't categorically confirm it's the alien toxins that caused the transformation, suggesting another cause. As the gelatinous monster bears down on Dr. Mora Pol, it becomes clear that the real cause of the transformation is Odo's father issues.

All 4 Star Trek Characters Played By James Sloyan

Star trek: voyager, season 3, episode 12, "macrocosm".

Star Trek: Voyager has many creepy episodes , but "Macrocosm" is the most overt monster episode. Like Star Trek: The Next Generation 's "Genesis", also written by Brannon Braga, "Macrocosm" has a silly concept that is realized like a survival horror movie. The monsters faced by Captain Janeway and the Doctor (Robert Picardo) are effectively giant viruses that become airborne, infecting those they come into contact with. To repel the viral infection of the USS Voyager, the Doctor created an antigen which Janeway eventually detonated inside the holodeck, killing the assembled macroviruses.

"Macrocosm" finally gave Captain Janeway her Ellen Ripley moment.

"Macrocosm" got a wryly funny sequel in Star Trek: Lower Decks ' season 4 premiere, "Twovixed", but the episode itself is a decent homage to the Alien franchise. As the Star Trek franchise's first female captain, it's great to see Janeway getting to be an action hero like Captain Kirk in Star Trek: The Original Series , or Picard in Star Trek: First Contact . While the monsters themselves weren't anywhere near as terrifying as Alien 's Xenomorph, "Macrosm" finally gave Captain Janeway her Ellen Ripley moment.

Star Trek: Discovery, Season 1, Episode 3, "Context is for Kings"

Teleplay by gretchen j. berg, aaron harberts, and craig sweeny.

The disgraced Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) is given a second chance after her mutiny aboard the USS Shenzhou in a Star Trek: Discovery monster episode. "Context is for Kings" explores what happened to the USS Glenn, the second of Discovery 's crossfield-class starships . Following a catastrophic accident while experimenting with spore drive technology, the ship's entire crew were killed, save for the tartigrade creature they had captured and wired to the spore drive. Freed from its shackles by the accident, the creature rampaged through the Glenn, killing a Klingon boarding party and turning its attention to Burnham and her away team .

The true monster in Star Trek: Discovery season 1, episode 3, "Context is for Kings" is Starfleet themselves.

The true monster in Star Trek: Discovery season 1, episode 3, "Context is for Kings" is Starfleet themselves. The cruelty that the crew of the USS Glenn had shown to the tartigrade was unbecoming of Starfleet, and showed how far they were willing to diverge from their principles to defeat the Klingon Empire . Captain Gabriel Lorca (Jason Isaacs) hammers this point home by having the tartigrade brought aboard the USS Discovery, taunting it as it tries to break free from the forcefield.

Jason Isaacs 10 Best Acting Roles (Including Star Trek: Discoverys Lorca)

Star trek: lower decks, season 4, episode 2, "i have no bones yet i must flee", written by aaron burdette.

Star Trek: Lower Decks introduced Moopsy into the canon in the season 4 episode, "I Have No Bones Yet I Must Flee". Visiting an alien menagerie, newly promoted Lt. junior grade Beckett Mariner (Tawny Newsome) and Commander Jack Ransom (Jerry O'Connell) had to conted with Moopsy, a soft fluffy creature that also happened to drink bones . Mariner and Ransom came up with a suitably irreverent Lower Decks solution to their problem, by punching out Ransom's teeth and using them as treats to lure the Moopsy back into its cage.

Moopsy is basically a monstrous Tribble, unable to control its base urges.

Moopsy was the sort of creation that could only feature in the irreverent world of Star Trek: Lower Decks , and yet it plays on existing creatures in the canon. Moopsy is basically a monstrous Tribble, unable to control its base urges. However, Mariner and Ransom don't kill the creature to save themselves, they find a humane - if slightly painful - solution to their situation. Not only that, but Mariner also unmasks the truly dangerous monsters - greedy humans seeking to bulk up their business portfolios , in this case by staging a hostile takeover of an alien menagerie.

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, Season 1, Episode 9, "All Those Who Wander"

Written by davy perez.

"All Those Who Wander" combines the classic Star Trek: The Original Series episode "Arena" with Alien to provide a terrifying episode of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds . The vicious Gorn babies that are encountered by the Enterprise away team are relentless, rampaging through the ship and killing everything in their path. It's through the noble sacrifice of Lt. Hemmer (Bruce Horak) that the away team is able to get back to the safety of the USS Enterprise. However, the scars of the terrifying encounter between the Enterprise and the Gorn carry over into Strange New Worlds season 2 .

The Gorn infants move like raptors, drawing comparisons with the climax of Steven Spielberg's Jurassic Park

Because there's genuine dramatic stakes and a cost to life, Star Trek: Strange New World 's Gorn survival horror movie is the best version of the subgenre after the classic movie, Star Trek: First Contact . As an hour of television, it wears its genre influences on its sleeve, particularly the similarities between the icy crash site with the colony in Aliens . However, it's not just the Alien franchise that Star Trek: Strange New Worlds riffs on in "All Those Who Wander". The Gorn infants move like raptors, drawing comparisons with the climax of Steven Spielberg's Jurassic Park .

Complete History Of The Gorn In Star Trek

Star trek: the next generation, season 1, episode 23, "skin of evil", teleplay by joseph stefano & hannah louise shearer.

Armus (Ron Gans) in Star Trek: The Next Generation , is a truly monstrous creation, and even refers to himself as " evil " . Unlike the Horta in Star Trek: The Original Series , Armus isn't attacking the Enterprise away team to protect its children, he's doing it because he's a monster. A black, oily mass of everything impure and evil rejected by a " race of Titans ", Armus was abandoned on the planet Vagra II . There, he fantasized about torturing any visitors to the planet, but he quickly got bored after killing Lt. Tasha Yar (Denise Crosby).

Tasha Yar was no red shirt, and her death at the hands of the monster of the week makes "Skin of Evil" an impactful entry in the TNG canon.

"Skin of Evil" is one of Star Trek 's best monster episodes because, like "All Those Who Wander", it takes a toll on the characters. Star Trek: The Next Generation loses Tasha Yar to this monster, which proved that it would be a very different show to Star Trek: The Original Series . A TOS version of "Skin of Evil" would have played out in a similar fashion, but with the deaths of some disposable red shirts thrown in . Tasha Yar was no red shirt, and her death at the hands of the monster of the week makes "Skin of Evil" an impactful entry in the TNG canon.

Star Trek: The Original Series, Season 1, Episode 5, "The Man Trap"

Written by george clayton johnson.

Star Trek 's best monster episode is also its very first, setting the tone for those that would follow . Star Trek: The Original Series , season 1, episode 5, "The Man Trap", features a Salt Vampire that feeds on salt, which can also shapeshift to take the form of anyone that can help it achieve its goals. In essence, "The Man Trap" is Star Trek 's take on the 1951 movie The Thing From Another World , later remade by John Carpenter as The Thing . Both the Star Trek episode and the Thing movies center on a shapeshifting creature that feeds on the human characters.

"The Man Trap" was chosen by the network as the first episode of Star Trek: The Original Series to air due, in part, to its strong monster-of-the-week.

Both iterations of The Thing and Star Trek: TOS season 1, episode 5, "The Man Trap" also play on paranoia and being unable to trust your own eyes . In "The Man Trap", the Salt Vampire has the ability to take the form of the woman most desirable to each of the male characters. For example, Dr. McCoy believes it to be his former lover, Nancy, driving a wedge between him, Kirk and Spock. "The Man Trap" was chosen as the first episode of Star Trek: TOS to air in 1966, and its influence can be felt in Star Trek 's monster episodes nearly 60 years later.

All these episodes of Star Trek are available to stream on Paramount+.

Star Trek's 10 Best Monster Episodes

This New 'Star Trek: Discovery' Character Is a Deep-Cut 'Deep Space Nine' Reference

Callum Keith Rennie's Captain Rayner is not Vulcan or Romulan after all.

The Big Picture

  • Callum Keith Rennie joins Star Trek: Discovery as Kellerun Captain Rayner, revealing the obscure species from Deep Space Nine .
  • Rayner's Kellerun backstory is crucial to Rayner's characterization and mission, with the showrunner promising a focus on his personal history.
  • Discovery continues the tradition of exploring one-off alien races with new characters, adding depth and diversity to the final season.

Veteran actor Callum Keith Rennie will join the cast of the final season of Star Trek: Discovery as the alien Captain Rayner, and now we know what species he is. Fans have speculated that Rayner's pointed ears mark him as a Vulcan or a Romulan, but a new interview reveals that he is a member of the Kellerun, an obscure species from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine . TrekCore.com has the details from SFX Magazine's feature on Discovery 's upcoming fifth season , which will premiere on Paramount+ early next month.

Rayner's species will apparently be important to his characterization and the mysterious mission he joins the USS Discovery crew for, as they race against time in the show's final bow. Says showrunner Michelle Paradise , "He’s Kellerun, which is a minor planet mentioned in one of the other iterations… we learn more about his personal backstory and how that plays into who he is, and why he is how he is. We learn about that as the season goes on, and the planet he’s from has a lot to do with that." It won't be the first time an important character on Discovery comes from a one-off alien race; Commander Nhan ( Rachael Ancheril ), who debuted in the series' second season, is a Barzan, a race that had up to that point only appeared in the third-season Next Generation episode "The Price".

Who Are the Kellerun?

The Kellerun made their first and (so far) only appearance in "Armageddon Game", which first aired in 1994 as part of Deep Space Nine 's second season. A species with distinctive large, pointed ears, they had been at war for centuries with their neighbors, the T'Lani, in a conflict that utilized the Harvesters, deadly biological weapons. After the two races made peace with each other, Starfleet sent in Deep Space Nine crew members Dr. Julian Bashir ( Alexander Siddig ) and Miles O'Brien ( Colm Meany ) to help dismantle the remaining Harvesters. However, the Kellerun and T'Lani insist that all knowledge pertaining to the Harvesters must be destroyed - which means killing Bashir and O'Brien, too. The two have to make a desperate race for survival as their friends try to save them from the two alien species.

Although the Kellerun did not appear on the series again, the episode established Bashir and O'Brien's friendship, which endured for the rest of the show's run. Canadian actor Callum Keith Rennie is a veteran of science fiction productions, having starred in Battlestar Galactica , Impulse , The X-Files , Jessica Jones , and The Umbrella Academy . Discovery will be his first Star Trek appearance.

Star Trek: Discovery 's fifth and final season will premiere April 4, 2024 on Paramount+ , wehere past seasons are also streaming. Stay tuned to Collider for future updates, and watch the trailer for Discovery 's fifth season below.

Star Trek: Discovery

Taking place almost a decade before Captain Kirk's Enterprise, the USS Discovery charts a course to uncover new worlds and life forms.

Watch on Paramount+

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Published Mar 26, 2024

Star Trek's Strongest Supporting Women Characters

Beyond the Captain Janeways, Dr. Crushers, and Major Kiras, there has always been strong women in Star Trek.

Illustrated collage featuring Star Trek's Number One, Kasidy Yates, Carol Marcus, Ro Laren, Lursa, Edith Keeler, Rachel Garrett, and Lily Sloane

StarTrek.com

While the Star Trek franchise reached its pinnacle with Kate Mulgrew's fantastic portrayal of Captain Janeway, it began earlier with the truly revolutionary casting of Nichelle Nichols as Lt. Uhura. While one can nitpick and say she was subservient to the boys (and there's definitely an argument to be made), the very fact that an African American woman was seen on the Bridge had a direct impact on the viewing public. (Just ask Whoopi Goldberg!)

As Women's History Month comes to a close, let's take a look back — beyond the Dr. Crushers and Major Kiras — to some of the less-obvious strong women characters in the history of Star Trek .

10. Captain Kasidy Yates

Close-up of Kasidy Yates as she smiles over at Ben Sisko in 'The Way of the Warrior'

"The Way of the Warrior"

It takes a special kind of woman to win the heart of a space station commander, military leader, and Emissary to the Prophets. Kasidy Yates is that women.

She's a hardworking cargo ship captain (engaging in some light and mostly benign smuggling on the side) who refuses special treatment when caught or when it’s time to pitch in against the Dominion. Plus, she likes baseball. Yeah, Kasidy is awesome — let Sisko do the cooking!

9. Yeoman Leslie Thompson

Yeoman Leslie Thompson beams down to a planet's surface with the away team in 'By Any Other Name'

"By Any Other Name"

Okay, an odd pick, sure, but hear me out 'cause this is important.

How much was The Original Series in the vanguard? They were willing to have women beam down to planets as part of armed away teams. And sometimes (okay, once) they were willing to kill them off. Pretty radical!

Yeoman Thompson was the redshirt who was turned into the giant chalk Dungeons & Dragons cube and then crushed to death by that jerk from the Andromeda Galaxy in " By Any Other Name ."

8. Romulan Commander

The Romulan commander sits comfortably in her seat in 'The Enterprise Incident'

"The Enterprise Incident"

Nobody said they all had to be good guys!

While ultimately unsuccessful, the unnamed Romulan Commander from The Original Series ' "The Enterprise Incident" was cunning enough that it took the wits of both Kirk and Spock to take her down.

She had ambition and drive, as well as the courage to sacrifice herself for the good of the Romulan Empire. And did she actually get under Spock's Vulcan skin a little bit? That's up to your interpretation.

7. Lily Sloane

Close-up of Lily Sloane on the surface of Earth in Bozeman as she looks up to the sky in Star Trek: First Contact

Star Trek: First Contact

Blow up the damn ship!

Lily Sloane, Star Trek: First Contact

It takes a lot of sand to say — to SHOUT — something like that to Jean-Luc Picard, as Lily Sloane does in Star Trek: First Contact . And to kinda be right? Even more so.

Most civilians from a pre-Warp era would just be freaking out that time traveling humans and aliens are bombarding Earth, but this sharp engineer keeps her head enough to offer military advice.

Close-up of Lursa as she holds a cup in 'Redemption'

"Redemption"

The true mastermind of the Klingon Civil War, the machinations of Lursa of the House of Duras left the galaxy quaking for whole seasons. Even with all this going on, she found time to be a mother. Awww, right?

Also, her death in Star Trek Generations was cooler than Kirk's. Sadly, it was WAY cooler.

(Feel free to argue with me that Kai Winn shoulda got the "political puppet master" slot. It was a close call.)

5. Captain Rachel Garrett

Captain Rachel Garrett looks up while on the bridge of the Enterprise-C in 'Yesterday's Enterprise'

"Yesterday's Enterprise"

From Star Trek: The Next Generation 's " Yesterday's Enterprise ," a serious contender for best single episode ever in any series, we meet the captain of the Enterprise -C, Rachel Garrett . And we don't even KNOW that it is due to her bravery and sacrifice that the current timeline is as breezy and upbeat as it is today. (Guinan kinda knows, but that's complicated.)

Tricia O'Neal's strong-yet-still-feminine portrayal of a starship captain no doubt paved the way toward Captain Janeway, another reason to offer her a hero's salute.

4. Dr. Carol Marcus

Carol Marcus pensively glances over in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan

Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan

The woman who held, at least for a time, the heart of James Tiberius Kirk. But Dr. Marcus is no mere Captain's squeeze. She is an independent woman and a brilliant scientist whose Genesis Device is so powerful it was the focus of two movies!!

She also represents one of the very few times you'll see someone have a bone of contention with Starfleet prior to the creation of the Maquis.

(Again, here's your opportunity to scream at me for leaving a different brilliant scientist, Dr. Leah Brahms , off the list. This is hard work, people! And thankless, too. I felt the heat the other day for not including the Salt Vampire from TOS or the corpses from TNG ’s “ Night Terrors ” in my column about Trek ’s freakiest moments.)

3. Number One

Number One sits at her station on the bridge of the Enterprise in 'The Cage'

"The Cage"

Captain Pike's steady-as-a-rock first officer, Number One, was a brilliant tactician who wasn't afraid to bring out the laser cannons, or to sacrifice herself with an overloaded phaser rather than suffer indignities at the hands of the Talosians.

If you think her story ended with "The Cage," oh, how wrong you are. Drop everything and read John Byrne's fantastic comic series Star Trek: Crew to see Number One's really whacked-out adventures both pre- and post- her time on the Enterprise . Then pick up some of Peter David's New Frontier novels and focus on the Morgana Prime character. (I was there at New York Comic-Con a few years ago when David basically admitted that Morgana - Robin Lefler's mother - was actually Number One!)

In addition, Number One's adventure continues aboard Pike's Enterprise on Star Trek: Strange New Worlds .

2. Ro Laren

Close-up of Ro Laren in Star Trek: The Next Generation - Preemptive Strike

"Preemptive Strike"

[ RELATED : Everything You Need to Know About Ro Laren ]

One of the richest figures in Star Trek , the Bajoran nationalist was the first character we ever met whose antipathy toward Starfleet ever seemed justified. Still, her loyalty to Captain Picard kept her in line... most of the time.

Ro Laren was such a badass that even the woman who played her, Michelle Forbes, had to swim upstream. She rejected the offer to be a lead on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine , causing the show's producers to create the (at first) somewhat similar character of Kira Nerys. Ultimately, it worked out for the best, but, oh, if only we could glimpse into that alternate timeline!

But to hold that desire ever, don't miss Ro Laren's confrontation with Picard 30+ years after the fact in Star Trek: Picard .

1. Edith Keeler

Close-up of Edith Keeler with a street light shining on her at night in 'The City on the Edge of Forever'

"The City on the Edge of Forever"

Imagine a woman whose soup is so powerful it could change the course of World War II.

In " The City on the Edge of Forever ," it is this loving, warm, and caring pacifist who must be silenced for evil not to conquer the world. (Blame Harlan Ellison; he's the sicko that thought of it!) Edith Keeler isn't just a character; she's a philosophical construct, a topic worthy of intellectual debate that the finest scholars could argue about for ages. And just thinking about her (and the phrase "He knows, Doctor. He knows.") is enough to send an army of Star Trek fans blubbering.

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This article was originally published on Januarr 15, 2012.

Jordan Hoffman is a writer, critic and lapsed filmmaker living in New York City. His work can also be seen on Film.com, ScreenCrush and Badass Digest. On his BLOG, Jordan has reviewed all 727. On his BLOG, Jordan has reviewed all 727 Trek episodes and films, most of the comics and some of the novels.

Graphic illustration of a Klingon and his bat'leth

IMAGES

  1. "Skin of Evil" (S1:E23) Star Trek: The Next Generation Screencaps

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  2. "Skin of Evil" (S1:E23) Star Trek: The Next Generation Screencaps

    star trek skin of evil

  3. Watch Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 1 Episode 23: Skin Of Evil

    star trek skin of evil

  4. "Skin of Evil" (S1:E23) Star Trek: The Next Generation Screencaps

    star trek skin of evil

  5. "Skin of Evil" (S1:E23) Star Trek: The Next Generation Screencaps

    star trek skin of evil

  6. "Skin of Evil" (S1:E23) Star Trek: The Next Generation Screencaps

    star trek skin of evil

VIDEO

  1. Picard obliterates a skin of evil

  2. Star Trek TNG S 1 EP 22 Skin Of Evil Reviewed Was Tasha's Death a Mistake?

  3. Star Trek TNG

  4. STAR TREK DS9 Second Skin + The Abandoned

  5. Effy Stonem-[Monster]

  6. 10 Most Irredeemable Star Trek Villains

COMMENTS

  1. Skin of Evil

    Skin of Evil. " Skin of Evil " is the 23rd episode of the first season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation, and originally aired on April 25, 1988, in broadcast syndication. The story premise was written by Joseph Stefano, and the screenplay was re-written by Hannah Louise Shearer.

  2. Skin Of Evil (episode)

    A rescue operation to save the lives of a shuttle crew becomes complicated thanks to a malevolent entity, and one Enterprise-D crew member pays the ultimate price in their rescue. The USS Enterprise-D is traveling through the Zed Lapis sector where it will rendezvous with shuttlecraft 13, carrying Counselor Deanna Troi, who is returning from a conference, along with the shuttle pilot ...

  3. "Star Trek: The Next Generation" Skin of Evil (TV Episode 1988)

    Skin of Evil: Directed by Joseph L. Scanlan. With Patrick Stewart, Jonathan Frakes, LeVar Burton, Denise Crosby. Counselor Troi is held captive on a deserted planet by a slick, black, oily, sentient and immortal puddle of evil.

  4. A Look Back at 'Skin of Evil'

    The episode, like the creature, was originally called "The Shroud." "Skin of Evil" was conceived by screenwriter Joseph Stefano, who co-wrote the teleplay with Hannah Louise Shearer. Armus was named after the first season's writer and producer, Burton Armus. The episode was marked as the first time Star Trek had killed off a series regular.

  5. Recap / Star Trek: The Next Generation S 1 E 22 "Skin of Evil"

    Original air date: April 25, 1988. The first pivotal episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation. An evil, tar-like creature holds Troi hostage on an alien world. During the rescue mission, one of the Enterprise crew is killed. It's Tasha.

  6. Star Trek: The Next Generation S1E23 "Skin of Evil" Trailer

    Watch the trailer of Star Trek: The Next Generation S1E23 "Skin of Evil", a thrilling episode where the Enterprise crew faces a deadly and mysterious creature that killed one of their own. See how ...

  7. Skin of Evil

    "Skin of Evil" is the 23rd episode of the first season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation, and originally aired on April 25, 1988, in broadcast syndication. The story premise was written by Joseph Stefano, and the screenplay was re-written by Hannah Louise Shearer. The episode was directed by Joseph L. Scanlan.

  8. Skin of Evil

    Picard attempts to negotiate with Armus, but its evil intentions are clear. Armus is determined to take Troi's life, as well as the lives of the rest of the crew, and destroy the Enterprise. In a last-ditch effort to save Troi, Picard leads the crew in a daring mission to penetrate Armus's protective skin and destroy him from the inside.

  9. Revisiting Star Trek TNG: Skin Of Evil

    1.24 Skin of Evil. The Enterprise is proceeding towards a rendezvous with Shuttlecraft 13 (both ships travelling on impulse power. Er, you might want to read a book while you wait) when it ...

  10. The Trek Nation

    Skin of Evil By Michelle Erica Green Posted at September 7, 2007 - 9:00 PM GMT. See Also: 'Skin of Evil' Episode Guide. ... the original series was the only Star Trek I considered legitimate - and ...

  11. Episode Preview: Skin of Evil

    © 2023 CBS Studios Inc., Paramount Pictures Corporation, and CBS Interactive Inc., Paramount companies. STAR TREK and related marks are trademarks of CBS Studios Inc.

  12. Armus

    Armus was an entity created by the former natives of Vagra II. Armus was born as a by-product, or personification, of a procedure in which a "race of Titans" brought out from within themselves all evil and negative attributes that had bound them to destructiveness. The unwanted substance spread and coalesced into a dank and vile second skin. The race rejected this "skin of evil" and abandoned ...

  13. 'Skin of Evil': Was it ever explained what Armus was?

    Lance Rear Admiral Rear Admiral. As noted above, metaphorically he's the waste product of a society which has cast off all evil traits. A kind of physical manifestation of the negativity they've left behind. Physically, Armus is a combination of wet tar and metamucial.

  14. Watch Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 1 Episode 23: Skin Of Evil

    S1 E8 Nov 09, 1987. Justice. SUBSCRIBE. S1 E9 Nov 16, 1987. The Battle. A rescue mission turns to tragedy when one of the Enterprise officers is killed by an evil alien.

  15. Tasha Yar's Death Led to One of Star Trek: TNG's Best Episodes

    Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 1, Episode 23, "Skin of Evil" is often regarded as one of the show's worst episodes. Critics tend to rate it poorly and fans usually hate it for killing off the fan-favorite Tasha Yar so abruptly. Even the creators seemed to regret it, frequently finding ways to bring Yar back and crafting a whole episode "Tomorrow is Yesterday" in Season 3 to fix the ...

  16. The Next Generation Transcripts

    Skin of Evil Stardate: 41601.3 Original Airdate: 25 Apr, 1988. Captain's log, stardate 41601.3. We are crossing through the Zed Lapis sector, where we will rendezvous with shuttlecraft thirteen, carrying Deanna Troi, who is returning from a conference. Because Engineering is involved in preventive maintenance on our dilithium crystals, we are ...

  17. Star Trek: The Next Generation Re-Watch: "Skin of Evil"

    "Skin of Evil" Written by Joseph Stefano and Hannah Louise Shearer ... There are economies to be taken in teleplays, I realize, so for a Star Trek doctor to pronounce someone dead after doing nothing-or perhaps after making a single hypospray injection of go-juice-is perhaps just a way of speeding the story along. All the same, it ...

  18. How Star Trek: The Next Generation's Killing of Tasha Yar Became an

    "Skin of Evil" was the 22 nd episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation's inaugural season—just three episodes away from the season finale. Consequently, with audiences at this point having ...

  19. ARMUS (The Skin of Evil) STAR TREK EXPLORED

    Armus was essentially a malevolent entity featured in the expanded STAR TREK universe. Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/FilmComicsExplainedTo purchase a cop...

  20. "Skin of Evil"

    Mon, Apr 14, 2008, 1:33pm (UTC -5) I actually thought "Skin of Evil" was a bit better than most seem to make it. The sudden death of Tasha, while somewhat anticlimatic, was still a shock. The Troi/Armus scenes weren't as powerful as they wanted to be, but the funeral scene for Tasha at the end was fine, I felt.

  21. Star Trek TNG -- The Cruelty of Armus

    Season 1 Episode 23Episode: "Skin of Evil"After having survived a shuttle crash on planet Vagra II, Counselor Deanna Troi finds herself being held ransom by...

  22. 5 Controversial Star Trek: The Next Generation Scenes Nobody ...

    In terms of terrible send-offs, it doesn't get any worse than Tasha Yar's death scene in "Skin of Evil." Like Diana Muldaur, Yar actor Denise Crosby didn't have the best experience working on the ...

  23. Star Trek's 10 Best Monster Episodes

    Star Trek teaches us not to judge by appearances, but on the other hand it has provided us with multiple scary monsters for almost 60 years. ... "Skin of Evil" is one of Star Trek's best monster ...

  24. What are your thoughts on Skin of Evil? : r/startrek

    One of the top ten Trek stories IMO. The story of Armus and how Picard intuits truth from an unreliable person is fascinating to watch unfold, and I love my sci-fi surprising and cerebral rather than big gunfights. Also, Skin of Evil is based on the short story The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas, by Ursula Le Guin, and is one of the most life ...

  25. This 'Star Trek Discovery' Character Is a Deep-Cut 'DS9 ...

    The Kellerun made their first and (so far) only appearance in "Armageddon Game", which first aired in 1994 as part of Deep Space Nine's second season.A species with distinctive large, pointed ears ...

  26. Star Trek TNG "Skin of Evil" Picard and Armus

    Picard confronts the Enitity "Armus"

  27. Rewatching Skin of Evil : r/startrekmemes

    Memes of the Star Trek franchise ... Rewatching Skin of Evil Share Add a Comment. Be the first to comment Nobody's responded to this post yet. Add your thoughts and get the conversation going. Top 2% Rank by size . More posts you may like r/firefly. r/firefly /r/Firefly, for all your Joss Whedon Sci-Fi western needs. ...

  28. Star Trek's Strongest Supporting Women Characters

    While the Star Trek franchise reached its pinnacle with Kate Mulgrew's fantastic portrayal of Captain Janeway, it began earlier with the truly revolutionary casting of Nichelle Nichols as Lt. Uhura. While one can nitpick and say she was subservient to the boys (and there's definitely an argument to be made), the very fact that an African American woman was seen on the Bridge had a direct ...

  29. Ninja Announces Skin Cancer Diagnosis

    Famed streamer Tyler "Ninja" Blevins has announced that he has been diagnosed with melanoma, which is a form of skin cancer. In a post shared on his personal X (or Twitter) account, Blevins said ...