Devil's Due (Star Trek: The Next Generation)
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Star Trek: TNG episode | |
"Devil's Due" | |
"Picard discusses things with Jared, the Ventaxian leader, as Ardra attempts to take control of the planet in "Devil's Due". |
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Episode no. | 87 |
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Prod. code | 187 |
Airdate | February 4, 1991 |
Writer(s) | Philip Lazebnik and William Douglas Lansford |
Director | Tom Benko |
Guest star(s) | Marta DuBois as Ardra , Paul Lambert as Dr. Clarke, Marcelo Tubert as Jared, Tom Magee as Klingon Monster, Thad Lamey as Devil Monster , William Glover as Marley |
Year | 2367 |
Stardate | 44474.5 |
Episode chronology | |
Previous | "The Wounded" |
Next | "Clues" |
"Devil's Due" is an episode of the science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation. In this episode, the people of Ventax II believed in a devil-woman named Ardra (played by Marta DuBois). A thousand years before the episode, Ardra promised to solve all the world's problems. In return, the planet would become hers in a thousand years. The episode has an average rating of 3.5/5 on the official Star Trek website (as of June 14, 2007).[1]
Contents |
[edit] Plot summary
The Enterprise receives a distress call from a Federation delegation on Ventax II, where the population is in a state of panic because they are convinced their world is going to end.
Captain Picard and his crew discover that, according to Ventaxian history, the planet's leaders entered into a Faustian bargain long ago. Ventax II had been heavily polluted and had civil and political turmoil; under the bargain, society would flourish in peace and prosperity for 1,000 years, but thereafter the people would become slaves to Ardra, their mythology's devil. Recent earthquakes are seen by the Ventaxians as evidence of Ardra's imminent return.
As the Enterprise landing party confers with the Ventaxian leader on the planet's surface, a sultry brunette appears in their midst out of thin air and announces herself to be the long-awaited Ardra, come to collect on the contract and take over Ventax and its people. Since the Enterprise is currently in orbit around "her" world, she also lays claim to the starship and its crew.
Ardra performs numerous seemingly miraculous feats to prove her identity. Earthquakes come and go at her whim. She transforms her appearance to resemble mythological figures including the Human devil and Fek'lhr, guardian of Gre'thor, the Klingon Underworld, prompting Worf to bellow "You are not Fek'lhr!" As Picard and Data attempt to return to the Enterprise in a shuttle, the starship vanishes before their eyes.
Picard — not only incensed by what he is sure must be a fraud, but also offended by Ardra's attempts to seduce him — calls for a traditional Ventaxian arbitration hearing, hoping to expose the woman as a charlatan. Ardra agrees to this, but only if Data serves as the arbiter. Data urges Picard to refuse, since (being an android) he will have no choice but to rule impartially and cannot promise that the captain will prevail, but Picard decides to proceed on the grounds that anyone else available would be susceptible to Ardra's intimidation.
During the arbitration hearing, the Ventaxian leader admits that the legendary Ardra did not actually play an active role in his society's reformation — that the restructuring came from the people themselves and was adopted and implemented over a period of time. At one point, Picard scornfully asks regarding Ardra: "Did she not even pick up one piece of trash?" Despite the captain's suggestion that the Ventaxian society of a thousand years ago had rescued itself by its own efforts, the current leader still cannot shake off his conviction that the woman who has appeared to them is in fact the Ardra of legend.
As the arbitration hearing proceeds, Geordi La Forge (on the planet's surface) takes numerous readings in an attempt to figure out the nature of Ardra's powers. He finally manages to locate a cloaked ship in orbit above the planet — as well as the Enterprise, which didn't disappear, but is still where it should be (albeit cloaked).
Geordi gets word of his discovery to Picard, and after a brief recess, the captain turns the tables on Ardra. He starts an earthquake and challenges Ardra to stop it; when she cannot, Picard stops the quake himself with a snap of his fingers. He makes Ardra briefly disappear, and he transforms himself into the same Klingon demon which Ardra had changed into earlier. Having thus demonstrated "powers" equal to Ardra's, Picard reveals that a team from the Enterprise had captured Ardra's ship and had used her gang's technology to put on a show of their own. When Ardra and her co-conspirators heard about the Ventaxian legend, they found the prospect of cashing in to be irresistible, and the woman had thoroughly studied the stories of Ardra and played her part to near-perfection. The "magic effects" at her command were achieved using her starship technology and included appearing to change her form through holographic projection, appearing and disappearing at will through transporter technology, and creating tremors through the projection of a low frequency tractor beam on the planet's surface.
"Ardra" tries to back out of her corner by saying she has decided to release the Ventaxians from the contract (as a goodwill gesture) and will be on her way, but her exit is blocked by the palace guards. With "Ardra" withdrawn from the arbitration, Data ends the hearing, and the Ventaxian leader thanks Picard for saving his people.
[edit] Trivia
Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- The idea for "Devil's Due" came from a script written for the proposed Star Trek: Phase II television series by William Douglas Lansford. The story element of having the returning devil be an alien con artist was new to LaZebnik's version, Lansford had the devil figure being created by the planetary leaders.[1] The Ventaxian people were named after the UK ventilation company Vent-Axia.[citation needed]
- This is the only episode of TNG that the character of Q was mentioned, but did not play a part in the episode.
[edit] References
- ^ Andy Lane. "Lost Worlds Revealed", Star Trek Monthly, Titan, April 1997.
[edit] External links
- Ardra article at Memory Alpha, a Star Trek wiki
- Devil's Due article at Memory Alpha, a Star Trek wiki
- Devil's Due (Star Trek: The Next Generation) at StarTrek.com