Hello and welcome back to Subspace Radio, it's your old friend Kevin.
And your old buddy bud, Rob.
Rob, you're not a green ooze in a cave, are you?
Look, I'm not a green ooze, but I do like to put you through a trial of how you represent yourself as a human being and whether you have a good moral compass or not for me to do a podcast with. So far, you've succeeded!
Okay, I'm trying to understand if that's a specific Star Trek reference, or just a general reference to all of the moral tests of humanity that exist throughout all of Star Trek.
You have passed that test, so now let's sit down and eat giant bugs together.
Oh, yes. One of the many things you can do when you're stuck in a cave, as our crew on the Cerritos is in Lower Decks episode eight of season four, entitled simply, Caves.
Yes, after the Tantalizing story arc reveal last week, they threw a well used shifty on us like most genre shows do and they gave us a, and I do this in inverted commas, bottle episode.
Yeah, completely standalone, and and I loved it for it. I needed a dose of just plain, uncut, light entertainment.
Not only was it a cave episode, but it was also a flashback episode where we got little vignettes from each of our main characters who went on a, a joint mission, which we haven't had for a while. I know they all four went to Ferenginar, but they all went off on their separate ways really. But this is our first time where we had all four back on a mission, which we haven't had for quite some time. And this spurred them on to think back to other adventures in caves from the past.
It had that feeling. I think they had a couple of like lead ups to I'm gonna tell a story now, and then I'm like, oh, no, is it actually a clip episode in an animated series? Don't do that to us. But sure enough they had several original tales for us and it was good fun. I really enjoyed it.
Yeah, we went from bringing back obscure shape shifting creatures from the animated series and conspiracy theories to Rutherford getting pregnant and going off on an adventure with T'Ana, who was
that itself is an increasingly recurring motif of a male crew member getting impregnated by an alien.
Yep. If it works for Red Dwarf, it can work here. And Tendi wanting to always tell her adventures, but it was never in a cave. It was in a turbo lift.
Yeah and stuck in a Turbolift is something that's happened a few times in Star Trek as well. So yeah, the caves and more this episode had. I don't know about you Rob, my favorite one of these vignettes was the one with Dr. T'Ana. I've said recently how I'm a big fan of that cranky cat doctor and getting to see her be a bit real and emotionally affected and changed and almost start to fall in love with our pal Rutherford here. That felt real interesting. I really liked that.
When she was wistfully making her way off into the corridor for the, for the umpteenth time in search of their escape, it was really affecting. I loved that colour on this character.
Definitely.
And unlike other recent episodes in this season, it did play with the bridge crew here, or the command crew, but it kept them connected to the characters that are our core, and so it felt emotionally linked to what I care about in this series and not a side story.
Yeah, especially with T'Ana because she's been a bit of a appear and gag type of character. So, like, revealing that they used to hunt Betazoids and all that type of stuff, and the kinks that she has. But to have this as, she goes beyond that. And we've had elements of that in the past, but not for a while. To get back to going, yeah, T'Ana is a well rounded character. There's a lot of levels there, a lot of layers there, and, shows that we want to see more.
She's not just a, a doctor with a cat's head.
Mmm. What was your favorite of the vignettes?
I think I got the most out of Mariner with Delta Shift because it revealed a little bit more about the structure of a starship. And the priorities or the, who is seen and who isn't. Really nice. That whole case of you guys can do whatever you want and we have to clean up your mess. Or, we've only had one or two run ins with the captain because, we're up when everybody else is asleep.
That one I liked because it was the funniest. I laughed a lot at them getting old and breaking their leg and leaving the leg behind and all of that stuff was hilarious to me, so it was high entertainment value for me, but I see what you mean as well.
Um, I think I chuckled the most with Rutherford's baby adventures. And I did have a good heart swelling moment that, you know, Tendi, of course Tendi, the memory she holds dearest is the time when we flash back to,
The very first episode of the series, or like a coda to the very first episode of the series.
To Second Contact, where they just got to know each other. Trapped in an elevator, they had to, have a wee corner, as we would say in Australia, and sit and chat and get to know each other. So that good range of variety and spending some time with our characters that we haven't had for a while.
Yeah. Anything else you want to cover here? I'm keen to get into our past episodes because there's a lot to talk about.
Yeah. Let's get it, let's get into it. Let's do this.
Okay. I am going to presume to start with a Original Series episode, if you will.
Start with it. Start with it. Go with it. You can presume correctly.
The uh, first prominent Cave episode that I can think of is the Original Series season one episode twenty six. Remember when we had twenty six episodes in a Star Trek season, Rob?
Remember when we had 26 episodes of any TV series?
And it was this good. The Devil in the Dark, the the Horta, No Kill I, the big kind of carpet creature that is eating miners alive
Miners or minors?
Miners, of course!
He he heh hah!
And Spock has to calm it and communicate with this non humanoid silicon based creature by mind melding with it. The miners broke into a new cavern on their mineral rich planet and found it full of suspiciously round silicon nodules that turned out to be the eggs of this last surviving mother of the new generation of this race and they were breaking the eggs and so the mother had to fight back no one understood it until Spock came along and acted as translator.
This episode is 90 percent set in cave sets. And when you watch it in modern HD, a few things become clear. One, it is all the same cave set, just shot from different angles with different lighting, and different props strewn about the floor. All the same props, just in different configurations.
As Mariner said in this week's episode, the, all these caves look the same.
Ah, my biggest laugh was Rutherford commenting on, Oh, I love a good cave. The flat floors, the funny smell. The flat floors really got that is a direct reference to The Devil in the Dark here. All of these cave sets are very obviously built on a completely flat studio floor. And... I think all of us Star Trek fans watched that episode and mentally went, Okay, so when Starfleet digs caves, it makes sure the floors are flat.
That is part of the high technology on display is that we can flatten the floors of all the caves that we work in.
It's the future for a reason, Okay? We're not in the past, we're not primitives. We are in the, we are in the, the white palace on the Hill. We are in a utopian future, where all cave floors are perfectly smooth and flat.
I forgive the Star Trek fans come lately who complain about the flat floors because apparently that bothered Gene Roddenberry at the time as well. I found that in my behind the scenes information about that episode is that when he watched the dailies of that episode, he was like, someone fire the production designer because all those floors stupidly flat. Some great. Just a well made episode here, very tense, lots of Kirk, Spock.
When they split up and Kirk's life is in danger, Spock gets borderline emotional, calls him Jim, and starts running down the corridor until Kirk reassures him that it's okay, it's like really good early Kirk, Spock stuff. Lots of great smash cuts as well of like it cuts from the middle of one conversation to a completely different time and place in another conversation and you don't realize that we have changed scenes until we cut to a wide and find ourselves in a different place.
Really modern editing in this episode, here. I don't know if that was in the writing, if that was in the script, or is that something that the director or editor introduced in the process, but yeah, really well put together episode and it shows the power of a good cave set, because unless you're looking for it to realize that it is one small room shot from many angles with different lighting states, it feels like a massive complex of underground caverns. It's really good.
Awesome, awesome, I have to check it out.
I think that's the implication that a cave set can be reused and re shot in many different ways. And so you get a lot of bang for your buck from a cave set. It can make a low budget episode feel high budget. And there bit of that in Lower Decks, where if you're paying attention to that Caves episode, They use a lot of the same cave drawings, just with different lights or different colors over them.
There's lots of moments of our Cerritos crew kind of walking past the same two stalagmites that are in the same exact configuration, but they are meant to be in a completely different story on a completely different planet. That's the homage, that's part of the homage here. And, and that budget saving measure is on full display in The Devil in the Dark.
It's definitely the Star Trek equivalent of going on location but staying in the studio. So giving the feel that we are... somewhere else, but not needing to go through that financial, strain and, logistical nightmare of going out on location, or, the only locations available are California roughland, and we can only make that look like somewhere alien only so few times. But yeah, it's a great way to give that sense of we're off the ship, we're off world,
Mmm, kinda, kinda.
Kinda, yeah.
What's your first episode, Rob?
I've leaned heavily into it this week. I've gone straight to Deep Space
Of course, yes. There's a lot caves in Deep Space Nine.
Lots and lots of caves. So I'm going to do two. One where you think the cave will be the main focus, but it's actually the B plot that is the A plot. Uh, and the next one, it's just all about the caves. Let's start off with Star Trek Deep Space Nine, Season 3, Episode 14, Heart of Stone.
We have a match.
Hey!
That's on my list as well.
Awesome. Now this is the one where the actual cave plot is not the strongest part of this story. The strongest part of this story is the B plot, which I'd really say is the A plot.
I absolutely agree. It was obviously written that the A plot is Odo and Kira in that cave. But Nog's story with Sisko is so good!
Especially where Nog's story went, going back and watching it again, you're going, this is the A plot. You know what's going to happen with Kira and Odo, and that's an old trope, but this is, no discredit to Nana or René Auberjonois, they are in top form here. René especially is amazing, but Aaron is so good as Nog. And Max is there in such a small capacity as Rom before his role is expanded as well, but he steals it.
He's just such a loss, such a wonderful, talented actor, brilliant actor, and his Nog is one of the greatest creations in Star Trek, hands down.
Yeah, so that B story for anyone who's, who's wondering whether they should go watch this is when Nog first asked for a recommendation to go to Starfleet Academy. He's bribing Sisko with gold pressed latinum at the start of this episode and by the end he has won our hearts.
And always shaking his hand.
It catches you by surprise. I think you watch the start of that story and go, Ugh, more Ferengi stuff. And by the end you're crying. It's so good.
It's absolutely amazing stuff, and you just see... so much of where this character is gonna go and the potential that he has. It's a great stuff. So the main focus though is Kira and Odo chasing down a Maquis uh, escapee. They go to a a planet where they've crash landed or landed, chasing through the caves and they're distracted by the fact that... Kira gets caught in some sort of, crystal that is growing and evolving and consuming her entire body.
Yeah, yeah, it catches her by the foot. And at first she just thinks her foot is stuck, but gradually the crystal grows up her leg and eventually covers her whole body and is at at real risk of killing her.
And Odo cannot do anything to save her.
He tries a lot of stuff. I really enjoy the procedural moments of this where he goes back to the runabout and he's chatting with the computer about, can we try this? Can we try pattern enhancers? Can we try getting a signal to Deep Space Nine? How about this? How about that? I nerd out on when the world of Star Trek, feels rich and realistic, and the number of layers of things that he tries and that fail in this make me buy the world and the reality of their situation.
Definitely, there's a key moment in the episode near the end when it's getting to the point where Kira is going to die. There's no way of getting out of it. And Odo's wracked with all this, these emotions, and he just lets slip, he lets slip, and it's one of my favorite moments, it's one of my favorite things, I just
It's so early too! I did not realize that Odo was confessing his feelings. When you say something out loud, it makes it real. He made it real for himself way back here in Season 3.
yeah, and when he reveals it, the effect it has on him and you see him like literally crumble and fall to his knees with just the sheer weight of it, he's collapsing under the burden that's been released, it's such a beautiful moment. Yeah, and his story about how he got his name, there's some lovely stuff there and of course there's the old bait and switch at the end when it's not actually who they think it is.
We won't spoil it beyond that. But yeah, it's a good one. I remember this as the episode where Odo confesses his feelings in a
Yeah, hmm.
and that's why it was at the top of my list of cave episodes of Deep Space Nine.
Yes, yeah, I remember because I wanted to watch it because, you know, Odo is my favorite character and and his relationship with Kira is one of the strongest points of Deep Space Nine. And Nana Visitor is just in one of the top actors ever to be in the show.
She plays some great texture in this episode. She goes from like panic to crying to then back to professional and jokingly diffusing the situation with laughter. She plays all of those different colors and it's really, it's a really textured performance that could be quite one note if you looked at the script.
Definitely, but the real MVP of this episode is not even in a cave.
This is a good example of being stuck in one room of a cave. There's a lot of exits to that room, and you get the sense there is quite a network of caverns around, but because Kira's foot is stuck, we spend it all standing in one place, and I'm not sure how critical to the story that was. I think they probably went we want Kira's life to be under threat, and we don't want to spend a lot of money. Wait, I've got a brilliant idea! Like that, that I feel was the genesis
heh,
for this episode.
And even though we hadn't talked about it beforehand thinking back on it, those floors were not as smooth as uh,
No, they uh, they had upped the ante a bit.
So you got another episode to talk about that is let's get into the deep bowels of these episodes.
Yeah, I'm gonna, I'm gonna go for a Next Gen. This is TNG Season 4 Episode 9, Final Mission. This is Wesley's final regular episode of Star Trek The Next Generation before he leaves the show and is written out as he departs for Starfleet Academy. And this is famously because Will Wheaton wanted to leave the show in order to pursue a film career. And we had previously lost Denise Crosby as Tasha Yar way back in season one under similar circumstances.
She had asked to be written out of the show, asked to be released from her contract. And I think you read the behind the scenes stuff for Final Mission and it is clear that they were like, We want to do better for Wesley than we did for Tasha Yar. This is not going to be a sudden regrettable death.
No Skin of Evil. Yeah,
the stuff I've read suggests it was actually Gene Roddenberry who came up with the idea that he could go to Starfleet Academy. That preserves, it keeps the character alive, keeps him maybe available as a guest star if ever he wants to come back again, as he did. And it is a happy, positive development for the character that our audience will be caring about quite a bit four seasons into this series.
In this episode, yeah, it starts with Wesley getting the news in a ambush on the bridge by Captain Picard that he is been accepted into Starfleet Academy. A spot has opened up and Picard pranks him in giving him the news. And it's quite funny. And then Picard says, before you go, I want you to join me on one final mission. And they go off in a in a little freighter with a ornery captain to go and investigate a tense negotiation situation, but they never make it there.
This rickety shuttle breaks down and they crash on a planet. Now this is quite different from many cave episodes in that it doesn't feel like they were trying to save a lot of money or do a cheap episode because the crash landing sequence is quite, quite high in production value. There's a lot of exploding panels on the ship and attempts to keep the thing under control and they're swapping stations. And yeah they're really troubleshooting the problem.
They do end up going down and, but they don't just land in a cave. They land in a desert and they, come out the top of the ship and they find themselves on like a dry riverbed with mountains in the distance. They went on location for this cave episode and shot two days in a dry riverbed in California. And it looks hot and there's lots of you know how in Star Trek VI there's like those long walking segments when they're out of the shield and they're at risk of freezing to death?
This is the desert version of that. There's lots of long walking stuff where Picard proves his mettle by being the most resilient to the heat in the end.
course, of course.
But they do finally make it into a cave, and this cave looks mighty familiar, and that's because it is the Planet Hell set, which is a famous set during the Star Trek The Next Generation, and even into Star Trek Voyager years. On Paramount Stage 16, there was a standing cavern set that was built for The Next Generation, used in many episodes. That's why so many of the caves in Star Trek The Next Generation look so similar, because they were all the same standing set on Stage 16.
And there are several, you know, appearances of that set in DS9 and Voyager as well, as that thing was tweaked and changed and repainted and re sculpted and it was given a ceiling at one point. It was like an open kind of quarry situation originally. Voyager even did a tribute to it by calling a particularly unhospitable planet that Seven of Nine found in Stellar Cartography, they called it Planet Hell and talked how terrible it was and that was a reference to the Stage 16 set.
Nice.
Wesley and and Picard and the freighter captain make it into this cave set, which has at its center a fountain of water protected by a force field, the origin of which is never explained.
We never found out who made that fountain, who put that force field around it, but getting through that force field is critical to the survival of our heroes because they are, they crash landed in a ship with no provisions and they've just walked for a day in the scorching hot heat and in their efforts Picard is injured and on the verge of death. And this creates the dramatic kind of like final heart to hearts between Picard and Wesley. They say their feelings to each other.
They explain how much they mean to each other. Wesley's speech, I'd say is less effective than Picard's. And I don't know, I've said recently that I called another episode like Wesley's finest episode, because he was, his acting was so good. Here, it's a shame in final mission. Wesley's acting is not that great, if you ask me. He just is not selling the emotion. It feels like his mind is just elsewhere. But Picard gives him a great speech where he says, Oh, I envy you, Wesley Crusher.
You're just at the beginning of the adventure. And this is as Picard is laying near death, and he breaks into tears, and tears stream down his face about his feelings for Wesley. You rarely see Picard, especially in the original series looking this vulnerable, and it's a really lovely moment. This conversation they have establishes the existence of Boothby, the groundskeeper at Starfleet Academy, who we see in a later episode of NextGen and then in Voyager beyond. Lots of good stuff here.
I would say apart from Will Wheaton's performance not being the greatest, this is a really good episode, and a really fitting send off for the character.
It's interesting how they've, obviously because Patrick Stewart by this stage was... the lead. And it's interesting they decide to just focus on a mission with the two of them. A two hander, as opposed to a couple more of the cast to share their feelings as well. It really is just, what Wesley and Picard meant to each other.
There's a great I'll use a term that's familiar to both of us in improvisation, a status shift. At the start of this episode, Picard has high status. He is leading this mission. When they crash land, he's the one who says we're putting an arrow on the ground. We're heading for the mountains. We're not going to die here. The freighter captain is uppity about it. And Wesley's like, if you want to get out of this, you're going to listen to the captain. He knows what he's talking about.
So Wesley is quite low status. But when Picard gets injured in the cave, and it's Wesley's moment to step up and save them all, you have that status shift where now Picard is the one laying on the ground giving the tearful speech and telling Wesley he's gonna have to figure it out and Wesley steps up and saves them all. So it's a lovely kinda... dramatic shift there too throughout this episode.
Excellent. Yeah, I've always wondered about that final episode for Wesley and what it was. And do you think it, it's it's better without the other cast there to be a part of this farewell or it's better working with just the two of them?
Yeah, I, there are a lot of good episodes of Star Trek where it takes one or two of our characters and puts them in a situation together and I'd say this is a good one. We had seen Picard and Wesley in a shuttle before. There is a previous episode where Picard has to go to Starfleet Medical to have his artificial heart upgraded or replaced or serviced or something like that and things go awry on that as well. And it's a, it's an initial bonding point.
It's like when the walls first start to come down between Picard and Wesley. So if Wesley's leaving, this is a very nice bookend in that sense to see how far they've come by putting them in a similar situation together.
Awesome.
The cave set works well here; we're not in it too long. They shoot it from a couple of angles that make it look like two different rooms, and that works for me as well. There's some nice styrofoam rocks falling on people, which is always good as a bonus. Yeah, I rate this as an excellent cave episode.
Lovely.
What's your number two?
I'm going back into Deep Space Nine. We're jumping ahead to Season 6, Episode 11. It is firing on all cylinders. I'm going to deal with Waltz.
Waltz! I don't remember this one.
Oh, it is written by Ronald D. Moore, it's directed by René Auberjonois.
is Sisko and Dukat stranded in a cave and the interrogation, the interplay, the dance between the two of them, between Dukat and Sisko, while the rest of the Deep Space Nine crew are desperately in the Defiant, trying to find Sisko before they have to meet a convoy of unarmed ships from the Federation that are making their way out of the Badlands and they'll be susceptible to Dominion attack, so Worf is desperately trying to get his crew to find Sisko, before they have
this deadline to go and save the convoy. The primary focus is the cave, it is the best part of the episode, and it brings out the incredible genius that is Marc Alaimo as Gul Dukat, who's been playing this, who played this role for the entire season. He'd previously appeared as a Cardassian in a Next Gen episode, I believe?
yeah.
And his... Interpretation of Dukat, just so many layers and depth and range and levels and nuance.
He also played a Romulan in Star Trek The Next Generation um, and a a kind of dog alien. What were they called, the Anticans? In a very early episode of TNG called Lonely Among Us. So, yeah, he has played a lot of makeup roles.
But he also appeared out of makeup in far beyond the Stars,
We also got to see him out of makeup in TNG's Time's Arrow. The one where they go back in time and meet Guinan and Mark Twain also has Marc Alaimo playing a character called Frederick LaRouque.
And of course, near the end of the whole run spoilers ahead, he shows up very Bajoran as Dukat as well.
So this episode, Waltz, I think it's coming back to me now. This is the one where Dukat goes properly cuckoo, right?
Yeah, it took me a bit to adjust to because I hadn't been watching it up until this point, so I just had to re remember where it is. So at this point Deep Space Nine has been taken back. Dukat has his daughter, who's part Cardassian, part Bajoran. She'd been living on the station for a while. They tried to develop a relationship between her and Garak and that wasn't going to work.
But she'd been looked after by Nerys and by Sisko and in the final episode she's shot by Damar while the Federation are coming back to take Deep Space Nine. She's killed and so that's at the end of season five. So at the start of season six, Dukat's going through some stuff and this is where they pretty much go, he's insane. He's hearing and seeing people that aren't there. So he's got Weyoun show up, he's got Kira showing up, he's got Damar showing up, he's talking back and forth with them.
This is a deft thing. A lot of these cave episodes, I'm noticing, including at least one of the stories we saw in Lower Decks this week, serve to trap two characters together and force them to spend a bunch of time together. We were just talking about Wesley and Picard, stuck in a cave together. And a lot of these are like that too. There's other kind of bottle episodes that work the same way. Stuck in a turbolift, stuck in a shuttlecraft. Two characters are stuck.
And this certainly fits that template, but the hallucinations enable us to bring in kind of guest stars into this situation of stuckness and mix it up.
Yes, exactly. And it really is a... an episode about the journey that Dukat has been on, because he starts out as a monster, they try and add these different layers that he has some morale and some sense of justice within him. But then he just, they throw him full blown crazy. So it's a wonderful performance. And then as again, it descends into him fully embracing his insanity
Does he have any moments of being sympathetic at this point, or is there just too much water under the bridge by
At the start, at the start when the cold opener scene when they're on the ship that's heading towards Federation for the trial they set it up like Hannibal Lecter type thing with Sisko heading in and, and,
Marc Alaimo also played Hannibal Lecter in a— No, I'm just kidding.
Very nice. Very good. That would have been a sight to see. Um, but he's on his knees, sort of like in a praying position, and he's quite charming and calm and, and has a sense of menace about him. But that's more coming off from Sisko. They're sort of like this tone, and when the death of his daughter is brought up you do get a sense of loss and heartbreak and real pain there, which is excellent work. But then we just, see the truth about Dukat and he is well and truly gone.
And this is like the late 90s where it's like that whole insanity, crazy, the darkness of that was quite prolific in, in culture, you had Se7en was huge, as we mentioned, Silence of the Lambs in the early 90s, like started this serial killer obsession with
Yeah, into the mind of a criminal.
Which we still are fascinated by now, but this was this big push into mainstream cinema and television and it was everywhere. You could see it everywhere. So it was the go to thing to explore and do it in a quite theatrical way. Obviously it's directed by René Auberjonois who had one of the most extensive theatre records in American theater history. In television, directors are just a part of the cog. They don't really have much of a chance to have their own flair, as in, with cinema.
You know what a David Fincher film is. You know what a Catherine Bigelow film is. A Spielberg, a Scorsese, a, a Hitchcock film.
Yeah, you hope they get to put a little spin on it, but they're building on what's there.
Yeah, and there's some beautiful moments in here where you see René Auberjonois step up and go, this is my style. So there's moments where Alaimo as Dukat moves and the camera follows him. So he's there talking to himself and then the camera moves back and the vision that he has in his head just sitting on a rock or something. So that didn't need to be done. That could easily be cut and moved but René Auberjonois wanted those shots to carry on and stay in that performance and keep that energy.
So you could see, it's very, a theater based performance.
Yeah, you can almost imagine a dark corner of the stage and the light coming up on the character you didn't realize was there.
Exactly. And it's very much a case of the actors were just on the side, they followed the camera, they came back into shot, and when the camera came back, they were there. And so that energy carries on as if it's all in one, it feels, those one big longer takes really fills that energy out. And it's written beautifully by Ronald D. Moore and Marc's performance as Gul Dukat is a masterpiece.
That's probably something else you get to do in a cave episode is because you spend more time on one set, you're lighting it once. You're maybe even working with a more limited number of camera setups. You can spend more time to get creative on the theater of the scenes that you're going to put there.
Most definitely. Most definitely. So yeah, it's, for me, it's a highlight. It does, especially at the ending it does have callbacks to another duet type of episode, Duet, from season one. That whole, vile, disgusting... racist, prejudiced, dialogue, phrasing, rationalization that comes out of Dukat's head is quite horrifying to see but delivered with such power and conviction.
And comparing it to Heart of Stone, which had, some nice performances, but this is something that is a beautifully written script and the performances are beautifully directed and it just elevates it even higher than um, what it already was. It's a great episode and, yeah, that cave element gives you that claustrophobic element, that sense of, we're the only ones here. It's a dangerous environment. And it's brutal as well.
Sisko gets beaten up with a pole like with an inch of his life by Dukat and he's already injured and got phaser burns on his arms and plasma burns on his arms it's yeah it's a brutal episode and Sisko is you know taken through the ringer many times
I am gonna go back and watch that one tonight. You've seduced me into it, Rob.
Oh.
I love Duet and another episode of that same pedigree that I just am not as familiar with. So I got to catch up on it.
There's incredible stuff about how he justifies what he did within the occupation and it just relates back directly to, it's so connected there back to World War II and it's what happened there, what happened during, in Germany of all that time, it's all that type of stuff, it's just that time of this is what, it's a, it's a representation of all those issues.
That is just a taste of the cave episodes of Star Trek. I'm sure there are many in Voyager and Enterprise, and there have been many in modern Star Trek as well. The cave episode is not a lost art, even though we now have our amazing CG volume to shoot within. They can go nowhere and make it look like anywhere they want. yeah, there are still caves to be had in Star Trek, if only because they force our characters to spend time together.
We go down into the deep recesses of not a planet, not just a planet, but also each character's soul.