[A little break in Oscar week for a guest post by John Perich about Star Trek II. Leave your Kahn-ments below. –Ed.]
So we already know that Wrath of Khan is a deeper movie than we anticipated. But is there a chance it’s deeper still?
There are two moderate plot holes early in Wrath of Khan, both on the planet Ceti Alpha V. Left as is they make for a few hiccups in the story. Interpreted properly, they shed a whole new light on the real puppetmasters of Star Trek II.
ITEM #1: “THIS IS CETI ALPHA V”
Chekov and Terrell land on what they think is Ceti Alpha VI, hoping to find a good spot to plant the Genesis device. They poke around inside some crashed cargo carriers. Eventually Chekov spots a souvenir of Botany Bay, the hibernation vessel that escorted Khan from Earth, and spazzes out. He tries to run, but not before Khan and his goons ambush him and Terrell.
(Note that Khan recognizes Chekov, despite Chekov not being present in the original episode where Khan was encountered. That’s not the plot hole I’m talking about. Continuity’s a mug’s game.)
Khan revisits the past and explains what’s going on:
KHAN: He never told you how Admiral Kirk sent seventy of us into exile on this barren sand heap with only the contents of these cargo bays to sustain us?
CHEKOV: You lie! On Ceti Alpha Five there was life, a fair chance –
KHAN: THIS is Ceti Alpha Five. Ceti Alpha Six exploded six months after we were left here. The shock shifted the orbit of this planet and everything was laid waste.
Two problems here:
- A planet exploded 15 years ago and no one noticed? What sort of Federation of Planets is this? Even presuming Ceti Alpha is some galactic backwater that nobody ever visits, wouldn’t the crew of the Reliant, upon arriving in the system, think to count the number of planets? It’s not like the planet has a sign on it saying “Ceti Alpha V.” The Reliant mistakes it for Ceti Alpha VI because Ceti Alpha VI’s explosion shifted V’s orbit. So they must have some sense of the number of planets in the Ceti Alpha system and what their orbits should be. But that fails them here.
- The Reliant is searching for suitable planets for the Genesis Device. This means they’re poring over a list generated by the Starfleet database. When the Ceti Alpha system came up, wouldn’t Khan’s name appear as a footnote? “Oh, by the way, the genetic superman who briefly ruled a quarter of Earth a few hundred years ago is stranded on one of these planets. Keep an eye out.” That sort of warning would have to exist, if only to avoid other Starfleet ships landing on Ceti Alpha Five and getting hijacked.
Taken in isolation, either of those errors would be odd. Taken in conjunction, they’re unforgivable. And I have a hard time believing those sort of databasing errors happen in what is essentially a space navy full of nerds.
ITEM #2: “CETI ALPHA V’s ONLY REMAINING INDIGENOUS LIFE FORM”
KHAN: [T]heir young enter through the ears and wrap themselves around the cerebral cortex. This has the effect of rendering the victim extremely susceptible to suggestion. Later, as they grow, follows madness–and death.
There’s a problem here: susceptible to suggestion how? Do the eels make you susceptible to ANY suggestion?
If yes, then why don’t Chekov and Terrell remain suspiciously gullible once they beam back aboard the Reliant? “Go fuck yourself, Terrell… hey, wait, what are you doing?”
If no, then that means the hypnosis turns off after a few minutes. If that’s the case, then why would Chekov and Terrell continue following Khan’s commands?
Read on to find out.
SOLUTION: THE EELS ARE RUNNING THE SHOW
As we know, fifteen years earlier, in the episode “Space Seed,” Kirk dropped Khan and the survivors of Botany Bay on the fertile but dangerous planet Ceti Alpha V. The explosion of Ceti Alpha VI six months later knocks the planet out of orbit, causing dust storms that wipe out nearly all organic life.
However, just as the Enterprise awoke a long-dormant conqueror when they found the Botany Bay, so too does this explosion awaken the hibernating masters of Ceti Alpha V: the Ceti eels.
A superintelligent hivemind, the Ceti eels comprise a single brain, of which each individual eel is the equivalent of a cell. The Eel-mind went into a torpor when some catastrophe scattered them, turning them from a single supergenius mass into a bunch of mindless worms. However, the eels do have one evolved advantage: an eel that can merge with the cortex of an intelligent creature can boost its “transmission range.” This enables the Eel-mind to slowly begin rebuilding itself through parasitism and subterfuge.
The eels don’t make their victims vulnerable to suggestion. They plant suggestions themselves.
By luck, an eel sneaks into the ear of Marla McGivers, the Starfleet lieutenant who fell in love with Khan and followed him into exile. She’s no slouch, but she doesn’t have the eugenic hypersenses of the rest of the Botany Bay crew, so the eel’s able to creep up on her while she sleeps. Now she’s acting as a transmitter, waking up any nearby eels into a semblance of the original Eel-mind. The Eel-mind’s not up to full strength yet, so it tells her to sneak eels into more crewmembers.
The enhanced cortical capacity of these genetic superhumans restores the Eel-mind to awareness much faster than normal. Sadly, it takes some delicate balancing to keep an eel from consuming its host. Lt. McGivers, as well as some other crew members, are victims of this early experimentation. However, once they gain control of Khan the battle is won.
The eels cannot run a man like a puppet, but they can plant suggestions he will find reasonable. Khan sincerely believes that the eels make people more suggestible–because that’s what the eels want Khan, a man who seeks power over others, to think. In truth, this is simply the easiest suggestion that will get Khan to put eels in as many ears as possible.
Fifteen years later, the Eel-mind senses the Reliant in orbit over Ceti Alpha V. It suggests that Khan hack the Starfleet database uplink using Botany Bay’s communications gear, erasing all reference to his presence in the system. Chekov and Terrell are lured down, get a lecture from Khan, and end up with some eels in the brain.
Now, for the first time in its life, the Eel-mind is larger than the planet on which it was born. Khan, free of his prison and with the resources of a starship at his disposal, considers flight to a distant planet and a slow re-arming process. But the Eel-mind suggests that revenge on Kirk would be much sweeter. Even though Kirk was nothing but kind to him fifteen years ago – he didn’t have to let Khan live, after all – Khan follow’s his master’s suggestion.
Khan might want to be free, but the Eel-mind wants more starships.
Unfortunately for the aliens, and fortunately for the Federation, the only two eels that get anywhere near the crew of the Enterprise get killed or blown out of their rider’s heads. Kirk and Khan never actually get into the same room at the same time. The Reliant is blown out of the Mutara Nebula, and with it every eel “wired” to a transmitting cortex. In one terrible second, the Eel-mind’s consciousness is again wiped out.
But nobody knows exactly what the Ceti eels are capable of. McCoy doesn’t recognize the eel when he blasts it out of Chekov’s ear. Even if Chekov remembers what Khan told him, that’s pure misinformation.
So for now, and for milennia to come, the Eel-mind sleeps. And waits.
Email John at perich at gmail dot com.