Vox In Excelso
| Series: | Star Trek: Starfleet Academy |
|---|---|
| Medium: | Live Action Television Episode |
| Episode Number: | 104 |
| Production Number: | 104 |
| Original Air Date: | |
| Directed By: | Doug Aarniokoski |
| Written By: | Gaia Violo, and Eric Anthony Glover |
I'm not going to bury the lead here, this was one of the best episodes of Star Trek I've seen in a while, and that is saying something.
This episode focuses on the character of Jay-Den Kraag, and on where the Klingons are in a post-burn era. We learn that Qo'noS had a large number of Dilithium reactors on the planet surface, and as a result when the burn happened, they all exploded. As the Klingon home world was already unstable, we are reminded in this episode that Qo'noS was marred by volcanos, the result was the destruction of the planet, and billions of Klingons died in an instant. The Klingon people became refugees, scattered around the galaxy and became an endangered species.
We get Jay-Den's backstory of what led to him applying for Starfleet Academy. We learn about his 2 fathers and mother (yes a triad relationship, presumably the Klingons have resorted to triads and other non-traditional relationships as an effort to aid in the repopulations of their species) and more importantly about his brother Thar, who recognized what made Jay-Den special was that he was fully Klingon but also not meant for "the hunt," but instead for something different, and that that was enough, that that was ok, and that Jay-Den was fine just the way he is.
We learn a lot of what life has been like for the Klingons over the last century, and we find out about a horrible disaster that may have resulted in the death of the remainder of Jay-Den's family.
Starfleet has discovered that there is an uninhabited planet in Federation space named Faan Alpha that is virtually identical to Qo'noS, it is covered in volcanos with volcanic emissions, and the temperature was nearly the same. As Admiral Vance says, the Klingons are essentially the only race that would have any interest in a planet like this, and Starfleet wants to give it to them.
The problem is, with the Klingons decimated, all they have left is their pride, their honor, their tradition. It reminds me a lot of Fiddler on the Roof, where a town of displaced Jewish people in Russia cling - on (pun very much intended) to their tradition to hold themselves alive but are dieing out both in-spite-of and because-of that tradition.
Add to that centering the episode around a debate competition fits the college theme while also fitting Star Trek, where the greatest episodes involved debating and public speaking.
I have more I can say, but I'm going to leave it here, the first Admiral tiered episode of Starfleet Academy.
HD3 Episode Rank:
Admiral
(S Tier)