Season: | 4 |
Episode: | 21 |
Production: | 195 |
Director: | Jonathan Frakes |
Photographer: | Marvin Rush |
Music: | Ron Jones |
Guests: |
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Prev: | Qpid |
Next: | Half a Life |
Episode List: | List of Star Trek: The Next Generation episodes |
Season Article: | Star Trek: The Next Generation season 4 |
"The Drumhead" is the 95th episode of the syndicated American science fiction television series and the 21st episode of the program's fourth season. The episode was directed by cast member Jonathan Frakes. It takes the form of a courtroom drama.
Set in the 24th century, the series follows the adventures of the Starfleet crew of the Federation starship Enterprise-D. In this episode, an explosion aboard the Enterprise leads to a high-level investigation headed by Admiral Norah Satie (Jean Simmons), a retired officer renowned for her skill at exposing conspiracies.
When an explosion within the dilithium chamber of the Federation starship Enterprises main engineering appears to be the work of sabotage, Starfleet Command dispatches Norah Satie (Jean Simmons), a retired rear admiral from the Legal Division of its Support Services Section, to lead an investigation to uncover the cause.
Worf (Michael Dorn) discovers that J'Dan (Henry Woronicz), a Klingon exchange officer, had been using modified hypospray syringes to encode information into amino acid sequences for secret transport. J'Dan admits his collaboration with the Romulans but attests that he did not sabotage the chamber. Satie and Captain Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) interview crew members who associated with J'Dan, including Dr. Beverly Crusher and medical technician Simon Tarses (Spencer Garrett). Meanwhile, Chief Engineer Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton) and Lieutenant Commander Data (Brent Spiner) determine that the hatch had failed due to simple fatigue, not sabotage.
Picard considers the matter closed, but Satie expands her search for traitors, revealing Tarses' Romulan heritage and questioning Picard's guilt following his time as Locutus of Borg. Starfleet's chief of security, Admiral Thomas Henry (Earl Billings) attends the tribunals. Picard begins to compare the tribunal to a drumhead, resembling a battle-field court-martial of the 18th and 19th centuries infamous for its numerous miscarriages of justice.
Picard recalls a quote from Satie's own father Aaron Satie: "With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably."[1] Satie is enraged at him invoking her father and condemns Picard as a traitor. Admiral Henry becomes disgusted with Satie's fanaticism and calls a halt to any additional investigation. After they leave the ship, Picard privately confers with Worf, displaying regret at the arrogance he has shown as a human of the 24th Century as opposed to one in the 20th and earlier ("We think we've come so far."), and notes that such fanatics are well-disguised through apparent good words and deeds, and humanity must remain vigilant against them to protect their freedom.
Zack Handlen of The A.V. Club gave the episode a grade A.[2] Keith DeCandido of Tor.com rated it 3 out of 10.[3]
"The Drumhead" was rated the 15th best episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation in 2016 by The Hollywood Reporter. Actor Michael Dorn, who played the character Worf on the show, has stated this was his favorite episode of the series, and in particular liked Worf and Picard's scene at the end of the episode.[4]
In 2014, "The Drumhead" was rated as the 34th best episode of Star Trek by io9, when reviewing the top 100 episodes of all series up to that time (including animated and live-action television series).[5] In 2018, Tom's Guide rated "The Drumhead" one of the 15 best episodes featuring Picard.[6] In 2017, Den of Geek ranked Jean Simmons' role as one of the top ten guest stars on Star Trek: The Next Generation.[7]
In 2017, Vulture.com listed this episode as one of the best of Star Trek: The Next Generation.[8]
In 2018, Entertainment Weekly ranked "The Drumhead" as one of the top ten moments of Jean-Luc Picard.[9] In 2018, Popular Mechanics highlighted "The Drumhead" as one of the best Picard episodes, and as recommended viewing for audiences to prepare for a new television series based on that character, .[10]
In 2019, The Hollywood Reporter ranked it among the top 25 episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation, noting the acting performance by guest star Jean Simmons and its narrative warning about those who spread fear, of fanatical biases, and McCarthyism.[11]
In 2020, Games Radar recommended watching this episode prior to viewing Star Trek: Picard.[12]
In 2020, Space.com considered Picard's speech (beginning "With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censored. The first thought forbidden. The first freedom denied—chains us all irrevocably") as one of the character's top ten moments.
In 2020, ScreenRant ranked "The Drumhead" the number one best episode of all Star Trek franchise television episodes up to that time.[13] That same year the rated as the most important TNG episode with a morality message that "in an age of social media and out of control fake news, Admiral Satie's rhetoric has been taken to insane extremes within our culture, forcing us to once again examine our propensity for falling victim to conspiracy theories and nefarious agendas perpetuated by bad-faith actors."[14]
This episode is featured on the Star Trek: The Next Generation – Jean-Luc Picard Collection DVD set for Region 1 only, released in 2004.[15]
CBS announced on September 28, 2011, in celebration of the series' twenty-fifth anniversary, that Star Trek: The Next Generation would be completely re-mastered in 1080p high definition from the original 35mm film negatives. For the remaster almost 25,000 reels of original film stock were rescanned and reedited, and all visual effects were digitally recomposed from original large-format negatives and newly created CGI shots. The release was accompanied by 7.1 DTS Master Audio.[16] On July 30, 2013 "The Drumhead" was released on 1080p high definition as part of the Season 4 Blu-ray box set in the United States.[17] [18] The set was released on July 29, 2013, in the United Kingdom.[19]
This episode was released in the United States on September 3, 2002, as part of the Star Trek: The Next Generation season four DVD box set.[20]