Wolf in the Fold

Wolf in the Fold

__NOTOC__ST episode
name = Wolf In The Fold


Mr. Scott reacts to the accusation of murder against him.
series = TOS
ep_num = 43
prod_num = 036
remas._num = 23
date = December 22, 1967
writer = Robert Bloch
director = Joseph Pevney
guest = John Winston
John Fiedler Charles Macaulay Joseph Bernard Charles Dierkop Tania Lemani Judy McConnell Virginia Aldridge Judi Sherven Eddie Paskey William Blackburn (actor)
stardate = 3614.9
year = 2268
prev = Obsession
next = The Trouble With Tribbles

"Wolf in the Fold" is a second season episode of "". It is episode #43, production #36, and was broadcast on December 22, 1967. It was written by Robert Bloch, and directed by Joseph Pevney.

Overview: A series of bizarre murders points to Mr. Scott as the prime suspect.

Plot

On stardate 3614.9, the starship USS "Enterprise" arrives at Argellius II, a planet with a Middle-Eastern cultural influence primarily dedicated to peaceful hedonism. Ship's Captain James T. Kirk, chief medical officer Dr. Leonard McCoy, and chief engineer Montgomery Scott, beam down for some shore leave.

Scotty is attracted to a belly dancer named Kara and invites her to walk down a fog-shrouded alley. Shortly thereafter, Kara is stabbed to death and Scotty, in shock, is holding the murder weapon. His are the only fingerprints on the knife, but he claims to have no memory of the event. Dr. McCoy diagnoses Scotty with a mild concussion, caused by a female crew member aboard the Enterprise. McCoy has already concluded that Scotty has developed a resentment towards women, and that distrust could manifest itself in murder.

Hengist, the Chief Administrator of Argellius II, demands that Scotty be locked up suggesting he may murder again if left unsupervised. Prefect Jaris suggests that Kirk seek the advice of his wife Sybo who is an Argelian empath. Kirk agrees, but he wants Scotty monitored by a tricorder and orders Lt. Karen Tracy to beam down and administer the test. Kara's father mentions another suspect: Kara's former fiancé Morla, who, unlike most Argellians, is extremely jealous and fought with Kara. Morla is brought in for questioning but he claims he had nothing to do with the killing; he actually left the cafe where she danced in order to maintain his composure.

Lt. Tracy begins testing Scotty. Suddenly, screams ring out and the others find Tracy stabbed to death and Scotty once again in shock. Hengist believes that Scotty must be the killer, as there is no way into that room except through the room in which the others were setting up for Sybo's seance.

Jaris and his wife Sybo insist on continuing and Sybo falls into a deep trance. She senses a great evil and cries out several names: "Beratis", "Kesla", "Redjac", all names for an ancient entity that has intense hatred for the life of women. The room goes black, Sybo screams and when the lights come Sybo is fatally stabbed, lying in Scotty's arms.

Kirk has everyone beamed back to the "Enterprise" so that the computers can analyze Mr. Scott's testimony of innocence. The computer confirms that both Scotty and Morla know nothing about the murders. Scotty insists however, that he felt the presence of a cold, evil creature during Sybo's meditation.

The computer confirms such a creature could exist, but would be incorporeal, existing as formless electromagnetic impulses. The computer cites the creatures of Alpha Carina V who subsist on the emotion of love. It also suggests that the creature may take a solid form at will, as the miletus cloud creature of Alpha Madoris that can change from gaseous to solid forms. Spock believes this "Redjac" to be an entity that gains nourishment from the fear of its victims.

Kirk decides to run the names spoken by Sybo through the computer. The machine returns information that Beratis (of Rigel IV), and Kesla (of Deneb II), are names given to the unresolved identities of serial killers on those worlds. It also identifies Redjac as "Red Jack", the name of the elusive 19th Century Earth serial killer Jack the Ripper.

The computer goes on to say that Redjac may have been responsible for other killings, both on Earth (seven women in Shanghai, China, Earth, in 1932; five similar murders in Kiev, U.S.S.R., Earth, in 1974) and other planets; there were eight murders of women in the Martian Colonies in 2105 and ten murders of women in Heliopolis, Alpha Eridani II in 2156. Spock notes that all these locations lie sequentially between Argellius and Earth.

The computer adds that the Beratis killings took place on Rigel IV less than one solar year ago, and that the knife used in the killings matches knives crafted by the indigenous Hill People of Rigel IV's Argus River region. This implicates Mr. Hengist, who is from Rigel IV. Mr. Hengist becomes nervous and denies the evidence points to him. He flees the room, but Captain Kirk subdues him. Dr. McCoy discovers the man is dead.

Suddenly, the ship's computer system goes haywire and Hengist's distorted laughter is heard throughout the ship. He makes threats that they can never catch him and that they will all die. Spock believes the Redjac entity has taken over the ship through its computer and that the entity will become stronger by feeding off the crew's growing fear.

Dr. McCoy tranquilises everyone on the ship and Spock neutralizes Redjac's control of the ship's computer by ordering it to compute to the last digit the value of π. As their fears fade, Redjac weakens and must return to Hengist's body. Kirk has him rushed to the transporter room. He beams Hengist, and Redjac with him, out into the depths of space.

40th anniversary remastering

This episode was remastered in 2006 and first aired on March 10, 2007 as part of the remastered 40th Anniversary original series. It was preceded two weeks earlier by "The Paradise Syndrome" and followed three weeks later by "The Tholian Web". Video and audio have been digitally restored, and the episode features the all-CGI USS "Enterprise" that is standard among the revisions. Other changes to this episode include:

*Argellius II was given a more realistic look. There were no major changes to the rest of this episode.

Notes

*This episode derives from a short story by screenwriter Bloch, titled "Yours Truly, Jack the Ripper," published in 1943 in the magazine "Weird Tales". In the story, two men discuss a history of serial murder, and speculate that the Ripper may be a practitioner of occult arts whose murders are sacrifices to keep him eternally young.
*Around the same time that Bloch was writing this episode, he was asked by Harlan Ellison to write a sequel of sorts to "Yours Truly, Jack the Ripper," extending the Ripper into the future. The story, "A Toy for Juliette," was published in the landmark "Dangerous Visions" anthology in 1967. Ellison wrote a continuation of Bloch's story for the same anthology, "The Prowler in the City at the Edge of the World." The title is strikingly similar to that of Ellison's own script for Star Trek, "The City on the Edge of Forever."
*In a comic adventure published in 1985, taking place between the third and fourth Star Trek films, the "Enterprise" crew, now on the "U.S.S. Excelsior", face Redjac a second time. The creature works against types and uses a female host, Lieutenant Nancy Bryce (a character created for the comic book), to commit its murders. A way is found to free Lt. Bryce and destroy the entity once and for all.
*In a comic adventure of ' (which assumes the preceding adventure never happened), the crew of the "Enterprise-D" face Redjac. Having provoked a planetwide war, Redjac transfers himself into the "Enterprises computer and creates an 1880s style London in the holodeck, abducting various crewmembers to act as his victims. Data, in his Sherlock Holmes persona, rescues some of the crewmembers before confronting Redjac face-to-face. Redjac is tricked into facing Worf in single combat, which focuses all his energy into one location, allowing the crew to transfer him into a storage pod and trap him on a distant moon.
*The entity's description bears a striking similarity to the Horla from Guy de Maupassant's short horror story "Le Horla". The story had been adapted for the film "Diary of a Madman" a few years before the Star Trek episode was produced. The character Morla may be a variation on the name Horla.
*The entity also bears a stylistic resemblance to the spirit that takes the form of Adolf Hitler in "The Twilight Zone" episode "He's Alive," and Mick Jagger's narration in the Rolling Stones song "Sympathy for the Devil."
*The title of the episode comes from part of a poem written by British poet Lord George Byron. The same poem is paraphrased by Colin Firth in the 1997 film "Fever Pitch".

External links

* [http://trekmovie.com/2007/03/11/wolf-in-the-fold-screenshots/ Remastered "Wolf in the Fold" at Trekmovie.com]
* [http://www.startrek.com/startrek/view/series/TOS/episode/68732.html "Wolf in the Fold"] at StarTrek.com


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