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Khan makes his first appearance in ''Star Trek''{{'}}s twenty-third episode, "[[Space Seed]]", first broadcast on February 16, 1967. According to the backstory revealed in the episode, Khan is one of a group of genetically engineered supermen, bred to be free of both mental and physical defects, who were thrown from power after the [[Eugenics Wars]] of the 1990s.<ref name=Adaptations>{{cite book|title=Adaptations: From Text to Screen, Screen to Text|author=Cartmell, Deborah; Whelehan, Imelda |pages=179|year=1999|publisher=Routledge Publishing|isbn=0-415-16738-8}}</ref> Khan had been both the most successful conqueror and the most benign ruler of the group, ruling western Asia with a firm but peaceful hand until he was deposed.<ref name=Rand>{{cite book|title=The Age of Rand: Imagining an Objectivist Future World|author=Frederick Cookinham|chapter=Rules for Supermen|pages=154&ndash;155|year=2005|publisher=iUniverse|id=ISBN 0595351530}}</ref> While most of the supermen were killed or sentenced to death, Khan and 84 others escaped Earth via the [[sleeper ship]] [[SS Botany Bay|SS ''Botany Bay'']]. Cryogenically frozen in suspended animation, the crew of the ''Botany Bay'' are discovered by the crew of the [[USS Enterprise (NCC-1701)|''Enterprise'']] in 2267.
Khan makes his first appearance in ''Star Trek''{{'}}s twenty-third episode, "[[Space Seed]]", first broadcast on February 16, 1967. According to the backstory revealed in the episode, Khan is one of a group of genetically engineered supermen, bred to be free of both mental and physical defects, who were thrown from power after the [[Eugenics Wars]] of the 1990s.<ref name=Adaptations>{{cite book|title=Adaptations: From Text to Screen, Screen to Text|author=Cartmell, Deborah; Whelehan, Imelda |pages=179|year=1999|publisher=Routledge Publishing|isbn=0-415-16738-8}}</ref> Khan had been both the most successful conqueror and the most benign ruler of the group, ruling western Asia with a firm but peaceful hand until he was deposed.<ref name=Rand>{{cite book|title=The Age of Rand: Imagining an Objectivist Future World|author=Frederick Cookinham|chapter=Rules for Supermen|pages=154&ndash;155|year=2005|publisher=iUniverse|id=ISBN 0595351530}}</ref> While most of the supermen were killed or sentenced to death, Khan and 84 others escaped Earth via the [[sleeper ship]] [[SS Botany Bay|SS ''Botany Bay'']]. Cryogenically frozen in suspended animation, the crew of the ''Botany Bay'' are discovered by the crew of the [[USS Enterprise (NCC-1701)|''Enterprise'']] in 2267.


When Khan's sleep chamber malfunctions, he is transported to the ''Enterprise'', where he reawakens and learns he is in the 23rd century. Given spacious quarters while the ''Botany Bay'' is towed to a starbase, Khan fascinates and charms the ship's historian, [[Marla McGivers]], while using his access to the ship's technical manuals to learn how to take over and operate the ''Enterprise''. Khan uses McGivers's attraction to him to persuade her to revive the other supermen, allowing him to launch a coup. In order to coerce the ''Enterprise'' crew to cooperate with him, Khan places Kirk in the ship's compression chamber and threatens to kill Kirk unless the crew submits. McGivers cannot stand by as her Captain dies and frees Kirk, who neutralizes Khan's men by using a 'neural gas.' Khan heads to engineering and sets the ship's engines to self-destruct, whereupon he is incapacitated by Kirk. Captain Kirk conducts a hearing, sentencing Khan and his followers to exile on an uncolonized world, Ceti Alpha V. Khan accepts Kirk's challenge, and McGivers joins Khan rather than face court-martial. [[Spock]] wonders what the "seed" Kirk has planted will bear in a few years.
When Khan's sleep chamber malfunctions, he is transported to the ''Enterprise'', where he reawakens and learns he is in the 23rd century. Given spacious quarters while the ''Botany Bay'' is towed to a starbase, Khan fascinates and charms the ship's historian, [[Marla McGivers]], while using his access to the ship's technical manuals to learn how to take over and operate the ''Enterprise''. McGivers agrees to help Khan revive the other supermen, allowing him to launch a coup. In order to coerce the ''Enterprise'' crew to cooperate with him, Khan places Kirk in the ship's compression chamber and threatens to kill Kirk unless the crew submits. McGivers cannot stand by as her Captain dies and frees Kirk, who neutralizes Khan's men by using a 'neural gas.' Khan heads to engineering and sets the ship's engines to self-destruct, whereupon he is incapacitated by Kirk. Captain Kirk conducts a hearing, sentencing Khan and his followers to exile on an uncolonized world, Ceti Alpha V. Khan accepts Kirk's challenge, and McGivers joins Khan rather than face court-martial. [[Spock]] wonders what the "seed" Kirk has planted will bear in a few years.


===''Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan''===
===''Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan''===
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==Reception and legacy==
==Reception and legacy==
The character of Khan was critically received. Discussing the ''Star Trek'' motion pictures, the [[Associated Press]] noted that the films were measured by how menacing their foe was, and that Khan was among the best in the series;<ref name="ctv-villain">{{cite news
The character of Khan was favorably received by critics. Discussing the ''Star Trek'' motion pictures, the [[Associated Press]] noted that ''Star Trek'' films were measured by how menacing their foe was, and that Khan was among the best in the series;<ref name="ctv-villain">{{cite news
|author=Associated Press|url=http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/1039704049152_130/?hub=Entertainment
|author=Associated Press|url=http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/1039704049152_130/?hub=Entertainment
|title=Patrick Stewart envious of villain roles|date=2002-12-02|publisher=[[CTV.ca]]|accessdate=2007-12-04}}</ref> a 2002 review of the the ''Star Trek'' films ranked Khan as the greatest enemy seen in any of the movies;<ref>{{cite news|author=Germain, David|date=2002-12-13|title=Best of the baddies: No Star Trek evil one was nastier than lunatic Khan|work=[[The Gazette]]|page=D13}}</ref> ''Star Trek'' producer [[Rick Berman]] called the villain "threatening and memorable".<ref name="ctv-villain"/> Reviewers of ''The Wrath of Khan'', such as [[Roger Ebert]], rated Khan as one of the strongest elements of the film.<ref name="ebert-rev">{{cite web|author=Ebert, Roger|date=1982-01-01|url=http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19820101/REVIEWS/201010345/1023|title=Review: Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan|work=[[Chicago Sun-Times]]|accessdate=2008-09-13}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|author=Zacharek, Stephanie |date=2000-08-22|title='Star Trek II' DVD Review|work=[[Salon (magazine)|Salon]]}}</ref>
|title=Patrick Stewart envious of villain roles|date=2002-12-02|publisher=[[CTV.ca]]|accessdate=2007-12-04}}</ref> a 2002 review of the the ''Star Trek'' films ranked Khan as the greatest enemy seen in any of the movies;<ref>{{cite news|author=Germain, David|date=2002-12-13|title=Best of the baddies: No Star Trek evil one was nastier than lunatic Khan|work=[[The Gazette]]|page=D13}}</ref> ''Star Trek'' producer [[Rick Berman]] called the villain "threatening and memorable".<ref name="ctv-villain"/> Reviewers of ''The Wrath of Khan'', such as [[Roger Ebert]], rated Khan as one of the strongest elements of the film.<ref name="ebert-rev">{{cite web|author=Ebert, Roger|date=1982-01-01|url=http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19820101/REVIEWS/201010345/1023|title=Review: Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan|work=[[Chicago Sun-Times]]|accessdate=2008-09-13}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|author=Zacharek, Stephanie |date=2000-08-22|title='Star Trek II' DVD Review|work=[[Salon (magazine)|Salon]]}}</ref>

Revision as of 17:00, 3 October 2008

Template:Star Trek character

Khan Noonien Singh, commonly shortened to Khan, is a villain in the fictional Star Trek universe. According to backstory given in the character's first appearance, the Star Trek original series episode "Space Seed", Khan is a superhuman tyrant who once controlled more than a quarter of the Earth during the Eugenics Wars of the 1990s. After being revived by the crew of the Enterprise in the 2260s, Khan attempts to capture the starship, but is thwarted by James T. Kirk and exiled to a harsh world to create a new civilization with his people. The character returns in the 1982 film Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, set fifteen years in the future, in which Khan escapes his imprisonment and sets out to seek revenge upon Kirk. The character was portrayed by Ricardo Montalbán on both the television episode and in the movie.

Initially conceived as a brutal man of Nordic ancestry, Khan first appears as a Sikh who is both admired and opposed by the Enterprise crew. Harve Bennett, executive producer for Star Trek II, later chose Khan as the villain to appear in the sequel to Star Trek: The Motion Picture. To reflect the time spent marooned on an inhospitable world, Khan was given a costume which looked as though it was scavenged from different items and showed off Montalbán's physique. The character has been positively received by critics and fans; Khan was voted as one of the top ten greatest film villains of all time by the Online Film Critics Society.

Appearances

"Space Seed"

Khan makes his first appearance in Star Trek's twenty-third episode, "Space Seed", first broadcast on February 16, 1967. According to the backstory revealed in the episode, Khan is one of a group of genetically engineered supermen, bred to be free of both mental and physical defects, who were thrown from power after the Eugenics Wars of the 1990s.[1] Khan had been both the most successful conqueror and the most benign ruler of the group, ruling western Asia with a firm but peaceful hand until he was deposed.[2] While most of the supermen were killed or sentenced to death, Khan and 84 others escaped Earth via the sleeper ship SS Botany Bay. Cryogenically frozen in suspended animation, the crew of the Botany Bay are discovered by the crew of the Enterprise in 2267.

When Khan's sleep chamber malfunctions, he is transported to the Enterprise, where he reawakens and learns he is in the 23rd century. Given spacious quarters while the Botany Bay is towed to a starbase, Khan fascinates and charms the ship's historian, Marla McGivers, while using his access to the ship's technical manuals to learn how to take over and operate the Enterprise. McGivers agrees to help Khan revive the other supermen, allowing him to launch a coup. In order to coerce the Enterprise crew to cooperate with him, Khan places Kirk in the ship's compression chamber and threatens to kill Kirk unless the crew submits. McGivers cannot stand by as her Captain dies and frees Kirk, who neutralizes Khan's men by using a 'neural gas.' Khan heads to engineering and sets the ship's engines to self-destruct, whereupon he is incapacitated by Kirk. Captain Kirk conducts a hearing, sentencing Khan and his followers to exile on an uncolonized world, Ceti Alpha V. Khan accepts Kirk's challenge, and McGivers joins Khan rather than face court-martial. Spock wonders what the "seed" Kirk has planted will bear in a few years.

Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan

Khan returns in the 1982 feature film Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, when USS Reliant officers Clark Terrell and Pavel Chekov beam down to what they believe is Ceti Alpha VI, looking for an inhospitable world to test the Genesis device, a powerful terraforming tool. Khan's followers capture Terrell and Chekov, and Khan explains that the barren wasteland they now inhabit is in fact Ceti Alpha V. The sixth planet of the system exploded shortly after Khan and his followers were marooned, causing massive climate disturbances. The planet was turned into a desert, and many of the survivors (including McGivers, who had become Khan's wife) were killed by the only surviving species of animal, the Ceti eel. By the time the Reliant arrives at Ceti Alpha, only twenty of Khan's followers are alive. Swearing vengeance on Kirk, Khan takes control of Chekov and Terrell using ceti eels implanted in the officer's brains, rendering them vulnerable to suggestion. Khan then seizes control of the Reliant, intent on capturing Project Genesis and attaining his revenge for exile.[1]

Lured by Khan to the planet Regula I, the Enterprise falls victim to Khan's surprise attack. Kirk, his ship disabled, tricks Khan by using a special code to remotely lower the Reliant's shields and inflict significant damage. Khan is forced to withdraw and make repairs. Using the mind-controlled Terrell and Chekov as spies, Khan captures the Genesis device and leaves Kirk marooned on Regula I. However, Khan is deceived by Spock into thinking that the Enterprise is crippled. Khan is surprised when Kirk and the Enterprise escape to the nearby Mutara nebula. Goaded into following Kirk, Khan pilots the Reliant into the nebula, where shields and visuals are inoperable. Due to Khan's inexperience with three-dimensional space combat, the Enterprise disables the Reliant and kills Khan's followers. Refusing to accept defeat, Khan activates the Genesis device, intent on killing his foe along with himself. Khan believes he has doomed his enemy before he dies, but the self-sacrifice of Spock allows the Enterprise to escape via the warp drive.

Novels

Author Greg Cox penned three non-canonical Star Trek novels featuring Khan. In the two-volume The Eugenics Wars: The Rise and Fall of Khan Noonien Singh, Khan and his followers are placed aboard the Botany Bay by Gary Seven as part of a deal to stop Khan's machinations on Earth. The 2006 follow-up, To Reign in Hell: The Exile of Khan Noonien Singh, relates what happened to Khan and his fellow exiles between the events of "Space Seed" and The Wrath of Khan.

Design and analysis

In "Space Seed" writer Carey Wilber's original plot treatment, the character of Khan was a Nordic superman named Harold Erricsen. The first draft of the script introduced the character as John Ericssen, who is revealed to be a man involved in "the First World Tyranny" called Ragnar Thorwald. The character of Thorwald was more brutal than Khan in the final version, killing guards using a phaser.[3] By the final draft, Khan is of Indian ancestry.[4] The character's Latino accent and superhuman appearance strongly differentiate him from most Star Trek characters.[5] In "Space Seed", Khan is presented as having several good aspects. He is gracious, smiling, fearless, and generous. He is not threatened by the success of others, and encourages their self-esteem. He is also ambitious, desiring a challenge commensurate with his abilities. This ambition, however, is not tempered by any consideration of the rights of others.[2] Author Paul Cantor asserts that Khan is a mirror image of Kirk, sharing his aggressiveness, ambition, and even his womanizing tendencies, but possessing them in far greater degree.[6] During the episode, several of the characters express their admiration for the man, while opposing his plans and what he stands for at the same time.[6]

File:Khan-and-company---star-tre.png
Khan and his followers in Star Trek II. Note Khan's revealing costume and the garments worn by his crew.

After the disappointing response to the first Star Trek feature film, The Motion Picture, Paramount executives appointed Harve Bennett, a television producer who had never watched Star Trek, to be executive producer for the sequel.[7] Bennett watched all the original series episodes and chose Khan from "Space Seed" as a possible villain for the film.[8] Early drafts of the script had Khan as a shadowy tyrant leading a planet in revolt; later drafts added the "Genesis device" which Khan would steal.[8]

Costume designer Robert Fletcher wanted to emphasize the effects of their harsh environment on Khan and his followers. "My intention with Khan was to express the fact that they had been marooned on that planet with no technical infrastructure, so they had to cannibalize from the spaceship whatever they used or wore. Therefore, I tried to make it look as if they had dressed themselves out of pieces of upholstery and electrical equipment that composed the ship," he said.[9] Director Nicholas Meyer told Montalbán to keep Khan's right glove on at all times, in order to give viewers a puzzle they could form their own opinions about and add mystery to the character.[10] Meyer has been repeatedly asked if Montalbán wore a prosthetic chest for his scenes, as his uniform was purposefully designed with an open front. Meyer replied in audio commentary for the film that Montalbán (who was 61 during filming)[1] is "one tough cookie" and that no prosthetics were applied to the actor's sizeable frame.[10]

At no point during The Wrath of Khan are Khan and Kirk face to face; they speak to each other only over communication links such as view screens. This was due in part to the fact that the set of the Reliant was a redress of the Enterprise bridge, and the two actors' scenes were filmed four months apart.[11] Montalbán recited his lines with a script girl instead of to William Shatner.[12]

Montalbán said in promotional interviews for the movie that he realized early on in his career that a good villain does not see himself as villainous.[12] The villain may do villainous things, but the character feels that he is doing them for righteous reasons. Montalbán further stated he always tried to find a flaw in the character because no one is completely good or completely evil; while Khan had a rather distorted view of reality and therefore performs acts of evil, he still feels that his vengeance is a noble cause because of the death of his wife.[12] Khan quotes the character of Ahab from Moby Dick throughout the film, driving home his lust to make Kirk pay for the wrongs he has inflicted upon him.[10]

Reception and legacy

The character of Khan was favorably received by critics. Discussing the Star Trek motion pictures, the Associated Press noted that Star Trek films were measured by how menacing their foe was, and that Khan was among the best in the series;[13] a 2002 review of the the Star Trek films ranked Khan as the greatest enemy seen in any of the movies;[14] Star Trek producer Rick Berman called the villain "threatening and memorable".[13] Reviewers of The Wrath of Khan, such as Roger Ebert, rated Khan as one of the strongest elements of the film.[15][16]

Critic Christopher Null notes that "It is nearly gospel now among Trekkies that ... Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan is the undisputed best of the series, and will likely never meet its equal," and calls Khan the "greatest role of [Montalban's] career".[17] Though he felt that the villain of Star Trek: The Motion Picture, VGER, was more cerebral and interesting, author James Iaccino notes most fans and moviegoers preferred the archetypical good-versus-evil fight the struggle between Khan and Kirk represents.[18] Villains in subsequent Star Trek films have been measured by the standard of Khan, with Paramount promising fans that the villain of Star Trek Generations would be equal to the genetic superman.[19]

Khan is recognized as a great villain outside of the Star Trek series. The CTV Television Network called the character "one of sci-fi's great villains."[13] In 2002, the Online Film Critics Society's 132 members voted Khan as the 10th Greatest Screen Villain of all time, the only Star Trek character to appear in the listing.[20] In 2006, Emmy Magazine voted Khan "TV's Most Out-Of-This-World Character", beating out other science-fiction characters such as The Doctor and Commander Adama. Editors wrote that "Khan was so cool we would've bought a Chrysler Cordoba if he'd told us to," in reference to a series of Chrysler commercials Montalban appeared in.[21] The character also had a cultural impact outside of Star Trek fandom; a clip from The Wrath of Khan featuring Kirk screaming "Khaaan!" was one of pop culture appropriations that became a "popular fad" driving the success of the website YTMND.[22]

References

  1. ^ a b c Cartmell, Deborah; Whelehan, Imelda (1999). Adaptations: From Text to Screen, Screen to Text. Routledge Publishing. p. 179. ISBN 0-415-16738-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ a b Frederick Cookinham (2005). "Rules for Supermen". The Age of Rand: Imagining an Objectivist Future World. iUniverse. pp. 154–155. ISBN 0595351530.
  3. ^ Freeman, John (editor) (2005). "Flashback: 'Space Seed'". Star Trek Magazine. 1 (120). Titan Magazines. {{cite journal}}: |author= has generic name (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  4. ^ Marla McGivers: From the northern India area, I'd guess. Probably a Sikh. They were the most fantastic warriors. —"Space Seed". Star Trek: The Original Series. Season 1. Episode 22. 1967-02-16. NBC. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |episodelink= and |seriesno= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ Daniel Bernardi (1998). Star Trek and History: Race–Ing Toward a White Future. Rutgers University Press. pp. 84–85. ISBN 0-813-52466-0.
  6. ^ a b Cantor, Paul A. (2001). Gilligan Unbound: Popular Culture in the Age of Globalization. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 222–223. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |ibsn= ignored (help)
  7. ^ Rioux, Terry Lee (2005). From Sawdust to Stardust: The Biography of DeForest Kelley. Pocket Books. pp. 240–242. ISBN 0-7434-5762-5.
  8. ^ a b Robinson, Ben (editor) (2002). "Special 'The Wrath of Khan' Issue". Star Trek: The Magazine. 3 (5). Fabbri Publishing. {{cite journal}}: |author= has generic name (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  9. ^ Star Trek cast and crew. Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, The Directors Edition: Special Features: Designing Khan (DVD; Disc 2/2). Paramount Pictures. {{cite AV media}}: Unknown parameter |date2= ignored (help)
  10. ^ a b c Meyer, Nicholas. Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, The Directors Edition: Audio commentary (DVD; Disc 1/2). Paramount Pictures. {{cite AV media}}: Unknown parameter |date2= ignored (help)
  11. ^ Shatner, William (1994). Star Trek Memories. HarperCollins. p. 161. ISBN 0-0610-9235-5. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  12. ^ a b c Spelling, Ian (1994-08-07). "From deep space to heaven". The Toronto Sun. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  13. ^ a b c Associated Press (2002-12-02). "Patrick Stewart envious of villain roles". CTV.ca. Retrieved 2007-12-04.
  14. ^ Germain, David (2002-12-13). "Best of the baddies: No Star Trek evil one was nastier than lunatic Khan". The Gazette. p. D13.
  15. ^ Ebert, Roger (1982-01-01). "Review: Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2008-09-13.
  16. ^ Zacharek, Stephanie (2000-08-22). "'Star Trek II' DVD Review". Salon.
  17. ^ Christopher Null (2002). "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan". Filmcritic.com. Retrieved 2007-12-04.
  18. ^ Iaccino, James (1998). Jungian Reflections Within the Cinema: A Psychological Analysis of Sci-Fi and Fantasy Archetypes. Praeger/Greenwood. pp. 18–21. ISBN 0-275-95048-4.
  19. ^ Khoorsed, Jehan (1994-11-18). "Star Trek fans facing major disappointment". The Ottawa Citizen. p. B6.
  20. ^ Melloy, Neil (2002-10-08). "Vader our most wanted villain". Courier Mail. p. 18.
  21. ^ Staff (2006-06-12). "Montalblan's Singh Tops out-of-this-world poll". World Entertainment News Network. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  22. ^ Turnage, Jeremy (2006-02-05). "Humorous Web site YTMND.com rising in popularity". Financial Times. Retrieved 2007-12-04.

Further reading

External links