Samsara (Red Dwarf)

"Samsara" is the second episode of Red Dwarf XI and the 63rd in the series run. Originally broadcast on the British television channel Dave on 29 September 2016, it was made available early on 23 September 2016 on UKTV Play.

"Samsara"
Red Dwarf episode
Lister and Cat are trapped within the Samsara, with only each other for company
Episode no.Series 11
Episode 2
Directed byDoug Naylor
Written byDoug Naylor
Original air date29 September 2016
Guest appearance(s)
  • Dan Tetsell as Green
  • Maggie Service as Barker
  • Eddie Bagayawa as Captain Tom Kadri

After receiving an escape pod containing the ashes of its former occupants, the crew venture underwater to the escape pod's crashed ship, the Samsara.

Synopsis

Lister and Rimmer are playing a game of "Mineopoly" to settle a bet, with Lister secretly cheating using stashed cards. It comes down to the wire, only for Rimmer to roll a losing 2 and a 1, which he rolls again several more times. Meanwhile as Red Dwarf nears an ocean moon, Kryten receives a message from a woman onboard an escape pod in orbit which is cut off. Bringing the pod aboard reveals its two occupants, Professor Rachel Barker and Colonel Jim Green, reduced to ash. Looking into the escape pod logs, Kryten reveals that Barker was a computer specialist whilst Green was the mission director, both were married but not to each other. He also identifies the spaceship the pod belongs to, Samsara, and locates it crashed on the ocean moon. The crew take Starbug down to investigate.

When the crew arrive, they discover skeletons of the former crew engaged in various sexual positions, eventually deducing they all died in a mass orgy with the ship's captain being violently strangled in the midst of the chaos. They split in pairs, with Lister and Cat heading-off to the cafeteria and Rimmer and Kryten discovering the ship's "karma drive", which manipulates reality to deal punishments to those who disobeyed its programmed code of conduct. Lister manages to get his dreadlocks caught in a garbage disposal, where after Cat saves Lister by cutting off the stuck dreadlock, spits the knife back out, landing directly into Cat's foot.

Eventually, the Samsara loses its power and slowly begins to fall off the cliff its perched on. With no solutions to think of, a frustrated Rimmer insults Kryten, which leads into the ship regaining power. The two deduce the karma drive has been reprogrammed to reward negative behavior. When they manage to get back to Lister and Cat, Kryten immediately reacts by repeatedly punching Lister, telling him not to be kind to him, as they have figured out what happened.

It is revealed through flashbacks that Barker and Green boarded the Samsara with the intention of resuming an affair they had begun at a previous posting. However the karma drive soon began to punish them by having their living conditions intollerable. Eventually the ships captain confronts them about their unethical behaviour, and tells them that as long as they stop the affair on board the ship, the drive will leave them alone. Barker however convinces Green to get her access into the karma drive mainframe so that she could reprogram it for one night, thereby rewarding the unethical and punishing good behaviour. However this quickly backfires and causes anarchy onboard the ship. The two fled onboard the ship's escape pod, resting in stasis until they came across another ship. Due to Barker's attempt at warning the crew, she and Green were vaporized, as their tampering led the karma drive to have its influence stretch past even the ocean moon and to everything in its vicinity.

As Lister laments at how two peoples love brought down an entire ship, the crew decide to head back to Red Dwarf as unethically as they can. At this point, Lister accidentally drops one of his Mineopoloy cards and an angry Rimmer storms after him.

Production

The flashbacks onboard the Samsara pre-accident involve none of the core crew, a rare occurrence in the series that has only occurred twice previously, in The Inquisitor and The Beginning, respectively.

The episode was originally going to involve the crew stuck on malfunctioning elevators, referenced in the original title for "Samsara", Lift Off.[1]

Reception

"Samsara" received mixed reviews from critics[2][3] and fans.[4] Writing for Digital Spy, Tom Eames offered a more positive view on the episode, "[It] felt like an episode that would have been right at home in the days of series 4 or 5. This makes us really excited for the rest of XI."[5]

gollark: Well, this just seems to be technobabble and conspiracy theories.
gollark: I tend to not trust black-background websites with weird colored text and fancy animated backgrounds, but I suppose I'll read it.
gollark: I am going to assume you mean this: http://hutchisoneffect.com/Crystal%20Battery.php
gollark: A what? Hold on while I duckduckgo it.
gollark: The laws of physics say "no free energy" and if you think you have got free energy you'd better have a very good explanation and evidence.

References

  1. "Samsara", reddwarf.co.uk
  2. Pete Dillon-Trenchard (24 September 2016), Red Dwarf XI Episode 2 Review: Samsara, Den of Geek
  3. Sophie Davies (29 September 2016), ‘Red Dwarf XI’ Episode 2 review: ‘Samsara’ doesn’t quite live up to its premise, CultBox
  4. Ian Symes (26 September 2016), Red Dwarf XI: Samsara Review, Ganymede & Titan
  5. Tom Eames (29 September 2016), Red Dwarf XI episode 2 'Samsara' review: haven't we seen this story before?, Digital Spy
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