Dixon Hill: Picard’s Noir Refuge
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Picard programs the Holodeck for 1945 San Francisco, tailoring it to the novel "The Long Dark Tunnel," and the Computer clears him to enter. He chooses escape and sets the parameters with crisp precision.
Clad in trenchcoat and fedora, Picard steps into the simulation as Dixon Hill, embracing the hard‑boiled persona as his portal to relief. The threshold crosses from shipboard strain into noir immersion.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Seeks refuge and composure; externally composed but inwardly fatigued and relieved to transfer responsibility into a role that permits rehearsal of moral clarity.
Picard speaks the holodeck setting aloud, dons the Dixon Hill persona by appearance and posture, and physically re-enters the Chandlerland simulation as a deliberate emotional and tactical retreat from shipboard pressures.
- • Remove himself temporarily from intrusive social pressure and diplomatic exposure.
- • Recenter emotionally by inhabiting a controlled, fictional identity where decisions feel simpler.
- • Set up an investigative noir frame that will preoccupy his attention away from current ship issues.
- • The holodeck is a safe container where he can process stress without compromising command.
- • Assuming Dixon Hill's persona will allow him clarity and distance from messy interpersonal demands.
- • Ritualized role-play is an effective tool for psychological containment and ethical rehearsal.
Impassive and functional; communicates only system status and permission without affect or judgment.
The Enterprise computer responds to Picard's holodeck command with a terse authorization prompt, confirming system readiness and granting Picard access to the program in a neutral, procedural voice.
- • Confirm and authorize the requested holodeck simulation.
- • Maintain operational safety and protocol for the holodeck system.
- • System requests require formal confirmation before activation.
- • Maintaining objective, concise communication preserves shipboard order and safety.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Dixon Hill holodeck program is invoked explicitly by Picard to instantiate a 1945 San Francisco private-eye environment. It functions as the narrative container for Picard's role-play, a cognitive tool for emotional containment, and the literal stage into which he steps to displace present pressures.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Chandlerland (the holodeck precinct within the Dixon Hill program) is the immediate simulated space Picard re-enters; it compresses encounters into intimate, noir-styled corridors and physically houses the persona he adopts, turning role-play into embodied refuge.
The simulated San Francisco (1945 Dixon Hill program) is verbally set by Picard as the holodeck's milieu. It supplies period detail and cultural texture for the noir frame, functioning as the emotional and imaginative landscape Picard retreats into to rehearse decisions and avoid immediate social entanglement.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Picard's containment strategy (make himself less available) drives him to program the Holodeck escape."
"Picard's containment strategy (make himself less available) drives him to program the Holodeck escape."
"Picard's shift from public command to private focus echoes in his decision to seek private refuge in the Holodeck."
"Picard's adoption of a fictional persona parallels the Antedians' false diplomatic mask, which is finally stripped by Data's scan."
"Picard's adoption of a fictional persona parallels the Antedians' false diplomatic mask, which is finally stripped by Data's scan."
"Picard's escape into fantasy is later interrupted by duty, reinforcing the duty versus desire theme."
"Picard's escape into fantasy is later interrupted by duty, reinforcing the duty versus desire theme."
Key Dialogue
"PICARD: Setting: San Francisco California, United States Of America, the year 1945 A.D., program to fit the novel, "The Long Dark Tunnel"."
"COMPUTER VOICE: You may enter when ready."