Kamin Family Home (Ressik, Kataan)
Sub-Locations
Detailed Involvements
Events with rich location context
Kataan is the transformed setting where Picard awakens as Kamin, a stark contrast to the Enterprise bridge. The location is introduced through Eline's tender care as she tends to Picard's feverish body, her face radiant with relief. Kataan is a world gripped by drought, its people struggling to survive amid dwindling resources. The home where Picard awakens is modest, reflecting the planet's broader hardships, yet it is also a place of warmth and domestic stability. Kataan's role in the event is to anchor Picard's new identity as Kamin, providing a physical and emotional counterpoint to the Enterprise. The location's atmosphere is one of quiet resilience, where love and care persist despite external crises.
Quiet and intimate, with a sense of warmth and care despite the broader hardships of Kataan. The atmosphere is one of resilience and love, with Eline's tenderness providing a grounding presence amid the uncertainty of Kamin's illness.
Kataan serves as the new reality for Picard, where he must adapt to life as Kamin. The location is a place of domestic stability and emotional connection, contrasting with the institutional setting of the Enterprise bridge. It is also a symbol of the probe's transformative power, as Picard's identity is irrevocably tied to this world and its people.
Kataan represents the probe's metaphysical intervention in Picard's life, offering him a new identity and purpose. The location is a metaphor for the fragility of human existence and the possibility of renewal through connection and love. It also underscores the theme of transformation, as Picard must shed his Starfleet identity to embrace his role as Kamin.
Open to the inhabitants of Kataan, though the broader planet is likely restricted due to its drought-stricken conditions and the probe's mysterious influence.
Kataan is introduced to the narrative through Picard's altered consciousness as he collapses on the Enterprise bridge. The location serves as the destination of Picard's transformed identity, where he awakens as Kamin, an iron weaver in a drought-stricken community. Kataan's dimly lit room, where Eline greets Picard with a moist towel, contrasts sharply with the high-tech environment of the Enterprise bridge. This location symbolizes the unfamiliar and the unknown, as well as the emotional and physical care that will anchor Picard in his new life. Kataan's role in the event is to represent the profound transformation Picard undergoes, marking the beginning of his decades-long alien identity.
The atmosphere on Kataan is one of warmth, familiarity, and stability, despite the underlying drought and hardship. Eline's nurturing presence and the intimate setting of their home create a sense of comfort and belonging, which contrasts with the cold, technological threat posed by the probe on the Enterprise bridge.
Kataan functions as the site of Picard's new identity, where he will live as Kamin for decades. It serves as a refuge from the chaos and uncertainty of his Starfleet life, offering him a sense of purpose, love, and community. The location's role in the event is to introduce the emotional and narrative stakes of Picard's transformation, as well as the themes of memory, loss, and the passage of time.
Kataan symbolizes the fragility of human existence and the impermanence of identity. It represents the unknown and the unfamiliar, as well as the emotional and physical care that can anchor a person in a new reality. The location's contrast with the Enterprise bridge underscores the narrative's exploration of duality—Picard's life as a Starfleet captain versus his life as Kamin on Kataan.
Kataan is accessible only through the probe's nucleonic beam, which transports Picard's consciousness to the planet. The location is otherwise isolated and unknown to the crew of the Enterprise.
Kataan’s dimly lit room serves as the transitional setting where Picard awakens as Kamin, cradled by Eline. The location is sparse and functional, reflecting the planet’s drought-stricken conditions, yet it radiates an intimate warmth. The room’s dim lighting and Eline’s tender care create a stark contrast to the high-tech urgency of the Enterprise bridge, emphasizing the shift from Picard’s Starfleet identity to Kamin’s domestic life. The room becomes a metaphor for the fragility of Kataan’s civilization and the love that sustains its people amid hardship. Its atmosphere is one of quiet resilience, where personal connections outweigh the looming threat of extinction.
Intimate and warm, despite the planet’s hardships. The dim lighting and Eline’s nurturing presence create a sense of safety and familiarity, though the subtext of drought and impending doom lingers. The room feels like a sanctuary, a last bastion of normalcy in a dying world.
Sanctuary for Kamin (Picard) and a symbol of domestic stability on Kataan
Represents the contrast between Starfleet’s institutional power and the human-scale struggles of Kataan. The room’s intimacy underscores the emotional core of the narrative, where love and memory become the only defenses against oblivion.
Open to Kamin (Picard) and Eline, but reflective of the broader community’s shared hardship.
Kataan’s modest home is a pressure cooker of displacement, its domestic warmth clashing violently with Picard’s Starfleet identity. The room—with its openings to the kitchen and bedroom—feels both inviting and claustrophobic, a physical manifestation of the life he’s being forced into. The home’s modesty (unusual to a Starfleet captain’s sensibilities) and well-kept state underscore the resilience of Kataan’s people amid drought, but for Picard, it’s an alien landscape. The lack of technology, the unfamiliar textures, the absence of Starfleet insignia—every detail reinforces his otherness. The home is both a sanctuary (for Eline and Kamin) and a prison (for Picard), a place where his old self cannot exist.
Tense with unspoken conflict: The home’s warmth and Eline’s care create a deceptive calm, but the air is thick with Picard’s rising panic. The lighting is soft (domestic, intimate), but the shadows feel oppressive, as if the walls themselves are closing in on his Starfleet identity. The silence between Picard’s outbursts is heavy, charged with the weight of his denial.
A threshold between worlds: The home is the physical space where Picard’s Starfleet self must die and Kamin’s life must begin. It’s a stage for his disorientation, a witness to his struggle, and ultimately, a container for his transformation. For Eline, it’s a refuge; for Picard, it’s a foreign land.
Represents the inevitability of displacement: The home is a microcosm of Kataan’s doomed civilization—resilient on the surface, but ultimately powerless against forces beyond its control. For Picard, it symbolizes the erasure of his past and the imposition of a new identity, one he cannot escape. The home’s modesty also mirrors the humility of Kataan’s people, a contrast to Starfleet’s technological prowess.
None (the home is open to Picard, but his mind resists entry).
The Kamin main room serves as the primary setting for this pivotal confrontation, its confined space amplifying the tension between Picard and Eline. The room is dimly lit, its atmosphere heavy with unspoken fears and the weight of Kamin’s illness. The discovery of the hidden metallic panel transforms the room from a place of domestic stability into a threshold of uncertainty, as Picard’s defiance and the potential consequences of his actions become imminent.
Tense and claustrophobic, with a palpable sense of impending change. The room’s dim lighting and the hushed urgency of the dialogue create an atmosphere of mounting anxiety, as the stability of the Kamin household hangs in the balance.
A confined space that serves as both a domestic sanctuary and a battleground for Picard’s struggle to reclaim his identity. The room’s hidden panel and the exit it reveals function as a literal and symbolic threshold, marking the transition from stability to uncertainty.
Represents the fragile stability of Kamin’s life and the impending disruption caused by Picard’s defiance. The room’s concealment of the hidden panel symbolizes the unspoken dangers and secrets that lie beyond the household’s walls.
Initially restricted to the household’s inhabitants, but the discovery of the hidden panel suggests that access to the outside world is carefully controlled and potentially dangerous.
Ressik’s town square serves as the neutral yet charged battleground for Picard’s deception and the townsfolk’s reactions. As the physical and symbolic heart of the community, the square is where communal rituals (like the sapling planting) affirm life amid the drought, but it also becomes the stage for Picard’s interrogation of Kataan’s reality. The white stucco-like dwellings encircling the square create a sense of enclosure, reinforcing the townsfolk’s collective identity and their wariness of outsiders or disruptions. The dusty, parched earth underfoot and the gathered crowd amplify the tension, making the square a microcosm of the planet’s struggles and Picard’s internal conflict.
Tense with unspoken questions; the air is thick with the townsfolk’s curiosity and wariness, while the dry, dusty ground and the sapling’s fragile presence create a mood of fragile hope amid encroaching despair. Picard’s feigned memory loss and blunt questions introduce an undercurrent of unease, disrupting the ritual’s intended affirmation of life.
Neutral ground for communal rituals and public confrontations; a space where individual crises (like Kamin’s memory loss) intersect with collective concerns (the drought and survival).
Represents the town’s last bastion of hope and tradition, but also the vulnerability of their way of life. The square is both a sanctuary and a stage for the tensions between Picard’s Starfleet instincts and Kamin’s embeddedness in Ressik.
Open to all townsfolk, but Picard’s outsider status (as a Starfleet captain in Kamin’s body) makes him an unwelcome disruption to the community’s fragile stability.
Kataan serves as the physical and emotional battleground where Picard’s fractured identity unfolds. The planet’s drought-stricken landscape and modest homes contrast sharply with the high-tech environment of the Enterprise, emphasizing Picard’s displacement. The domestic setting of Kamin’s home—with its simple furniture, warm lighting, and Eline’s presence—creates an intimate yet oppressive atmosphere, forcing Picard to confront the reality of his life as Kamin. The location symbolizes the tension between his Starfleet duty and his domestic obligations, as well as the existential question of which life is "real.
Intimate yet oppressive, with a warm domestic glow that contrasts with the emotional coldness of Picard’s detachment. The air is thick with unspoken tension, devotion, and despair.
Domestic sanctuary and emotional battleground, where Picard’s identity crisis plays out against the backdrop of Eline’s devotion and the limitations of Kataan’s reality.
Represents the blurred line between Picard’s two lives—his Starfleet past and his Kataan present—and the existential question of which reality is true.
Open to Picard and Eline, but symbolically closed to Picard’s Starfleet memories and the outside world.
Kataan’s main room serves as the emotional and narrative epicenter of this event, a confined space where the illusion of domestic harmony collapses under the weight of Picard’s probing questions and the revelation of the medallion. The room, bathed in the dim light of Kataan’s dying world, becomes a pressure cooker of tension, where every object and gesture carries symbolic weight. The shelves, the chair, the doorway—all are charged with meaning, reflecting the fragility of Picard’s fabricated life. The room’s atmosphere shifts from warm and inviting to claustrophobic and oppressive as the truth emerges, mirroring the unraveling of Kataan’s doomed civilization.
Initially warm and intimate, with the soft glow of Kataan’s fading light casting long shadows. The air is thick with the scent of soup and the quiet hum of domestic life. As the event progresses, the atmosphere grows tense and oppressive, the walls seeming to close in as Picard’s questions and the medallion’s revelation shatter the illusion. The room becomes a metaphor for the confinement of Kamin’s identity, a gilded cage from which there is no escape.
A domestic sanctuary that becomes a battleground for identity and truth. The room is where Picard’s Kataan life is both sustained and dismantled, serving as the stage for his confrontation with the artificiality of his existence.
Represents the fragile illusion of Kataan’s civilization—a world built on love and routine, but ultimately unsustainable. The room’s confinement mirrors the inescapable fate of Kataan, where even the most cherished memories (like the medallion) are tied to destruction.
Restricted to Kamin and Eline; the doorway is activated only by Eline, symbolizing Picard’s limited agency in this fabricated life.
Kamin’s main room serves as the intimate and sacred space for Batai’s naming ceremony. The room is dimly lit, creating a warm and cozy atmosphere that contrasts with the harsh realities of Kataan’s drought-stricken world. It is filled with family and guests, who gather to celebrate the birth of a new life. The room’s layout, with the long table set up for food and drinks, reinforces the communal and hospitable nature of the event. The space symbolizes the last bastion of normalcy and hope in a dying society, where family and tradition are cherished despite the looming threat of extinction.
Warm, intimate, and emotionally charged, with a sense of communal togetherness and quiet hope amid the looming tragedy of Kataan’s decline.
The primary setting for the naming ceremony, providing a space for family and community to gather, celebrate, and reflect on the significance of new life.
Represents the last remnants of Katanian culture and domesticity, where love, tradition, and hope persist despite the planet’s inevitable end.
Open to family and close community members, reflecting the intimate and personal nature of the ceremony.
Kamin’s main room serves as the intimate and ceremonial space for Batai’s naming ceremony. The room is dimly lit, creating a warm and cozy atmosphere that contrasts with the looming existential threat to Kataan. The long table, food, and guests contribute to the communal and celebratory mood, while the unseen lullaby adds to the emotional depth of the moment. The room’s atmosphere shifts abruptly as Kamin collapses, the warmth giving way to panic and urgency.
Warm, intimate, and celebratory → Sudden panic and urgency
Ceremonial space for family milestones and communal gatherings, serving as a sanctuary of warmth and connection amid existential doom.
Represents the fragile but enduring bonds of family and community on Kataan, even as the planet faces extinction.
Open to family and close community members, reflecting the intimate and inclusive nature of Katanian social life.
The interior of Kamin and Eline’s home is referenced indirectly as the space from which Batai emerges with his flute and where Eline retreats after her exchanges with Picard. The home’s walls amplify the tensions between Picard’s emotional distance and Eline’s grounded presence, creating a sense of intimacy and confinement. The interior symbolizes the private life of the family, where their bonds are tested and reinforced amid the broader crisis of Kataan’s decline.
Warm yet tense, with a sense of domestic intimacy that contrasts with the underlying emotional and existential conflicts.
Private space for family interactions, where personal and emotional dynamics play out.
Represents the sanctuary of family life, where love, conflict, and resilience intertwine amid the looming crisis.
Restricted to family members, providing a sense of privacy and security.
The Kamin main room is the emotional and narrative epicenter of this scene, a domestic sanctuary that has now become a crucible of grief. The room, once a place of warmth and shared life, is transformed into a space of quiet devastation as Eline dies. The dim lighting, the stillness of the air, and the presence of the deep chair and blanket all contribute to an atmosphere of intimacy and inevitability. This room, which has witnessed decades of Kamin and Eline’s life together, now bears witness to its end, its walls absorbing the weight of their final moments. The room’s role is to amplify the emotional stakes of the scene, making Eline’s death feel like the collapse of an entire world—because, in this moment, it is.
A heavy, suffocating quiet—broken only by the soft murmur of Eline and Picard’s voices—pervades the room. The air is thick with unspoken grief, the dim lighting casting long shadows that seem to stretch toward the future, a future Picard must now face alone. The room feels smaller, as if the walls are closing in on the weight of the moment, yet it is also vast in its emptiness, a void where love once lived.
Sanctuary for private reflection and the stage for a personal tragedy that will reshape Picard’s understanding of time, purpose, and loss. It is a place where the domestic and the existential collide, where the mundane (‘put your shoes away’) becomes a metaphor for the profound.
Represents the fragility of the life Picard has built on Kataan and the inevitability of its end. The room is a microcosm of the planet itself—once a place of warmth and community, now a dying space where the past and future collide in a moment of irreversible loss.
Restricted to Picard, Eline, Young Batai, and the Doctor at the beginning of the scene. Eline’s request for privacy ensures that the final moments between her and Picard are intimate and unobserved, a deliberate choice to emphasize the personal nature of their bond and her death.
The Kamin main room is the intimate, claustrophobic heart of Eline and Picard’s shared life, and it becomes the stage for her death. The room, dimly lit and filled with the quiet tension of impending loss, encapsulates the fragility of their existence on Kataan. The walls, once a sanctuary, now feel like a prison as the truth of the planet’s doom settles over them. The room’s domestic warmth—evoked by the chair, the blanket, and the faint echoes of their life together—contrasts sharply with the existential weight of Eline’s final words. It is a place of love, loss, and revelation, where the personal and the cosmic collide.
Intimate yet oppressive, the air thick with unspoken sorrow and the weight of truth. The dim lighting casts long shadows, emphasizing the finality of the moment. The room feels both familiar and alien, a place where love and death are inextricably intertwined.
Sanctuary for private reflection and the intimate act of dying. It is a space where Eline can speak her final truths, where Picard can grieve without witness, and where the weight of Kataan’s fate presses in on them both.
Represents the collapse of their domestic world and the inevitability of Kataan’s end. It is a microcosm of the planet itself—once a place of warmth and life, now a site of irreversible loss.
Restricted to family and the Doctor, who exits at Eline’s request. The room is a private space, shielded from the outside world’s chaos and the Administrator’s complicity.
The Kataan home, specifically Kamin’s main room, serves as a microcosm of the family’s emotional and physical state in this event. Initially, the room is a sanctuary of domestic warmth, filled with the sounds of laughter and play as Kamin and Kamie chase each other around the large chair. The dim lighting and the chair’s bulk create an intimate, almost womb-like space, a temporary refuge from the harsh realities outside. However, this sanctuary is fragile, and the room’s atmosphere shifts dramatically with Young Batai’s announcement of the 'launching.' The walls, once protective, now feel like a barrier that must be breached. The family’s movement toward the door—Meribor collecting hats, Kamin’s reluctant departure—signals the room’s transformation from a place of joy to a threshold between the past and the inevitable future. The room’s role is to contrast the fleeting safety of home with the inescapable doom outside, making the family’s departure all the more poignant.
The atmosphere begins as warm and joyful, filled with the sound of laughter and the physicality of play. The dim lighting and the large chair create a cozy, almost playful space, a contrast to the harsh world outside. As the scene progresses, the atmosphere shifts to one of tension and sorrow. The laughter fades, replaced by the weight of Kamin’s grief and the quiet determination of Meribor. The room feels smaller, the walls closing in as the family prepares to step into the unknown. The final moments are tinged with a bittersweet melancholy, the domestic sanctuary now a place of transition rather than refuge.
Domestic sanctuary and threshold. The room begins as a place of warmth and play, a refuge from the planet’s decay. As the event progresses, it becomes a liminal space—a place of transition between the safety of home and the harsh realities outside. The family’s movement toward the door marks the room’s shift from sanctuary to threshold, a physical manifestation of their emotional journey.
The room symbolizes the fragility of human connection and the inevitability of loss. It is a place where joy and sorrow coexist, where the past and the future collide. The large chair, the hats, and the laughter all serve as reminders of what the family is about to lose, making the room a powerful metaphor for the transient nature of happiness in the face of catastrophe.
The room is a private domestic space, accessible only to the family. There are no explicit restrictions, but the family’s actions—collecting hats, preparing to leave—suggest that the room is a place of preparation, a final moment of intimacy before facing the world outside.
Kamin’s main room is the emotional epicenter of this scene, a space where domestic warmth and existential dread collide. The room, dimly lit and cluttered with the detritus of family life, serves as a sanctuary from Kataan’s harsh outdoors. It is here that Kamin and Kamie engage in their playful chase, a fleeting moment of joy that belies the room’s role as a staging ground for the family’s confrontation with their planet’s fate. The large chair, the hats, and the flute all contribute to the room’s atmosphere of fragile normalcy, even as the announcement of the 'launching' shatters it. The room’s walls feel like they are closing in as Kamin’s denial gives way to grief.
A tense, bittersweet mix of warmth and foreboding—laughter and playfulness are undercut by the looming sense of doom. The room feels like a pressure cooker, where the family’s emotions are compressed into a single, suffocating moment. The dim lighting and cluttered space amplify the contrast between the adults’ despair and Kamie’s innocence.
A sanctuary that doubles as a battleground for emotional confrontation. The room is where the family gathers to process their grief, make decisions, and ultimately face the truth of Kataan’s extinction. It is both a refuge and a place of reckoning.
Represents the family’s last bastion of normalcy before they are forced to confront the planet’s doom. The room’s warmth and clutter symbolize the life they are about to lose, while its confinement mirrors the inescapable nature of their fate.
Open to family members only; the room is a private space where the family can grieve and make decisions without the scrutiny of the outside world.
Events at This Location
Everything that happens here
The Enterprise bridge crew shares a moment of lighthearted camaraderie as Picard recounts an amusing anecdote about Admiral Gustafson’s operatic endurance, fostering a rare, relaxed atmosphere. The warmth is abruptly …
The Enterprise bridge crew enjoys a rare moment of camaraderie as Picard recounts a humorous anecdote about Admiral Gustafson’s operatic endurance. The lighthearted exchange is abruptly shattered when Worf detects …
The Enterprise bridge, mid-conversation about Admiral Gustafson’s opera obsession, is abruptly disrupted when Worf detects an unidentified probe emitting a nucleonic beam. Despite Riker’s order to raise shields and stand …
Picard awakens in an unfamiliar domestic setting—a modest but well-kept home on Kataan—disoriented and physically weak. The woman Eline, who identifies herself as his wife, tends to him with a …
Picard, still disoriented but increasingly insistent on reclaiming control, searches the Kamin household for familiar objects—his Starfleet uniform, his communicator—while Eline, alarmed by his erratic behavior, tries to soothe him …
In Ressik’s town square, Picard—now inhabiting Kamin’s body—confronts Batai and the townspeople with a calculated deception, pretending memory loss to extract answers about his new reality. His blunt questions about …
Eline, Picard’s wife in his Kataan life, confronts his disorientation after he returns home exhausted and questioning reality. His probing questions about communication systems and planetary travel reveal his fractured …
In a moment of intimate vulnerability, Eline—Picard’s wife in his Kataan life—attempts to reconnect with him after his disoriented return from wandering the planet. Their exchange reveals the depth of …
During Batai’s naming ceremony, Kamin (Picard) plays a lullaby for his newborn son, surrounded by family and guests. The moment crystallizes his emotional transformation from a detached outsider to a …
During the naming ceremony for his infant son, Batai, Kamin (Picard) plays a lullaby, fully immersed in his role as a devoted father and husband. The scene radiates warmth and …
In the quiet intimacy of their courtyard at night, Eline’s playful yet pointed remark about Picard’s absentmindedness—leaving his shoes out—sets the tone for their decades-long domestic rhythm, where his absorption …
In the quiet intimacy of their home, Eline—Picard’s wife on Kataan—delivers her final words with wry humor masking the gravity of her revelation. She confirms Picard’s suspicions about the Administrator’s …
In the quiet intimacy of their home, Eline—Picard’s wife on Kataan—delivers a poignant, domestic reminder before dying in his arms. The moment crystallizes the irreversible loss of their shared life, …
In a rare moment of domestic warmth, Kamin (Picard) plays with his six-year-old grandson Kamie, their laughter filling the room as Meribor enters, her protective concern for her father evident. …
In this emotionally charged scene, Kamin (Picard) is caught between domestic warmth and existential dread as his family prepares to witness the 'launching'—a missile event tied to Kataan’s impending doom. …