star trek

Thoughts on Star Trek (2) – The Original Series, Season Two

I’ve been (slowly) making my way through the complete Star Trek canon, with the goal of watching every episode and every movie and jotting down my reactions to each. Here’s the second installment, looking at the second season of the original series.

If you’d like to catch up:

The Original Series, Season One

One quick note – I’m watching the original series in the order the episodes were produced, not aired. Air dates were chosen by the networks and sometimes resulted in some odd continuity. Production order gives a much better indication of how the series progressed and evolved.

Here’s how I’m doing this. Each entry starts with a code for the series (TOS: The Original Series; TAS: The Animated Series; TNG: The Next Generation; DS9: Deep Space Nine; VOY: Voyager; ENT: Enterprise; MOV: the movies), followed by the season number, the episode number and the episode title. Then, to help refresh your memory, I’ve given the episode synopsis from Memory Alpha, the premier Star Trek wiki. Then the date the episode first aired. Then, in case you still don’t remember it, my own quick description of which one this is, based on whatever I think is the most memorable part of the story. Finally come my own thoughts on the episode, neatly bulleted. Sometimes I have a lot to say, sometimes I don’t. Let’s get to it!

TOS 2×1. Catspaw

The Enterprise crew finds witches, black cats, and haunted castles on a distant planet.

First aired  October 27, 1967.

The Star Trek Halloween special!

  • I like the three witches. They’re spooky. Spoooooooooky!
  • This is Lieutenant DeSalle’s final appearance on the show, having appeared twice last season. He goes out on a good one – he’s left in charge of the ship while the away team is gone. Honestly, this is the first time he stood out for me. I’m not sure why I didn’t notice him before – he’s pretty hunky, and I’m pretty shallow.
  • This is Chekhov’s first appearance, and his wig is frigging ridiculous. It’s supposed to make him look like the Beatles, I think, but it’s enormous. Remember on The Flintstones, when they got their scary neighbors the Gruesomes to play “bug music” and they all wore Beatles wigs that just sort of sat on top of their over-sized monster heads? It’s like that.
  • This episode falls a bit flat, but all the horror and magic iconography is fun. And the “giant” cat striding through the set model is hilarious.

TOS 2×2. Metamorphosis

On an isolated asteroid, Kirk finds Zefram Cochrane, inventor of the warp drive, who has been missing for 150 years.

First aired November 10, 1967.

The one without James Cromwell.

  • Kirk, Spock, and McCoy are in a shuttle with Commissioner Nancy Hedford, taking her back to the Enterprise for treatment for a life-threatening virus she’s contracted. It does seem a bit off that the three most senior members of the crew are running missions like this, but I guess when your name’s in the opening credits, sometimes you have to do the grunt work.
  • Commissioner Hedford is pretty nasty but I suppose facing death might do that.
  • They’re on-board the Galileo when they’re hijacked towards a mysterious planet. This is the second shuttle by that name, since the first was destroyed in “The Galileo Seven.”  They should probably stop naming shuttles that, it seems a little unlucky.
  • Cochrane is cared for by the Companion, a creature of formless energy, and he says they’ve been “close in a way that’s hard to describe.” They’re boning. I’m not sure how, but they’re boning.
  • The universal translator uses a female voice for the Companion, so they accept the energy creature as gendered in human terms, which is strange enough – even if the creature had a gender, how the hell would the translator know that? But then learning the creature is female leads them to realize that it’s in love with Cochran. Because it couldn’t possibly be in love with Cochran if it was male, or genderless, or some other type of gender that only energy creatures have. Kirk even says, “The idea of male and female are universal constants.” No, they’re not! Screw you, 1967!

TOS 2×3. Friday’s Child

The Enterprise becomes involved in a local power struggle on planet Capella IV, where the Klingons want mining rights.

First aired December 1, 1967.

The one where the Klingons and the Federation negotiate with a primitive tribe for mining rights and oh my god I’m asleep already.

  • Kirk, Spock, McCoy, and security officer Lieutenant Grant beam down to the planet. Guess which one doesn’t beam back?
  • Julie Newmar plays Eleen, the wife of the “Teer,” or chief, of the tribe. She’s a bit of a stock character, the snooty aristocrat who acts unreasonably for seemingly no reason other than to keep the plot moving, but she’s Julie Newmar so she’s amazing to watch. Her and McCoy are a particularly good double act.
  • Scotty has to take the Enterprise away to answer a distress call, which strands the landing party on the planet for a while. This is already feeling like an overused plot device.
  • “I’m a doctor, not an escalator,” may be my favorite McCoy-ism. I won’t give you the context; it’s funnier without.

TOS 2×4. Who Mourns for Adonais?

The Enterprise is captured by an alien claiming to be Apollo, the Greek god of the sun.

First aired September 22, 1967.

Oh, you know this one. Giant Greek god.

  • I don’t know, he deserves happiness and all but I always find it creepy when Scotty flirts.
  • Oh, good, another omnipotent alien story. Can never have too many of those.
  • Apollo says not to bring Spock down to the planet because the Vulcan reminds him of Pan, and Pan always bored him. I’m sorry, but if you’re tired of the god of rutting sex you’re tired of living.
  • The god who abducts them is Apollo so I don’t know why we should be so concerned with who’s mourning for Adonais.
  • Like Lt. McGivers with Khan in “Space Seed,” Lt. Palamas falls for Apollo instantaneously for seemingly no other reason than that he’s just such a big strong powerful handsome manly man. I would love to see an episode where one of the male crew comes close to commuting mutiny and treason because he’s got the hots for one of those sexy green alien dancers.
  • The basic plot of this episode has been done before and will be done again, but this episode stands out for a reason – the cliche is done well here, mostly thanks to guest stars Michael Forest as Apollo and Leslie Parrish as Palamas.

TOS 2×5. Amok Time

Suffering through his first infliction of pon farr, the Vulcan biological mating urge, Spock must return to Vulcan to marry his betrothed or he will die. However, when the Enterprise arrives at Vulcan, complications at the ceremony may endanger Captain Kirk as well.

First aired September 15, 1967.

The one that inspired decades of Kirk/Spock slash fiction.

  • So Vulcans have to mate or die once every seven years. I’m kind of surprised nobody else in the Federation seems to know about this. I know Vulcans are private but that’s a pretty big thing to leave out of someone’s medical record.
  • Spock’s so mean to Nurse Chapel! She just wants to feed him some plomeek soup! It sounds delicious!
  • I’d be irritable too if I hadn’t had sex in seven years.
  • On beaming down McCoy says, “Hot as Vulcan. Now I understand what the phrase means.” It was unclear before? Seems like a pretty straightforward saying. “Oh, it means Vulcan is hot? I get it now.”
  • So, wait…this appears to be the first time Spock has gone through this ceremony. He was promised to T’Pring at seven years old, so I guess the pon farr doesn’t take affect until later in life (unless Spock was a very mature fourteen). Does that mean he’s…untouched? Or is he able to get busy with humans while waiting for the seven-year-itch to come along?
  • T’Pau! Give me love, give me heart and soul!
  • I call bullshit on Vulcans’ claims to be unemotional. All that shame over the pon farr, plus T’Pring and Stonn having an affair? How logical is that? They’re just an entire species of people with resting bitch face, that’s all.
  • Spock had an orgasm during the fight with Kirk, right? That’s why the pon farr blew over?

TOS 2×6. The Doomsday Machine

The Enterprise discovers a superweapon capable of destroying entire planets, and a commodore whose crew was killed by the machine jeopardizes the crew on a crazed mission of revenge.

First aired October 20, 1967.

The one with the giant space Fleshlight.

  • Commodore Decker looks like he is always drunk.
  • The planet killer is an enormous penis sleeve. I can’t see it as anything else.
  • This story being a take-off on Moby Dick doesn’t help the penis sleeve visual.
  • Another episode where the primary plot obstacle is someone of a higher rank making bad decisions. That’s getting a little lazy.
  • Who’s that white lady sitting in Uhura’s chair? All of the regulars (outside of the Holy Trinity) get subbed in for once in a while, since the actors weren’t contracted for every episode, but I really notice it when Uhura’s missing.
  • William Shatner is a good actor. There, I said it. He’s great in this episode. He plays his last moments aboard the Constellation, where the plan is about to fall apart because Scotty is still working on the transporter just as Kirk needs to be beamed off before the ship explodes, perfectly. He’s slightly panicking but holding it together, playing for comedy but not so much so to undercut the dramatic tension. He can chew as much scenery as he wants in torture scenes, he’s earned it.
  • There’s a reason why certain episodes are remembered by everyone. It’s because they’re really good. This is one of those.

TOS 2×7. Wolf in the Fold

Scotty is suspected of killing several women while on shore leave on Argelius II. However, a more sinister force may provide a connection between this murder and many previous around the galaxy, including a rampage on ancient Earth.

First aired December 22, 1967.

The one where Scotty maybe killed some ladies a little.

  • Sometimes the core idea of a Star Trek episode is a shining example of the best of the science fiction genre, and sometimes it’s just batshit crazy. This is the latter.
  • A female crewmember makes a mistake that injures Scotty, and he develops “total resentment towards women.” This resentment is apparently a medical condition requiring treatment by McCoy, and not just Scotty being a chauvinist dick.
  • That treatment is a recommendation for shore leave on a planet with a hedonistic sexually permissive culture, where they set Scotty up to get laid with an exotic dancer. He goes off with them and McCoy and Kirk are satisfied that he’s cured. Because misogynists don’t like sex, I guess, so…Scotty must not be one anymore? Where did McCoy get his degree?
  • Kirk suggests he and McCoy leave that bar to go to another place he knows where the women are equally permissive. It’s a whorehouse. Kirk’s taking McCoy to a whorehouse.
  • I hope the new movies revisit “The Planet Where Any Woman Will Have Sex with You, For Real, No Questions Asked.”
  • We’re not even to the opening credits yet, by the way.
  • Yadda, yadda, yadda, trial scene, trial scene, trial scene, Jack the Ripper did it. Spoilers! He’s an incorporeal alien who can possess people and also ships’ computers somehow. He feeds on fear so they beat him by getting the entire crew high. Groovy.
  • I’m glad Scotty’s innocent of murder but he’s still a chauvinist dick.

TOS 2×8. The Changeling

The Enterprise finds an ancient interstellar probe from Earth, missing for 265 years, which has somehow mutated into a powerful and intelligent machine bent on sterilizing entire populations that do not meet its standards of perfection.

First aired September 29, 1967.

The one where Uhura gets mind-wiped by a floating can opener.

  • While hailing a planet and not receiving a response, Kirk reminds Uhura to check a special frequency. Bitch, don’t tell Uhura how to check frequencies. Uhura knows how to check frequencies.
  • Four billion people dead before the opening credits. Man, the death toll on original Star Trek is crazy.
  • I know it’s just on wires, but the Nomad model floating around the ship looks pretty cool. There’s a lot to be said for practical effects.
  • Uhura gets her brain erased. I find that scene really disturbing. I mean, Scotty gets killed, but he gets better. Uhura has to be, in Spock’s words, “re-educated.”
  • Spock can mind meld with computers now? Sure, why not.
  • Kirk logics the computer to death. Computers in the future are really susceptible to being logiced to death.
  • The implications of Uhura’s re-education are disturbing. She’s at a first grade reading level, do they really get her all the way through her whole education, including her Starfleet training, to the point where she can serve as an officer again? What about all her memories, did she forget her family, her friends, her entire life? It sure seems so. That’s one of the saddest things I can imagine happening to a person.
  • Luckily, continuity wasn’t really a thing back then, so she’s completely back to normal by the next episode. Onward!

TOS 2×9. The Apple

The Enterprise crew discovers an Eden-like paradise on Gamma Trianguli VI, controlled by a machine that is revered by the local humanoid primitives as a god.

First aired October 13, 1967.

The subtle title might have misled you, but this is the one that’s a play on the Garden of Eden.

  • That’s a heck of a big landing party. LOADS of redshirts to bump off.
  • Yup. Redshirts dropping like flies.
  • I do love how every single thing on this planet, right down to the rocks, can kill you. They’re killing off a lot of redshirts, but they’re doing it in very inventive and entertaining ways.
  • Despite the high body count, the story isn’t glossing over the deaths. The plot may consider these characters disposable, but Kirk doesn’t. It’s well written.
  • The Vaalians have ruddy skin and terrible wigs, but they’re super buff and run around in loincloths. They’re kind of like hot Oompa Loompas.
  • About what percent of the times when Scotty’s been given command of the Enterprise has the ship been unable to beam the landing party to safety because of mysterious technological reasons? Eighty-five? Ninety?
  • Despite the villagers being quite happy and not in any apparent danger, Kirk decides to completely upend their society. Spock mentions the Prime Directive. I’m surprised they don’t all just laugh at this point. “What, that old chestnut?”
  • “Well, we killed your god. You’re on your own now, completely innocent and uneducated society. Enjoy getting to understand the concept of death. Laters!”

TOS 2×10. Mirror, Mirror

A transporter malfunction sends Kirk, McCoy, Scotty, and Uhura into a parallel universe where the Federation is replaced by an evil Empire, Kirk is a despot, and Spock is a cunning pirate.

First aired October 6, 1967.

The one that introduced goatees into the pop culture lexicon as a short-hand for evil parallel universe duplicates.

  • The Halkans won’t give the Federation mining rights to their dilithium, because Halkan society is completely peaceful and even one life lost as a result of the dilithium would violate their ethics. Kirk tries to convince their leader Tharn that the Federation is peaceful, and we’re obviously supposed to side with Kirk, but…Tharn is right. Peaceful intentions or not, the Federation gets into fights all the time. That dilithium would be powering up some deadly weapon before the episode was over.
  • I know the mirror universe is evil but it is also way sexier. Lots more skin on display, lots more swagger, and Spock looks terrific with a goatee.
  • It’s kind of weird that the transporter beamed the landing parties into their duplicates’ clothes. That’s pretty precise.
  • I love when Uhura’s in on the action. Her “I’m scared” when Kirk orders her to the evil bridge feels out of character, although Nichelle Nichols does her best to make it the bravest declaration of fear on television. I assume it’s the writer feeling the woman needs to be all womanly. I consider that five second dialogue exchange non-canonical, and you can’t convince me otherwise.
  • Nice bit of continuity, calling back to “The Menagerie,” that evil Kirk got his command by assassinating the previous captain, Christopher Pike.
  • I like how the evil away team are just so darn evil that they can’t even hide it and are instantly arrested by the real Enterprise crew. Evil Kirk could teach his good counterpart a lesson or two in scenery chewing – Shatner is not holding back.
  • I’ll bet Kirk kind of wishes his universe’s Enterprise had an official position for “Captain’s Woman.”
  • “Tantalus field” is an interesting name for the device that kills people by instantly wiping them from existence. By interesting, I mostly mean confusing. If it’s named for the mythological Tantalus, it should torment people by holding grapes out of their reach. The other thing Tantalus is associated with is cannibalism, so maybe the victims are all being beamed to the ship’s larder.
  • The scene where Uhura distracts evil Sulu by seducing him, then backhanding him, is pretty much the best thing ever.
  • I love that Uhura dives right into the brawl against evil Spock. Between that, the Sulu backhand, and overpowering the phaser-wielding Captain’s Woman, Uhura kicks a whole lot of ass in this episode.
  • I know I talk about Uhura a lot. I’m not sorry.
  • This is not the first parallel universe story in science fiction, but it set the bar for every one that came after. It’s justly remembered as one of the best episodes of Star Trek. I think it might be my personal favorite.

TOS 2×11. The Deadly Years

The Enterprise discovers a colony full of rapidly-aging scientists. Whatever caused the rapid aging afflicts the ship´s landing party as well. Kirk, Spock, McCoy and Scott are shocked to discover they are aging decades each day and will soon die unless a cure can be found. The unaffected Chekov may be their only hope for survival.

First aired December 8, 1967.

They all get old.

  • Chekov sees a dead body and freaks the hell out. It’s so out-of-character that it’s obviously necessary for the plot, which kind of gives the whole episode away.
  • Elderly Kirk falling asleep in the command chair is hilarious.
  • Kirk’s competency hearing is pretty obviously padding.
  • The foolish commodore throwing his authority around got old a while back.
  • The funny thing about Commodore Stocker, though, is that he’s right – Kirk is unfit for command. The only problem is that Stocker himself is no good at it either, but doesn’t have an aging disease to blame.
  • Not a terrible episode – they make the most of the whole aging thing – but everything with Stocker, the hearing and the Romulans feels tacked on.

TOS 2×12. I, Mudd

Harry Mudd, now ruler of a planet of androids, captures the Enterprise and attempts to imprison Kirk for revenge.

First aired November 3, 1967.

The other one with Mudd – with the sex robots, not the space prostitutes.

  • How the heck does Norman the android infiltrate Starfleet so easily? He signs on the Enterprise as a lieutenant while it’s at a starbase. He serves on the ship for three days and nobody ever checks his references? Can you just show up to work anywhere in the future and they assume you’re supposed to be there?
  • Yay, Uhura’s beaming down!
  • Oh my gosh, it’s Harry Mudd behind all this! If I hadn’t read the title card I might have been surprised.
  • Mudd has made a robot replica of his nagging wife solely so that he can tell her to be quiet and she has to obey. That is fucked up.
  • Uhura is all about the idea of putting her brain into a robot body. That’s a side of her we haven’t seen before. I blame that mind wipe a few episodes back.
  • Time to logic some more computers to death. Or illogic them to death, but it’s roughly the same idea.
  • The routines the crew do to confuse the robots are delightful. Also, these robots are really, really easy to confuse.

TOS 2×13. The Trouble with Tribbles

A dispute over control of a planet brings the Enterprise to a space station, where they must deal with Klingons, edgy Federation officials, and a previously-unknown species of small, unbearably cute, voraciously hungry and rapidly-multiplying furry creatures.

First aired December 29, 1967.

The one with the tribbles. Duh.

  • I really want the backstory behind Sherman’s Planet. Who was Sherman? Why is it his planet? Did he discover and and so got to name it? And he wanted to name it after himself, but rather than call it “Sherman,” he called it “Sherman’s Planet,” so everyone would know it was his property? That sounds like something a six-year-old boy would do, like hanging a sign on his bedroom door saying, “Sherman’s Room! Mom Keep Out!!!” I think I wrote the backstory myself.
  • That running joke about Chekov claiming that every significant historical person or event hails from Russia never gets old. Which is good, because he makes it about fifty times in this episode alone.
  • Okay, yet another plot pushed forward because of an idiotic incompetent Federation official who outranks Kirk throwing his weight around. There must be some serious cronyism going on in the Federation because every other Commodore or Ambassador is a goddamn asshole.
  • Kirk: “I have never questioned the orders or the intelligence of any representative of the Federation, until now.” Good dig, but a bald-faced lie.
  • Cyrano Jones gives Uhura a free tribble as a loss-leader. That’s just good business sense, if you ask me.
  • McCoy calls the tribbles bisexual, although I think he means asexual. He obviously isn’t on Tumblr or he’d know the difference.
  • Scotty beams all the tribbles over to the Klingon ship, and it’s meant to be a funny ending because of how much the Klingons hate tribbles, but all I ever think when I watch the last scene is how the Klingons are just going to beam all those adorable little fuzzballs into the vacuum of space.
  • This is another episode deservedly remembered as great. It’s funny while staying grounded in the established reality of the series, and the guest cast is terrific. I’ll take Cyrano Jones over Harry Mudd any day.

TOS 2×14. Bread and Circuses

Kirk, Spock, and McCoy are captured on a planet that resembles a Roman Empire with 20th-century technology. They are set to die at the hands of gladiators for the sake of public spectacle.

Are you not entertained?

Originally aired March 15, 1968.

  • Three hundred years into the future and they’ve forgotten what television is. That seems overly optimistic.
  • The planet is basically nineteen-sixties Earth technology with ancient Roman culture. Spock says, “Complete Earth parallel. The language here is English.” Which doesn’t make a lick of sense, of course, but it sure is convenient.
  • Oh, Jesus, this is the Jesus episode.
  • “The Children of the Son,” which Kirk and his crew misapprehend to be “The Children of the Sun,” are the Christian analogues for this episode. The pro-Jesus tenor is not handled with the greatest of subtlety.
  • Kirk wants to arrest and prosecute Captain Merik for violating the Prime Directive, which seems a little hypocritical. Sure, it’s super important to follow the Prime Directive when it’s some other captain…
  • The modern version of the arena is a television show called Name the Winner, complete with sports commentator and canned applause. It’s clever. All of the jokes about television are pretty good, actually.
  • Kirk is assigned a slave girl to tend to him. At first he thinks she’s been given to him as some kind of trick, but she promises him there’s no deception. So he’s like, okey-dokey, and has sex with her. With a slave. Who’s been given to him. Who specifically says that he owns her. Because, I guess, it seems like she’s into it? On a world where slaves are routinely executed for disobeying their masters? No power imbalance there, no sirree! Screw away, Captain! (And remember, this is the pro-Christianity episode.)
  • The episode ends with Uhura revealing to them that the slaves worship Christ, not the sun, and everyone’s like, ooh, that’s awesome. Christianity’s going to take over this planet and it will be a world of total love and brotherhood. Yay! It is a seriously weird ending.

TOS 2×15. Journey to Babel

As the Enterprise comes under attack on the way to a diplomatic conference on Babel, one of the alien dignitaries is murdered, and Spock’s estranged father Sarek is the prime suspect – but he is also deathly ill, and only Spock can save him.

First aired November 17, 1967.

The one with Spock’s parents.

  • Ooh, aliens! I like the look of the Andorians – the blue guys with the antennae – and the Tellarites – the pig guys. Nobody does bipedal prosthetic-faced aliens like Star Trek!
  • Kirk doesn’t figure out the the Vulcan man and the human woman who are a married couple are Spock’s parents? That seems a little thick, it’s not like Vulcan-human hybrids are particularly common. Plus, he’s been to Spock’s ancestral home and went through that whole Pon Farr thing already – all that bonding they’ve done, and Spock never mentioned his parents’ names? And it’s not like Spock’s dad isn’t a pretty prominent Federation official, you’d think it’d be in Spock’s personnel record, which Kirk would be familiar with. Okay, fine, it’s all to set up a good dramatic line before the opening credits (“Captain, Ambassador Sarek and his wife are my parents.” Duh duh duuuhhhh!), but come on.
  • I like the little hand-touching thing Sarek and Amanda do. It seems a very Vulcan way for him to show that he loves his wife while maintaining the illusion that he doesn’t feel anything.
  • This is a terrific episode. It really hinges on the performances of Leonard Nimoy, Mark Lenard as Sarek, and Jane Wyatt as Amanda, and obviously they’re all fantastic, with really subtle dynamics among the three of them.
  • With such great performances at the heart of the episode, the obligatory action plot could have just gone by the numbers and the episode still would have been memorable. But everything with the murder mystery, the traitorous fake-Andorian and the space battle against the enemy ship is gripping.

TOS 2×16. A Private Little War

On a planet with a primitive civilization, the Enterprise discovers that the Klingons are providing a Stone Age society with increasingly-advanced weaponry.

First aired February 2, 1968.

The one with that horned white ape. Oh, and Klingons.

  • Spock comments, again, on how Earth-like the planet is. You can stop pointing that out, Spock. They’re pretty much all Earth-like at this point. The budget doesn’t allow for more than one or two non-Earth-like planets a season.
  • This is the first of two appearances for Dr. M’Benga, and the first real hint that there are other Medical Officers for McCoy to be the Chief Medical Officer of. M’Benga specializes in Vulcan physiology, so he probably would have been useful in the last episode when Sarek was dying. I guess it was his day off.
  • The mugato – the horned white ape with a venomous bite – is a marvel. The ape suit looks so soft I want to give him a hug. Watching him bite Kirk is my favorite part of this episode.
  • M’Benga walks in on Chapel holding the unconscious Spock’s hand. Awkward! Later he tells her that if Spock wakes, she should do whatever he says. Not a problem!
  • The native men’s blond wigs are huge and ridiculous.
  • Okay, so the conclusion of this episode reveals that it was a Viet Nam parable all along – in fact, Kirk explicitly references this war to justify his arming of the natives to the exact same level of technology that the Klingons have been arming their rivals. Kirk’s reasoning, and ethics, are dubious at best, but at least McCoy’s opposing viewpoint is given voice. I find myself thinking that to avoid a war between the Federation and the Klingons, Kirk sacrificed the people of this planet (who were pacifists, by the way) to years of a bloody war of their own. Not too heroic for the hero of a sci-fi adventure show. Still, Star Trek is often at its best when it tackles difficult subjects, and it’s interesting that the episode ends intending for us to be unsure if Kirk has done the right thing.

TOS 2×17. The Gamesters of Triskelion

Kirk, Uhura, and Chekov are kidnapped by aliens and forced to fight other aliens so that a mentally superior race can gamble on the winner.

First aired January 5, 1968.

Spartacus, but with aliens, and the Romans are brains in a jar.

  • Uhura’s in the away mission? She’s beaming down to the planet, right off the bat in the pre-credits teaser? Oh, I already know I’m going to like this one.
  • And the first commercial cliffhanger is the threat of Uhura about to be raped. With the emotional focus being Kirk’s reaction it. Ugh. She does fight the guy off all on her own, at least, because Uhura is a badass. But still.
  • Uhura’s trainer is the guy who tried to rape her, and he was a big burly handsome man. Kirk’s trainer, of course, is a sexy, sexy woman. Kirk, being Kirk, seduces her to get information and to gain her sympathies. Wouldn’t it have been nice if Uhura could have done that to her trainer? Wouldn’t that switcheroo have been so much more interesting than an attempted-rape scene?
  • Okay, all that aside, this is a fun episode, if a little by-the-numbers. And Uhura kicks ass multiple times, so I’m can’t help but love it.

TOS 2×18. Obsession

A survey of Argus X brings the Enterprise crew in confrontation with a vampiric cloud that killed a crew Kirk was on years ago, captained by the father of an ensign currently assigned to the ship.

First aired December 15, 1967.

The one with the silent but deadly cloud. (Except this one smells nice.)

  • Kirk, Spock, Ensign Rizzo and a security team are carrying out a planet survey. You know what? I feel good about the redshirts’ chances this time out! I think they’re finally gonna beat those odds!
  • Oh. Never mind.
  • Kirk’s a real asshole in this one. Nothing’s messing with his mind or anything. He winds up being right about everything, of course, but he’s still a dick to everyone.
  • It’s a very small thing, but the antigravity device with which Kirk and Garrovick move the bomb is a simple effect done very well.
  • This is a fairly run-of-the-mill episode – another Moby Dick pastiche. Ensign Garrovick’s redemption storyline is the best part – I’m glad he survives (though of course we never see him again).

TOS 2×19. The Immunity Syndrome

After Spock senses the destruction of the Vulcan-manned starship Intrepid, the Enterprise encounters an enormous single-celled organism that feeds on energy which threatens the galaxy as it prepares to reproduce.

First aired January 19, 1968.

The one with the giant space amoeba.

  • Kyle’s at the helm. Sulu hasn’t been on an episode in forever. George Takei was off filming something else, apparently.
  • There’s a lot of button-pushing in this episode. By that I mean, most of the tension, and the resolution of that tension, depends on talking about what to do with the controls – “Maybe we can escape if we push this switch! It didn’t work! Throw that switch, quick! It worked, hooray!” – but dressed up with technobabble. That’s the problem with writing an episode featuring an unintelligent adversary who can’t be communicated with. I’m starting to understand why similar episodes usually resort to the cliched “unreasonable ambassador/commodore/station commander” character just to add a little interpersonal conflict.
  • There’s a nice moment, when Kirk has chosen Spock over McCoy for a vital mission he almost certainly won’t return from (spoiler – he does), where we see the friendship behind the Science and Medical Officers’ bickering. A lot of writers forget this – too often you’d think the two genuinely despised each other.
  • This is not a particularly memorable episode. Not bad, but not that good, either.

TOS 2×20. A Piece of the Action

Returning to a planet last visited by an Earth ship 100 years earlier, theEnterprise finds a planet that has based its culture on the gangsters of Earth’s 1920s.

First aired January 12, 1968.

The one with the gangsters, of course!

  • The premise of this episode is that an entire culture could be so soft-willed and easily influenced that their entire way of life, from dress to language to interpersonal relationships to the very laws that form the foundation of their society, is shaped by what’s written in one single book. Ridiculous!
  • Given the description, “an intersection just at the end of the block, near a yellow fire plug,” Scotty finds the precise beam-down coordinates in seconds. Damn, he’s good!
  • I love that the book Chicago Mobs of the Twenties was published in 1992 but looks like a First Folio.
  • I would like to learn how to play fizzbin, the nonsensical card game Kirk makes up to distract his guards. I’ll bet some Trekkies somewhere have codified the rules.
  • This is a great episode. William Shatner in particular is obviously having so much fun with the contrasts between the gangster and the sci-fi settings. When Star Trek does a comedy episode right, it’s golden.

TOS 2×21. By Any Other Name

Extragalactic aliens hijack the Enterprise and turn the crew into inert solids, leaving the four senior officers on their own to exploit their captors’ weaknesses.

First aired February 23, 1968.

Remember that Saturday Night Live sketch set at a Star Trek convention, with William Shatner, and he makes fun of the Trekkies for not having lives? Remember at the beginning, where Phil Hartman introduces the other guests, and one of them is a woman who was in one episode, where she was transformed into a cube, and crushed? That one.

  • As a Doctor Who fan, I get a little jealous when a sci-fi show understands the differences between a solar system, a galaxy, and a universe. Classic Doctor Who tended to use them somewhat interchangeably, but here, the enormous difficulty of intergalactic travel is a major plot point, described accurately.
  • The dead redshirt in this episode is a woman, Yeoman Thompson. That’s sort of a sign of how this show was ahead of its time, in a weird way – a woman can play a disposable minor character as well as a man.
  • On the other hand, Nurse Chapel is particularly dim in this episode when she doesn’t understand that McCoy and Spock are faking an illness to fool their guards, even though the ship is in enemy hands and one of the enemy aliens is right there with them.
  • They revisit the energy barrier at the rim of the galaxy, from “Where No Man Has Gone Before.” Continuity callback! I guess it doesn’t give psychic powers anymore, since nobody mentions that possibility.
  • Kelinda, the beeeee-yooooo-tiful female alien, is, in her true form, a massive creature with a hundred tentacles. Nevertheless, she finds Kirk irresistible.
  • They win with the power of friendship! Now that’s very Doctor Who.

TOS 2×22. Return to Tomorrow

Three survivors from a race that died half a million years ago “borrow” the bodies of Enterprise crew members so they can build android bodies for themselves.

First aired February 9, 1968.

The one where Kirk, Spock and the female-guest-star-of-the-week agree to swap bodies with some seemingly benevolent aliens, and it goes about as well you’d expect.

  • Sulu’s back! Hooray! Ten whole episodes he was gone, filming The Green Berets.
  • Explaining how the Enterprise crew could be his descendants, Sargon says, “As you now leave your own seed on distant planets…” He’s got Kirk pegged, that’s for sure.
  • Oh, you know Chapel was digging having Spock’s consciousness inside her body. So…many…jokes…

TOS 2×23. Patterns of Force

The Enterprise, searching for a missing Federation historian, discovers that the historian has apparently contaminated the cultural development of the planet where he was assigned as a cultural observer to have it follow the societal path of Nazi Germany in the 1930s and ’40s.

First aired February 16, 1968.

Pretty much the same as the Roman one and the gangster one, but with Nazis.

  • Say this for Star Trek, it is not afraid to keep visiting the same well.
  • Before beaming down, Kirk has Spock and himself injected with subcutaneous transponders, with orders for Scotty to beam them aboard at a set time if they can’t be reached. It’s really a quite sensible precaution, given how their away missions usually go. Makes me wonder why they’ve never done it before…and never do it again…
  • A shirtless Kirk scene is always appreciated.
  • The alien Nazis are persecuting the “Zeons,” whose members include “Isak” and “Abrom.” Just in case the bad guys being actual Nazis wasn’t enough for you to get the comparison.
  • Kirk and Spock recognize that something is wrong with John Gill, the Federation historian who has become the Fuhrer, because of the nonsensical inspirational jingoistic platitudes he spouts in his speech. It basically sounds like any speech from any candidate for any U.S. national office today.
  • Kirk asks Gill, who is supposedly both good and brilliant, why he chose Nazi Germany as the template for a new government for the alien world, and his answer is essentially, “Eh. Seemed like a good idea at the time.”

TOS 2×24. The Ultimate Computer

The Enterprise tests a computer that, if successful, could replace Kirk as the captain.

First aired March 8, 1968.

Damn machines! They’re taking all our jobs, amirite?

  • A computer is installed that can do the job of running the Enterprise all by itself. I’m guessing…and I’m going out on a limb here…that it’s going to go wrong.
  • Dr. Daystrom is kind of a dick to Kirk. It’s not nice to taunt someone with the prospect of losing their job. Not in this economy.
  • Spock is so far up Daystrom’s ass he could do a Vulcan colon-meld.
  • Commodore Wesley is a dick to Kirk too, teasing him that he no longer serves any useful purpose. That’s no surprise, though, as commodores in the Star Trek universe are contractually obligated to be dicks.
  • Captain Kirk is getting really, really good at talking machines to death. I’ll bet by now he could convince a vending machine to hang itself.

TOS 2×25. The Omega Glory

The Enterprise discovers the derelict starship Exeter drifting in space, its entire crew killed by an unknown plague and her captain missing.

First aired March 1, 1968.

The one with the starship captain who goes bad. Yeah, another one.

  • Lieutenant Galloway appears in this episode. He’s been in a bunch of episodes since the first season, doing not a lot in some very crucial episodes. He’s in the landing party down to the planet of the Guardian in “The City on the Edge of Forever,” and he guards the storage bin filled with tribbles that pour out onto Kirk in “The Trouble with Tribbles.” They don’t always bother, but I really enjoy when the producers make an effort to keep the recurring minor characters (some just extras, with no lines at all) consistent.
  • Kirk gets on his hypocritical high horse about the prime directive again in this episode, criticizing Captain Tracey for using his phaser to defend the friendly villagers from the attacking bloodthirsty savages. As if Kirk wouldn’t have done exactly the same thing.
  • Tracey immediately loses any moral superiority he might have by vaporizing poor Lt. Galloway. Sorry, Galloway. You can only avoid that redshirt curse for so long.
  • The Asian-looking people are the good ones, and – twist! – the white people are the savages! Kirk refers to them as “the white civilization” and “the yellow civilization.” Blergh.
  • The savages are the Yangs and the villagers are the Kohms, and Kirk and Spock realize they’re degradations of the words “Yankees” and “Communists,” because that makes sense to them. So the white savages were the good guys all along! Uh…yay?
  • This planet had an American civilization, complete with American flag, Pledge of Allegiance, Constitution, and the Christian Bible. Are there any planets in Star Trek that didn’t evolve to be like Earth? And can someone tell the writers that sometimes they can make their metaphors a little less on-the-nose? We’ll still get it, promise.
  • This episode is…not great. Really rams that American exceptionalism down your throat.

TOS 2×26. Assignment: Earth

The Enterprise travels back in time to 1968, where the crew encounters the mysterious Gary Seven who claims to be sent by advanced beings trying to help Earth.

First aired March 29, 1968.

The one that’s actually an episode of a completely different show that never got made.

  • The Enterprise can travel through time whenever they hell they want now. Just a routine mission to 1968, no big deal.
  • I like the foggy vault door thing Gary Seven uses to transport himself. It’s nifty. The nice thing about this being a backdoor pilot is they could spend the dough on giving him a really cool office.
  • Hey, that’s Teri Garr! She’s quite charming in this. I’m sort of sorry it never got picked up, if just to see more of her as Roberta Lincoln.
  • I think the cat is my favorite character, though. She turns into a sexy lady for just a second at the end, I assume to make all the suggestions sprinkled throughout the episode that Gary Seven is fucking his cat more palatable.
  • Spock: “Captain, we could say that Mister Seven and Miss Lincoln have some interesting experiences in store for them.” Or not.
  • Not a bad episode, but a little unfortunate to end the season with a backdoor pilot starring a completely new cast. Makes it all the better that the show was renewed – this would have been a terrible series finale.

 

Posted by Brian in Pointless Babblings, Ten Thoughts, 0 comments

Thoughts on Star Trek (1) – The Original Series, Season One

After Doctor Who, my favorite science fiction franchise would have to be Star Trek. I remember the episodes of the original series playing endlessly in syndication when I was a kid, I saw all the movies in the theater, and I was there on day one when The Next Generation premiered. I’ve stuck with it through highs and lows, all the way through the disappointing finale of the otherwise underrated Enterprise and the questionable reboot movies.

A while back I started on a massive re-watch of the entire canon, starting from the beginning and proceeding chronologically. (I decided to watch the original series in production order, since the broadcast order was decided by the network rather than the producers. Less continuity weirdness if you watch it in production order.) I was really struck by just how brilliant the original show was, and how well it holds up today. I have a lot of thoughts on it, and since, hey, I’ve got a blog, I thought I’d share them. So here’s the first in a probably quite long series of my thoughts on Star Trek, covering the first season.

Here’s how I’m doing this. Each entry starts with a code for the series (TOS: The Original Series; TAS: The Animated Series; TNG: The Next Generation; DS9: Deep Space Nine; VOY: Voyager; ENT: Enterprise; MOV: the movies), followed by the season number, the episode number and the episode title. Then, to help refresh your memory, I’ve given the episode synopsis from Memory Alpha, the premier Star Trek wiki. Then the date the episode first aired. Then, in case you still don’t remember it, my own quick description of which one this is, based on whatever I think is the most memorable part of the story. Finally come my own thoughts on the episode, neatly bulleted. Sometimes I have a lot to say, sometimes I don’t. Let’s get to it!

TOS 1×0. The Cage

While investigating a distress call from Talos IV, Captain Christopher Pike of the starship Enterprise is captured and tested by beings who can project powerfully realistic illusions.

The unaired pilot, with nobody you know except Spock in it.

  • Jeffrey Hunter (Pike) is very handsome. (Yes, this is my first thought on the entire Star Trek canon. I feel like it’s a good idea to let you know how serious to take this right off the bat.)
  • On meeting his new yeoman, Pike is unhappy with having a “woman on the bridge.” God damn it, Star Trek. Hurry up and get progressive already.
  • The different illusory settings created by the Talosians are done well, especially the fight in the castle.
  • The Talosians’ plan to repopulate their planet with two humans seems peculiar. Apart from the obvious inbreeding problems once you hit the second generation…why bother? If your species is going extinct, how does breeding a completely different species to replace you help?
  • Vina can’t go with Pike at the end because she’s ugly, and therefore can’t be around other people, and he accepts this. God damn it, Star Trek, what did I just say?

TOS 1×1. Where No Man Has Gone Before

An encounter at the limits of our galaxy begins to change Lieutenant Commander Gary Mitchell and threatens the future of the Enterprise and the Human race itself.

First aired September 22, 1966.

The one where Kirk’s BFF gets super-powers and goes crazy.

  • I like these early Starfleet uniforms. They’re basically just sweaters. They look comfy.
  • Sulu is a physicist in this episode. That’s weird.
  • And we meet the chief medical officer of the Enterprise, Doctor Piper. (Don’t get too comfortable, Doc!)
  • Hard to get a handle on who the main characters of the show at this point were supposed to be, beyond Kirk, Spock, and Piper. Scotty’s pretty prominent, I guess, but Sulu doesn’t do much. Lt. Kelso seemed like a lead until Mitchell killed him. Good fake out!
  • This is a pretty great episode. As much as I liked Captain Pike and Majel Barrett as his first officer, I can see why the network retooled it. I don’t know why they held this episode back to air third, though – apparently it was felt to be “too expository” to be the pilot, but it seems pretty action-packed to me. That last battle between Kirk, Mitchell and Dehner is a lot of fun.

TOS 1×2. The Corbomite Maneuver

Exploring a distant region of space, the Enterprise is threatened by Balok, commander of a starship from the First Federation.

First aired November 10, 1966.

The one with creepy child Clint Howard.

  • Sulu’s at the helm, McCoy is in sick bay, and all is right with the world. I wonder what happened to Dr. Piper? We’ll never know.
  • Kirk’s annoyed at being assigned an attractive female yeoman. When does this show get progressive, exactly?
  • That attractive female yeoman is, of course, Janice Rand, who will be a major character for a while before leaving the show under truly horrible real-world circumstances.
  • This is Lt. Uhura’s first appearance too. I love Lt. Uhura. I get very excited whenever they let her have a line.
  • Chief navigator Lt. Dave Bailey keeps fucking up, again and again and again. And then he yells at the captain. If I didn’t already know, I’d guess we wouldn’t be seeing him again after this episode.
  • Balok is clearly a puppet, but I’m guessing the crew shouldn’t feel too badly about not realizing this since most of the aliens they’ll meet won’t be puppets despite clearly being puppets. If that makes sense.
  • Bailey’s all calm now, and Kirk’s like, “Eh, insubordination, shminsubordination, take your post.” They’re very forgiving in the Federation, I guess.
  • Clint Howard as the real Balok is way scarier than the puppet. I don’t know why he bothered with it.
  • Balok asks for one of them to live with him, and Lt. Bailey is immediately all, “Yeah, I’ll live with the freaky alien kid with the disturbingly adult voice. Sure.” Kirk talks a good game about how it’ll be good for Bailey but I think he’s just eager to get rid of him.

TOS 1×3. Mudd’s Women

The Enterprise rescues a con man named Harry Mudd who is trafficking in mail-order brides.

First aired October 13, 1966.

The one with the space pimp.

  • I have trouble believing Harry Mudd is any good at his job. He is so obviously a stereotypical con man I half expect him to knock on my door and convince me to switch to an alternative energy provider.
  • There are only three miners on the whole planet? I don’t know if that means the colony is extremely efficient, or extremely inefficient.
  • The scene with Eve and the miner Childress reminds me of Seven Brides for Seven Brothers. But in space. Seven Space Brides for Seven Space Brothers.
  • Uhura was in gold in this episode and the previous one. They were still figuring out exactly what everyone’s roles aboard the ship were, but it’s a shame they didn’t run with the idea of having her be a part of Command division. Can you imagine Kirk leaving for an away mission and saying, “Uhura, you’ve got the conn,” and she moves to the big chair? That would have been fantastic.
  • I’m fantasizing about ways Star Trek could have been more progressive, because this episode with the mail-order brides isn’t doing it for me, for some reason.

TOS 1×4. The Enemy Within

A transporter malfunction splits Captain Kirk into two people – one good and one evil, and neither capable of functioning well separately.

First aired October 6, 1966.

The one with the evil duplicate Kirk that isn’t “Mirror, Mirror.”

  • The first “transporter malfunction causes the plot” episode. But not the last!
  • Also the first attempted rape on Star Trek. But not the last!
  • It’s evil duplicate Kirk on Janice Rand, in case you’re wondering. She fights him off and scratches the hell out of him in the process. Good for her!
  • There is some great Shatner scenery-chewing in this episode. It started early.
  • Sulu’s stranded on the rapidly-freezing planet and does the “heat the rock with a phaser” trick for warmth. Do NOT think too hard about the physics of this. Just accept it.
  • I love the little alien doggie that gets split into good little alien doggie and evil little alien doggie.
  • After everything’s been resolved, Spock makes a smarmy comment to Rand suggesting that the evil Kirk had some qualities she found “interesting.” Fuck you, Spock. He tried to rape her. Asshole. (No joke. It is an ugly moment and it’s meant to be the lighthearted ending to the episode.)

TOS 1×5. The Man Trap

A mysterious creature stalks the Enterprise, murdering crew members.

First aired September 8, 1966.

The one with the salt vampire that looks like a cross between Bigfoot and a lamprey.

  • Crewman Darnell once met a pretty woman on “Wrigley’s Pleasure Planet.” We don’t learn anything else about this place, but based on the name alone I very much want to visit.
  • The appearance of the salt vampire gets made fun of a lot (in the real world, I mean, not in the story), but I actually think it looks pretty good.
  • There’s some quick flirty banter between Spock and Uhura in this episode. It didn’t seem like the set-up for a real romance – Uhura was teasing him – but it does set the stage for an interesting relationship between the two. (Which never goes anywhere, unfortunately.)
  • There’s also a great scene with Rand and Sulu in the ship’s arboretum. Sulu has an interest in botany, apparently. That will also never be addressed again.
  • These very early episodes tried to showcase some of the other crew members and make more use of the ensemble, but that fades away pretty quickly. It becomes all about Kirk, Spock, McCoy and sometimes Scotty, and the rest settle for the occasional plot point without much in the way of character development. It’s a shame – there were a lot of interesting interpersonal dynamics to explore, and the original cast were pretty good actors, for the most part.

TOS 1×6. The Naked Time

The Enterprise crew is intoxicated by an inhibition-stripping contagion which causes mayhem throughout the ship.

First aired September 29, 1966.

The one where they all get space-drunk.

  • Lt. Tormolen (don’t bother remembering his name), while examining mysterious deaths, removes the glove of his environmental suit to scratch his nose. I’m sorry, he deserves what he gets.
  • Shirtless sweaty fencing Sulu. Yeah, I can get into that.
  • Most of the Enterprise crew are pretty friendly drunks. Everybody’s pretty frisky. I’d take them with me to Wrigley’s Pleasure Planet for sure.
  • I don’t really get why Nurse Chapel is so into Spock, but Majel Barrett sells it.
  • Shatner takes a lot of shit about his overacting, but his “Never lose you. Never.” to the Enterprise is fantastic.
  • And they travel back in time three days at the end for…reasons? I always found that ending bizarre, it’s apropos of nothing. It doesn’t lead into a time travel episode, it just kind of happens. Oh, we traveled backwards in time a few days? Huh. Weird. Whatever, carry on.

TOS 1×7. Charlie X

The Enterprise takes seventeen-year-old Charles Evans aboard for transport after he spent fourteen years alone on a deserted planet, but he’s unable to reintegrate with his fellow Humans.

First aired September 15, 1966.

The one with the horny super-powered teenager.

  • I can’t help but feel that this episode is somewhat influenced by that “wish it into the cornfield” episode of The Twilight Zone.
  • More flirtatious teasing from Uhura to Spock, as she sings to him in the rec room. I wonder if the writers of the new film series were spring-boarding off of this early relationship?
  • More threateningly sexual advances on Rand.
  • I don’t have a lot to say about this episode. It’s serviceable. Kind of a deus ex machina ending, but that’s hardly unique for this series.

TOS 1×8. Balance of Terror

The Enterprise battles a Romulan ship suspected of destroying outposts near the neutral zone.

First aired December 15, 1966.

The first one with the Romulans.

  • The episode begins with Kirk officiating a wedding between two crewmembers we’ve never met before. What are the odds of both of them making it to the wedding night?
  • Everybody’s all freaked out because the Romulans look like Vulcans, like Spock. But nobody thinks it’s at all strange that they’ve met so many alien species who look like humans?
  • Okay, I guess in the series so far they haven’t met any aliens who look like humans. (Clint Howard doesn’t count.) But they will! Tons! And nobody mentions it then!
  • This episode is very, very good. Mark Lenard as the Romulan commander is perfect.

TOS 1×9. What Are Little Girls Made Of?

The Enterprise finds archaeologist Dr. Roger Korby, who has been missing for five years, living underground on a deserted planet with a group of sophisticated androids.

First aired October 20, 1966.

The one where Nurse Chapel has a lot to do.

  • I always like episodes where a character outside the Big Three gets a turn in the spotlight, so I have a fondness for this one. It fleshes out Nurse Chapel’s backstory quite a bit and Majel Barrett is very good in it. It’s just a shame that it’s such a generic “torn between my duty and my man” kind of story.
  • And what happened to her being in love with Spock? Seems weird they don’t mention it, since it was such a big deal just a few episodes ago and this story is all about her love life.
  • Korby made himself a sex bot. They don’t even try and bury that behind a space allegory.
  • Kirk’s on the run from Ruk the giant robot, and he breaks off a stalactite to use as a weapon. It looks exactly like a giant pink dildo. It even has balls.

kirkdildo

TOS 1×10. Dagger of the Mind

A routine visit to the Tantalus Penal Colony proves dangerous for Kirk and an Enterprise psychiatrist.

First aired November 3, 1966.

The one with the penal colony. (It’s not a very memorable episode, honestly, but isn’t penal a fun word?)

  • Van Gelder escapes from the penal colony by hiding inside a crate that’s beamed aboard the Enterprise. That is some seriously lax security on both ends.
  • It’s the first Vulcan mind meld! It’s treated here as a much bigger deal to do than it will be later, when Spock’ll meld with anyone with a pulse, the hussy.

TOS 1×11. Miri

The Enterprise discovers an Earth-like planet that was devastated by a horrific degenerative disease and is now populated entirely by impossibly old children.

First aired October 27, 1966.

“No blah blah blah!”

  • Yeoman Rand gets a lot to do in this episode. I always forget what a major character she was on the show before Grace Lee Whitney’s unfortunate departure.
  • The disease is supposed to have killed anyone post-pubescent, but Jahn is making it hard to suspend my disbelief. He looks like a middle manager at a box company.
  • It’s really fun to watch Kirk get the crap beat out of him by a bunch of children.
  • So, the planet is completely identical to Earth, and they never really try to find out why. (Besides the obvious reason, that the studio wanted to use existing backlots instead of making new alien-looking exterior sets.) They mention it at first, have a sort of, “Huh, that’s weird,” reaction, then never discuss it again. I’m not sure they have this whole “mission of exploration” thing down.

TOS 1×12. The Conscience of the King

An actor traveling aboard the Enterprise may be a former governor who ordered a mass murder twenty years ago.

First aired December 8, 1966.

The one with the Shakespeare plays.

  • Pretty big back-story introduced for Kirk here, that he was a survivor of a famous massacre on an Earth colony when he was young.
  • The whole story here hinges on the fact that of 4,000 survivors, only nine ever saw the face of the man who committed the massacre. But that man was the governor of the colony. He was the governor and he killed thousands of people. That didn’t make the news? They didn’t have a yearbook photo or something?
  • Maybe it’s a Hamlet homage but Kirk takes his damn sweet time deciding that the traveling actor on-board is the evil governor, well past the point when it’s completely obvious to everyone.
  • That aside, I do like all the Shakespearean influences on this episode. It’s right up my alley.

TOS 1×13. The Galileo Seven

Spock faces difficult command decisions when his shuttle crashes on a hostile world populated by barbarous giants.

First aired January 5, 1967.

Everybody hates Spock.

  • This is a great episode, but some of the characterization falters in service of building up tension. The reactions of the shuttle crew to Spock’s command are ludicrous for military personnel – they’re insubordinate, bordering on mutinous. And Commissioner Ferris might as well be twirling a mustache, he’s so pointlessly evil.
  • Uhura gets to be science officer for a day. That must make a nice change for her. They’re really committed to cross-training in Starfleet.
  • The ending is very tense. Despite myself I was genuinely concerned that the Enterprise wouldn’t spot them.
  • This is one of many episodes that ends with everybody laughing at Spock. It’s a good thing he doesn’t have emotions, the poor guy.

TOS 1×14. Court Martial

Kirk is accused of criminal negligence causing the death of one of his subordinates, Lt. Commander Benjamin Finney, and is put on trial for his murder.

First aired February 2, 1967.

The one where Kirk killed a redshirt, maybe.

  • Cogley, Kirk’s lawyer, talks about the history of those who created law, from “Moses to the Tribunal of Alpha III.” This is a small detail, but they do it a lot on Star Trek and I really like it – they’ll include, in a list of historical events or personages, some fictional creation from the future, unknown to us. It’s good world-building, and reminds us that there’s a whole history of the galaxy between our time and theirs.
  • Uhura takes the navigation console at the end of this episode. She can do anything! She could run the whole Enterprise herself, screw those other guys. Uhura’s awesome.
  • There’s an unnamed personnel officer who gives testimony at Kirk’s trial, played by Nancy Wong, an Asian-American actor. This isn’t the first time we’ve seen a person of color in a supporting role on the show, and it’s certainly not the last, but I make note of it here just as an opportunity to say how great it is to see a popular television show in the 1960s with such diverse casting. The show was really committed to the idea that all of humanity had united by the time of Star Trek and racism was a thing of the past for humanity. Of course, it could have been better – there were a lot of white dudes in Starfleet – but compared to other television shows of the time, it deserves its groundbreaking reputation – not just for the obvious reasons, like Nichelle Nichols as Uhura on the bridge, but also for Nancy Wong as the unnamed personnel officer feeling bad about having to testify against her captain.

TOS 1×15. The Menagerie, Part 1

Spock fakes a message from the Enterprise’s former commander, Christopher Pike, steals the vessel, and sets it on a locked course for the forbidden planet Talos IV.

First aired November 17, 1966.

The one where they chop the pilot up into two episodes.

  • I confess, I skipped most of the pilot re-hash and just watched the framing sequences. It hadn’t been that long since I had watched “The Cage” and it really didn’t hold up to another re-watching so soon.
  • Wow, communication methods for people who are “locked in” has really regressed in the past few centuries. They can’t even hold up an alphabet chart for Pike to beep at?
  • Lt. Hansen makes his second appearance as helmsman. The second part of this story will be his last appearance as helmsman. The first series in particular had an awful lot of personnel making a handful of appearances, making it seem like they might become main characters, before vanishing, never to be seen or mentioned again.

TOS 1×16. The Menagerie, Part 2

While Spock faces court martial for kidnapping Captain Pike and hijacking the Enterprise, he further explains his actions with mysterious footage about Pike’s captivity by the Talosians.

First aired November 24, 1966.

The one where they chop the pilot up into two episodes. Part 2.

  • It’s a little severe for Starfleet to punish contact with Talos IV with the death penalty, especially if it’s their only capital offense. Those guys aren’t so terrible. They let Pike go. Eventually. Maybe Starfleet just doesn’t want anybody watching the pilot episode?
  • Commodore Mendez’s reaction to the Orion slave girl is to drool a little and comment that they’re supposed to be “irresistible,” and not, “she’s a slave, how horrible,” as one might expect.
  • Psyche! Mendez was never there, it was all an illusion! So really it’s the Talosians who are being disgusting.
  • Pike gets to the transporter room and down to the planet pretty damn fast considering his situation.

TOS 1×17. Shore Leave

The Enterprise crew take shore leave on a planet where their imaginations become reality.

First aired December 29, 1966.

The one where McCoy sees the White Rabbit from Alice in Wonderland.

  • The best part of this whole episode is Finnegan, the Irish upperclassman who taunts Kirk to the accompaniment of a jaunty jig. I would watch a Finnegan spin-off.
  • McCoy is super gross to Yeoman Barrows, but she’s into it.
  • We get another almost-rape, this time on Barrows by an illusory Don Juan. We learn at the end that these illusions are caused by the secret wishes of the crew, which is…disturbing, regardless of exactly whose secret wish it might be.
  • The episode ends by revealing they were never in any danger and absolutely nothing was at stake, so, you know. Glad I spent an hour on that.

TOS 1×18. The Squire of Gothos

The Enterprise is captured by Trelane, the childish ruler of Gothos.

First aired January 12, 1967.

“Are you challenging me to a duel?”

  • William Campbell as Trelane is everything.
  • I love this episode, so, so much. It sets the template for what will become a pretty generic Star Trek plot – the crew is kidnapped and manipulated by a God-like alien. “Where No Man Has Gone Before” and “Charlie X” were both proto-versions of this type of story, but “The Squire of Gothos” perfects it.
  • There doesn’t seem to be any particular reason why Yeoman Ross couldn’t have been Yeoman Rand – except, of course, for the behind-the-scenes drama. Too bad.

TOS 1×19. Arena

Kirk battles an alien captain who destroyed a Federation outpost.

First aired January 19, 1967.

Kirk versus the lizard-man.

  • Sulu’s in command! When Kirk beams down he leaves Sulu in charge, which makes so much more sense than Scotty, who would quickly become the default stand-by captain. The chief engineer should be in engineering, whereas Sulu’s just a few feet away from his normal post. Also, Sulu is bad-ass. (I’m glad the movies finally realized this.)
  • Another god-like alien race – the Metrons, this time – having their way with the little people.
  • The Gorn looks like a Sleestak on steroids but I like it.
  • This is an all-out action episode, and they do it right. Kirk trying to build a cannon before the Gorn rips him to shreds is gripping.

TOS 1×20. The Alternative Factor

Investigating the cause of a massive, galaxy-wide disruption in space, the Enterprise finds a mad scientist who claims that he is being pursued by a hideous being.

First aired March 30, 1967.

The one with the guy fighting his twin from the negative universe.

  • For all the crap I give this show about its occasionally contradictory relationship with gender roles, sometimes it really gets it right on the diversity front. This episode features two female African-American bridge officers like it ain’t no thang. In addition to Uhura, this week’s one-off character is Lt. Charlene Masters, who wears science division blue but also works in engineering. She does her job. She gets involved in the main plot, filling the role Scotty would normally play (he’s not in this one). She complains about coffee with her assistant, an unnamed white guy. It’s 1967, and this is network television, and all of this is important.
  • The image of Lazarus and his evil double fighting in the negative space corridor is really striking. I saw this episode as a kid and it really unnerved me for some reason.
  • This is one of those episodes that really isn’t that great – it tends to drag – but that I like anyway, probably because of how much it freaked me out as a kid. Kirk’s last line is unnecessarily portentous, though – “But what of Lazarus? What of Lazarus?” Uh, you just locked him in a battle with his evil double until the end of time, Kirk, that’s what of Lazarus. You had a whole conversation with him about it. Don’t act like you don’t know what you did.

TOS 1×21. Tomorrow Is Yesterday

The Enterprise is hurled back in time to the year 1969, where the US Air Force sights it as a UFO. The crew must find a way to erase evidence of their visit before trying to get back to their future home.

First aired January 26, 1967.

The time travel one where they kidnap the fighter pilot.

  • Now, this is a good episode. Lots of action, the plot keeps moving, some good character-based comic bits, likable guest star playing a good guy who acts as the antagonist for entirely believable reasons. More like this, please!
  • Wouldn’t it have been cool if this episode had followed The Naked Time, and the pointless time travel at the end of that episode had been how they wound up in 1969? It would have been a neat little cliffhanger linking two otherwise unrelated adventures. Shame they didn’t really do that sort of thing back then – all the episodes had to pretty much stand alone (with rare exceptions, like “The Menagerie.”).
  • This is the one where the computer calls Kirk “dear” because it was overhauled on a female-dominated planet. I…think it’s supposed to be a joke?
  • The ending is cool. Just don’t try and think the time travel stuff through too hard. Why does Christopher forget everything when they beam him home? Because science, that’s why.

TOS 1×22. The Return of the Archons

The Enterprise discovers a planet where the population act like zombies and obey the will of their unseen ruler, Landru.

First aired February 9, 1967.

The one with the orgy.

  • The natives of this planet are mind-controlled drones but they periodically engage in the Festival, which is twelve hours of uncontrolled debauchery. It looks hella fun. Five stars on Trip Advisor.
  • Kirk justifies violating the Prime Directive again. It’s not that I disagree, but it seems like it’s becoming more of a Prime Suggestion.
  • Kirk logics another computer to death. After 6,000 years it must have really needed a software update.
  • Another episode with a great set-up and a weak resolution. Why does Festival even exist? There’s no reason for the computer to allow it except to offer an exciting plot device and ramp up the danger a little.

TOS 1×23. A Taste of Armageddon

On a diplomatic mission, the crew visit a planet that is waging a destructive war fought solely by computer simulation, but the casualties, including the crew of the USS Enterprise, are supposed to be real.

First aired February 23, 1967.

The one where all the people line up to be atomized because the war computers told them they had to.

  • I remember this episode as a favorite when I was a kid, so I had that moment of, “Ooh, this is a good one!” when I recognized it.
  • Are all Federation Ambassadors and Commodores and Admirals willfully obtuse? Ambassador Fox is one of many Federation authority figures who exist only to ignore obvious warning signs and order the Enterprise crew to do something stupid for the sole purpose of putting them all into danger.  At least he wises up by the end, although it takes him actually being forcibly marched into a disintegration chamber before he starts listening to Kirk.
  • Spock does the mind meld on a guard – from the other side of a wall. Time to dial back those Vulcan superpowers a little, I think.
  • Kirk threatens to implement General Order 24, which would command the Enterprise to destroy all life on the planet. I keep waiting for him to explain that it was a bluff, and General Order 24 doesn’t exist, but apparently it does. That’s pretty hardcore for a fleet of ships on missions of peaceful exploration.
  • This is a great episode – lots of action, and the central conceit is just plausible enough to make it extra disturbing.

TOS 1×24. Space Seed

The Enterprise discovers an ancient spaceship carrying genetically enhanced supermen from late 20th century Earth and their enigmatic warlord leader: Khan Noonien Singh.

First aired February 16, 1967.

Khaaaaaaaaaaannnnn!!!!!

  • Ricardo Montalban is fantastic. Maybe the best guest star of the entire series. There’s a reason they made a movie out of a sequel to this.
  • Lt. Marla McGivers is a bit of a wet noodle, though. She commits treason because Khan is just such a manly man that she can’t control the pitter-patter of her girly heart. Ugh. How did you ever get out of the Academy?
  • Man, remember the Eugenics Wars of the 1990s? Those sure did suck.
  • Uhura gets a killer moment when she’s slapped for refusing to give Khan the information he’s looking for. The looks of defiance she gives him afterwards is fierce. Nichelle Nichols is a national treasure, y’all.
  • Deservedly considered one of the best episodes ever. I certainly think so.

TOS 1×25. This Side of Paradise

The Enterprise crew finds happiness at a colony where alien spores provide total contentment.

First aired March 2, 1967.

The one where the crew gets high. No, not drunk, that was “The Naked Time.”

  • I can’t believe that the production crew of this episode did not intend for the spray spore of the evil pod plants to look like ejaculate. The crew gets blasted with it, head to toe. It’s like somebody made a Star Trek porn parody consisting entirely of bukkake scenes.
  • This is the third and final appearance of Lieutenant Kelowitz, who had a small part in “The Galileo Seven” and a slightly bigger one in “Arena.” Even this late in the season the show is still figuring out who the major recurring characters are going to be.
  • “I have never understood the female capacity to avoid a direct answer to any question.” Fuck you, Spock.

TOS 1×26. The Devil in the Dark

The Enterprise arrives at Janus VI, where an unknown monster is destroying machinery and killing the miners, threatening the entire mining operation.

First aired March 9, 1967.

The one with the rock monster.

  • Another classic. The first half, when the Horta’s killing everybody, is genuinely creepy.
  • It does stretch credulity a bit that the miners have discovered literally millions of perfectly smooth silicon spheres in the mines and nobody ever bothered to spare a thought as to where they might have come from.
  • I think Leonard Nimoy took some acting lessons from Shatner while preparing for his mind-meld with the Horta. “Pain! Pain!”
  • This is the first “I’m a doctor, not a…” line. (Bricklayer, in this instance.) Surprisingly late in the series.
  • I like how immensely pleased with himself McCoy is after he heals the Horta. Maybe he is a bricklayer after all.

TOS 1×27. Errand of Mercy

Kirk and Spock try to protect the planet Organia from the Klingons, but the natives don’t want the Federation’s help.

First aired March 23, 1967.

Klingons! Finally!

  • The pre-existing tension with the Klingon Empire seems like a really big deal considering we’ve never heard of them before.
  • The Klingons are instantly a believable threat, more so than just about any alien race we’ve been shown before. It’s clear why they became the main antagonists of the series.
  • And Kor is awesome.
  • The Organians’ pacifism would probably be a bit nobler if they weren’t omnipotent. Kind of easy to be all high and mighty about violence when you are, in fact, higher and mightier than everybody else.
  • This is a fantastic episode. The conflict of Kirk and Spock against Kor is tight. I love it despite the deus ex machina all-powerful aliens ending.

TOS 1×28. The City on the Edge of Forever

After taking an accidental overdose of cordrazine, Doctor Leonard McCoy goes back in time and changes history.

First aired April 6, 1967.

You know this one. Even people who never saw the show know this one.

  • Wow, this really was a hell of a streak, wasn’t it? I know they didn’t air in this order, but the production team was on a role.
  • McCoy “accidentally” injects himself with that cordrazine for a really long time. You honestly couldn’t have stopped pressing that button, Doctor Feelgood?
  • Hey, it’s Lieutenant Kyle! Have I mentioned him yet? He’s the major character you don’t remember – I had honestly forgotten all about him until I started this re-watch. He’s in more episodes than anybody outside of the main characters, I think. He even makes it into the animated series and has a small part in the second movie. He’s usually manning the transporter, although he pops up in other positions whenever they need somebody to say a few lines. Remember him yet? No? He’s in more episodes than Janice Rand! Ah, well, sorry, Lieutenant.
  • Uhura’s in the landing party! I love when Uhura gets to go down to a planet. It doesn’t happen very often.
  • The Guardian of Forever is very free with his time travel abilities. You wanna hop inside, change history, maybe wipe out your entire species before it evolves? Knock yourself out. Not much of a guardian, is he? More like the Napping Night Shift Security Guard of Forever.
  • Kirk explains Spock’s eyebrows and ears away by saying he’s Chinese and had an accident with a rice picker. Jesus Christ.
  • The scene where the homeless guy accidentally vaporizes himself with McCoy’s phaser gives me the shivers. Frankly, the whole idea that the phaser has a setting that completely disintegrates someone without a trace freaks me out. I know it’s just science fiction, but it’s always struck me as a really horrible way to die. (I know that’s kind of a downer thought, but cut me some slack, this whole episode is a downer.)
  • While the main question of this episode is a great one – would you sacrifice someone you love for the greater good? – the message conveyed – that pacifism could destroy the world – is slightly less great.

TOS 1×29. Operation – Annihilate!

The Deneva colony is attacked by neural parasites that cause mass insanity while the crew of Enterprise search for a way to stop them.

First aired April 13, 1967.

The one where Kirk’s brother dies.

  • Really great pre-credits teaser – the mysterious ship plunging itself into the planet’s sun, the pilot intent on killing himself, resisting any attempts to save him. Good mysterious set-up!
  • Kirk’s brother dies off-screen, before the crew arrives. It’s a bit shocking, to have the brother of the lead character killed so casually. The story doesn’t make as much of it as it could, frankly. By the end of the episode Kirk’s joking around like nothing happened.
  • I can’t decide if the parasite creatures are disturbing or ridiculous. They look like a cross between a jellyfish and a frog that’s been run over by a truck, but there are so many of them and the pulsing creeps me out.
  • Then they start to fly and I settle on ridiculous.
  • A pretty good episode, but nothing special considering it was the season finale. (It was last in both production and broadcast order.) I know season finales weren’t quite as big a deal back then, but they really should have gone with “The City on the Edge of Forever.”

Next: The Original Series, Season Two

Posted by Brian in Pointless Babblings, Ten Thoughts, 0 comments