This is the season that
truly defined what is known as Star Trek. Over the break script editor Dorothy (D.C.)
Fontana interviewed the cast and added what they’d learned/created about their characters
to the series bible. Basically, what
worked before was amplified, what didn’t was dropped, and the show as it is
known in the popular culture took form.
“Amok Time”
Air
Date: September 15, 1967
Mom
Title: “Spock’s Wedding”
Crazed Spock, a trip to
Vulcan, the greatest fight music in television history and Nimoy’s introduction
of the salute and “Live Long and Prosper” – Man what an opening!
Nurse Chapel admits affection for Mr. Spock for the first time since she had her inhibitions
destroyed by the Psi 2000 virus. Now
that her friend Uhura’s romance is finished, and Christine’s fiancée is both
dead and a robot, she has a clear shot.
Uhura does look sadly at
him when Kirk leads Spock off the bridge, but doesn’t moon over the Vulcan
anymore.
Yay, Chekov’s here! We didn’t even know you and immediately
realize how much we missed you and your banter with Sulu.
Two Questions related to
Vulcan being one of the charter members of the Federation:
1) T’Pau declined a seat on the Federation
council? Then in what capacity was
Vulcan a founder? Have they withdrawn over time?
2) Spock (and presumably
all the other male Vulcans in Starfleet) is not fourteen years old. Didn’t anyone notice they go nuts during Pon
Farr every seven years?
Since combat shakes off
the effects of the plak-tow, are Vulcan officers sneaking into seedy bars on
shore leave and beating the tar out of unsuspecting ruffians to keep this
secret?
This is primarily a
Spock episode, and we learn a great deal about him.
Even through the use of
silly words, bizarre musical instruments and impractical weapons, Nimoy’s
portrayals of his internal battles are a wonder to behold.
In his cabin there are
items that dive deeper into Spock’s personality. His tricorder and his chess
set are readily available, highlighting the primary tools of his work and favorite
recreational activity. There’s also a molecule made of nerf balls that may have
been his third grade science project, indicating the sentimentality of his
human half may not be as buried as he’d like.
As with any member of
the Big Three, when the focus is on one, the story is driven by their friendship. Exactly how far each is willing to go for the
other comes out in spades. Having seen
the first officer steal the Enterprise before, Kirk and McCoy start off
assuming he has an acceptable reason for mutiny, and their trust only grows
from there.
The Captain and Bones
immediately establish their personalities in political situations when meeting
T’Pau, being respectively defiant and charming.
They also both instantaneously
deduce that Stonn is the other man in the triangle. So much for Vulcans repressing emotions. Then again, they use a pretty broad
definition for what is a feeling and what isn’t. If T’pring’s actions are any indication,
being a manipulative wench is not emotional.
Aside: Poor Lawrence Montaigne. Sci-Fi typecasting can be bad in general, but
after playing Stonn and Decius (the Romulan tattletale officer in "Balance ofTerror”) he must have been offered countless, “Jerk with pointy ears” parts.
McCoy knows Jim all too
well, which is why he keeps his own plan secret and eggs Kirk on to kill
Spock. Bones knows the Captain won’t
take a dive in front of T’Pau, and psyches him up to the point that his
overexertion will trigger the drug.
The whole episode is a
magnificent ride to kick off the season, ending with a massive roller coaster
of sadness and joy. Spock’s crushed and
defeated farewell to T’Pau is balanced by his measured yet scathing blast to
Stonn:
“After a time, you may
find that having is not so pleasing a thing, after all, as wanting.”
Nerd that I am, that line
(and myriad other Trek quotes) found its way into many a high school English
essay topic sentence.
The finale is nothing
less than the greatest “Jim” moment in the entire series. Spock’s transition from surprise to unbridled
happiness and back to controlled explanation, coupled with the reaction of Kirk
and McCoy illustrates the friendship between those three men perfectly.
That they make Chapel
leave the room before giving Spock the full explanation also illustrates that
the bond between those three is over and above that of anyone else on the ship.
“Who
Mourns for Adonis”
Air
Date: September 22, 1967
Mom
Title: “Apollo Moves on Scotty’s Girl”
The Enterprise goes to Pollux
4 and meets a Greek god…what a coincidence!
Unless the name inspired
the choice of locations…
Apollo is an extremely
powerful reality manipulating being who looks human, requires a machine beyond
normal Trek science to fuel and focus his abilities, demands unearned respect
and has immature tantrums.
That sounds quite a bit
like Trelane. Except instead of a “strange small boy” he acts more like a
hormonal adolescent. Perhaps this is
Charlie’s next training step in transforming into a being of pure thought.
Hey, I
wonder when 1960’s audiences saw a giant green hand grab the Enterprise if they
expected to hear a jolly, “Ho Ho Ho!”
The
Enterprise escapes said hand by rocking back and forth like a car caught in a snow
bank, because warp physics works the same way as terrestrial friction I guess.
That is
one powerful hand by the way, it magically makes Chekov’s goofy wig disappear.
Chekov
again takes the Spock role in the landing party, demonstrating whose footsteps
he’s destined to follow in.
By dividing
up the Big Three, it provides a rare example of time nicely split between the
landing party and the ship.
Another
HR question for Starfleet: Why do
Starships have anthropologists who specialize in primitive earth cultures on them? I mean, aside from running into ancient gods,
but how often can that happen?
Rather
a lot, I guess. Never mind.
I think
Lieutenant Uhura may be the only female officer who’s loyalty doesn’t threaten
to crumble when faced with a powerful hunk.
Apollo
is once more offering Kirk paradise in exchange for servitude. We all know how
well that’s going to go. He also
compares the Captain to Agamemnon and Hercules, cementing by divine(ish) decree
that Jim is a Classic Hero.
Continuing
to establish patterns, Kirk laughs at the superior intellect and questions a god.
He also
launches into a Shakespearean soliloquy about Ancient Astronauts the year
before von Däniken’s Chariots of the
Gods? is published. He’s commanding, and topical!
That level of command is
why he feels terrible remorse at destroying the ego of a fellow alpha male.
Considering how strong
the “We’ve outgrown gods,” message was in this story and others, I’d surmise that
the second half of: “Mankind has no need for gods. We find the one quite
adequate,” was thrown in to keep certain conservative markets from cancelling
the show.
Spock is highly
complementary to Uhura, when she confidently demonstrates her technical
abilities. She’s firm but polite in telling him to butt out. Good to see even though they broke up,
they’re still close friends.
“The
Changeling”
September
29, 1969
Mom
Title: “Nomad”
Season Two and the
goodness keeps on coming…unless you’re a Redshirt. Even poor Scotty dies after being nearly
killed by Apollo last time, leading to what may be Bones’s most dramatic, “He’s
dead Jim.” Regular Redshirts are
dropping like flies this time around, possibly illustrating that assigning
guards to a floating death machine once it’s been proven they are incapable of
stopping or controlling it may have been one more bad HR decision in a line of
many.
To keep the Trek clichés
running, Scotty is “Givin’ them all she’s got!” today. In this case, he means the shields though,
not the engines. They needed all they’ve
got as Nomad hits them with a blast equivalent to ninety photon torpedoes. This is the same battle where the crew is
shocked that something can withstand a single photon torpedo. I’m thinking in the heat of battle there’s
some confusion about when they mean “withstand” and “absorb.” That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.
Sulu’s back, which means
Chekov’s gone. It must have taken a while to realize the Russian was a new main
Bridge Crew member, and not yet another generic swap out in the navigator’s
chair.
Some Nomad thoughts:
A) He could raise Scotty
from the dead, but not reeducate Uhura?
That’s a highly selective “undo” function he has. Then again, he didn’t erase Swahili from her
mind. That and the fact that they
completely reeducated her in a week probably means her brain wasn’t erased,
just temporarily reset. Although it might
explain why the greatest communications officer in Starfleet history doesn’t
know Klingonese in Star Trek VI. They may have missed a couple chapters.
Spock’s the one that
points out that Uhura is a woman, and asks Nomad to reeducate her.
Awwwwww, he still cares.
By the way, fantastic
acting by Nichelle Nichols, becoming a textbook alternately confused and
delighted small child faced with learning a task.
B) If Nomad incorporated
pieces of the alien probe to repair itself, and took on part of Tan Ru’s
programming did the opposite happen as well?
Nomad went from searching for intelligent life, to looking for perfect
intelligent life and sterilizing what didn’t meet its criteria.
Did Tan Ru go from
looking for perfect soil samples to collect and sterilize to trying to hunt
down intelligent soil samples? The poor
thing.
C) Nomad’s a mechanical
being looking for perfection who eventually becomes a danger to its creator
once it realizes that creator doesn’t meet its internal criteria for perfection. Substitute “Exterminate” for “Sterilize” and Nomad
sounds an awful lot like a Dalek.
The Big Three work
together to take out another computer; Kirk taking the other’s advice and
executing the plan on his own.
He guilt’s Nomad to
death by expanding a single error (thinking James Kirk was the creator James
Roykirk) into three errors (the initial error, not noticing the initial error,
and not correcting the initial error.)
That’s the equivalent of
convincing someone to commit suicide over a typo.
Adding on the “My son
the doctor,” line at the end, conclusively proves Captain James T. Kirk is a
Jewish Mother.
And really, making the
doctor joke after Nomad killed several crew members and wiped out an entire
solar system? No wonder McCoy and Spock
look confused and upset.
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