“The
Immunity Syndrome”
Air
Date: January 19, 1968
Time for another bottle
episode, or more accurately a Star Fleet Battles solitaire mission.
It just goes to show that
with strong characters and well written drama, a show can churn out gripping
stories using only its standing sets, and no guest stars.
Based on Spock’s command
times, we’ve seen pretty clearly that pure logic is not the best way to run a
starship. His successes have come from a
combination of knowing when to buck his Vulcan heritage, and input from his
irrational coworkers to give his sound logic a spark to edge it into the
flexibility needed for command. It’s
amazing the USS Intrepid survived pulling out of space dock never mind to this
teaser.
Everyone was exhausted
at the start of the story, maybe this whole thing is an illusion caused by the
extra-galactic invaders and/or Talosians.
Kirk being tempted by a lovely planet
(or at least a lovely Yeoman) usually gets tied in to those and energy and emotion manipulation are often those beings’ normal modus operandi. I’d use a giant one celled space monster being kinda silly as further proof, but it could be explained by their irradiation of the smaller space amoebas on Deneva, or by being a distant cousin of the vampire cloud. They do get rid of it the same way as the latter. I may be falling prey to my own conspiracy theory. To be fair though, I’m not expecting anyone else to.
(or at least a lovely Yeoman) usually gets tied in to those and energy and emotion manipulation are often those beings’ normal modus operandi. I’d use a giant one celled space monster being kinda silly as further proof, but it could be explained by their irradiation of the smaller space amoebas on Deneva, or by being a distant cousin of the vampire cloud. They do get rid of it the same way as the latter. I may be falling prey to my own conspiracy theory. To be fair though, I’m not expecting anyone else to.
Honestly, it’s far less
silly than a giant, indestructible, weaponized space cannoli.
Transporter chief Kyle
is at the helm wearing gold, further supporting my temporary transfer
theory. In other lower level return crew
member news, Lieutenant Leslie is the first one on the bridge to collapse from
the energy drain, which -considering he was dead a few adventures ago- is understandable
Relationship note: Thought they no longer look to the other the
same way as they did at the start of the five year mission, Spock is the first
one by Uhura’s side when she falls. Awwwww.
The series focus is now
squarely on the Big Three and it is they who carry the load.
It’s obvious that Kirk,
Spock and Bones are the absolute best choices for “boldly going.” Everyone on the ship is dying, nothing
technical (including physics) works correctly, and a giant hither to unknown
beastie has eaten an entire solar system and a fellow starship. In the face of all that, The Big Three remain
excited about what they’ll be able to learn from this new finding.
They are able to have
extra time to discover a solution, because McCoy just happens to have enough
stimulants for each and every crew member on board. My guess:
he had them to counteract the volume of sedatives he stores as witnessed
in orbit around Argelius. Too bad he
stocked so many uppers and downers. He could have used that space for cures or
treatments and have ended several other problems they faced in about five
minutes.
Kirk’s insisting that
insufficient data is “insufficient” is typical managerial thinking. What makes him a great leader is following
that by coming up with the top level idea of using reverse logic, then trusting
his people to work out the details. This
continues when he realizes McCoy figured out the final solution with something
he said before the Doctor himself caught on to the importance of his own statement.
With the entire ship and
crew in what appears to be unsolvable danger, Kirk stops logging for most of
the episode to focus on motivating his people.
He only turns to the log when he has to decide which of his two best
friends to likely condemn to death, in order to more clearly work through magnitude
of the decision. I think we’ve found the
reason behind his compulsion, it helps him focus
The stress and
exhaustion gets to everyone. Spock and Bones tear into each other constantly
and with heightened venom. It reaches a
point that Spock needs to call McCoy out on the fact that hundreds of Vulcan’s
just died and blasted him with a giant mental space noogie.
The emotional (for our
pointy eared friend), “Wish me luck,” to the Doctor before they split, possibly
to never see the other again, summarizes the importance of their
friendship.
And in case that less than
subtle exchange was missed: what Spock thinks is his final log entry focuses
not on scientific discovery, but friendship.
“Captain” McCoy finishes
hammering the point home in his usual emotional style:
“A
Private Little War”
Air
Date: February 2, 1968
Mom
Title: “Mugato”
I have a “Bad Trekkie
Confession” to make about this heavy handed Vietnam allegory.
I constantly get “A
Private Little War,” “The Apple” (platinum blonde natives and a crew analogy as
good Satan) and “Friday’s Child” (One officer has a prior visit, Spock injured,
lame Klingon) confused. Plus, they’re clumped fairly close together, like the
first season was known to do with theme episodes. Still, it’s better than how the episodes
clump in the third season. (By a significant drop in quality.) Luckily there
are also unique elements.
For today’s story, the
white, horned, venomous gorilla stands out.
Oddly, the Mugato is listed as a “Gumato” in the credits. Maybe that’s an Italian relative.
A possibly easier to
remember difference is the presence within the excessively typical group of
Star Trek natives of Nona. Somehow the
raven haired, deeply tan, Kahn-ut-tu witch woman parading throughout the
otherwise pasty population in leather bell bottoms and an orange shag carpet
wonder bra stands out.
Another truly
embarrassing admission: Nona always
reminded me of Medea in Jason and the
Argonauts. Until this viewing, I had
no idea they were the same actress.
(Insert any snide “not
looking at her face” accusations here.)
Awesomeness in the Trek
galaxy seems to be grouped by starship. Besides the Enterprise, the
subordinates of Kor, and Koloth have been (and those of Kang will be) far more
competent than the other Klingon captains we see.
Speaking of awesome
crews: Uhura, Scotty and Chekov are all historians and planetary technological
development experts. It’s a shame those
courses are only taught at Starfleet Academy, and not to members of the
Federation Diplomatic Corps.
For a change, Human
Resources did something useful by bringing Vulcan specialist Doctor M’benga on
board after the emergency with Sarek. Dang, they shot Spock clean through, lucky
every other race in the galaxy has their heart where we do; otherwise they
might have aimed at his.
Hmm…going into a
complete immobile unconscious state in order to recover health?
How about that? I fight
sickness like a Vulcan.
It’s McCoy’s turn to showcase
the awesomeness of the Big Three bonds. First, he nearly places Spock’s
condition above the encroaching Klingons. Because he’s (as mentioned) awesome,
and a military man, he gets his priorities straight in time to do what he
must. Also, when both of the other two
are out of action, he fills in for them and logs into the spaces of his own
mind.
Not all choices make
full sense. Per the prime directive, phasers
are COMPLETELY FORBIDDEN…but are brought anyway.
Still, they do try. McCoy only uses his to heat some rocks...as opposed to building a fire like any native would be able to do without attracting attention.
Still, they do try. McCoy only uses his to heat some rocks...as opposed to building a fire like any native would be able to do without attracting attention.
Kirk does his part as
well, attacking an enraged Mugato with his bare hands WHILE WEARING A VISIBLE
PHASER that everyone in the immediate area is aware of its function.
Eventually he remembers he’s packing and chooses sanity and safety over drop kicking the poisonous, pointy primate.
Eventually he remembers he’s packing and chooses sanity and safety over drop kicking the poisonous, pointy primate.
Once again, Klingon and
Federation representatives are battling one another with no appearance from the
Organians, which is odd since the hill people are EXACTLY the types of
non-technological pacifists the Organians were pretending to be. You’d think
they’d have a vested interest in preventing contamination of those cultures.
Speaking of watchdog
entities not paying attention, how about the CBS censors?
Besides there being a
great deal of blood in this one, (albeit mostly green) there’s Nona.
Ignoring the most
obvious scene, there are two others that one would expect to bring down network
control’s fist of prevention:
Kirk finding her at the
waterfall,
Her being attacked by
the village people.
Too bad, Kirk doing a
pose down to “Macho Man” would work for many and varied reasons.)
The key scene, though,
is Nona healing Kirk. They should have
hired her for the Tribbles the way she makes that Mako root vibrate to
life.
Nona’s and Kirk’s
reactions as she writhes and moans next to him, with her shag carpet heaving
were…stimulating. The moral guardians
must have been napping during the screening or something.
Didn’t Buddy Hackett
make a rhythm method joke like that once?
“Return
to Tomorrow”
Air
Date: February 9, 1968
Mom
Title: “Sargon in a Light Globe”
This is the first of two
episodes where we learn a great deal about that extra-galactic invasion I may
or may not have made up. Though trapped
in globes, Sargon and company are non-corporeal with advanced transporter
capabilities. It’s like The Providers
who succeeded in the next evolutionary step. Their consciousnesses left their
bodies and brains behind but still need to maintain a “home” in a “Mod” light
fixture.
All the other “dead”
spheres may actually be beings that made the next leap and are floating around
the galaxy as pure energy, and causing problems in other episodes.
As they prepare to beam
down Doctor McCoy becomes the only person in Enterprise history to question the
risk of sending both senior officers off into the unknown. This is acknowledged as an excellent
point…for all of five minutes. Then the aliens force changing it to be impossible,
and no one ever brings it up again.
Speaking of risk:
Captain Kirk gets one of his greatest speeches in the history of his command
this time out. It’s the famous “Risk is our Business” exhortation. Granted, it
would have been much more impressive if this undertaking actually yielded them
any benefits at all, but you can’t have everything.
Vulcans can withstand
the transfer of these beings much better than humans. Obviously, they couldn’t have selected a ship
full of that race, as it was just eaten by a giant space amoeba two weeks
before. Talk about bad timing. Still, someone should have questioned putting
the leader of the opposition into the most powerful individual on the
Enterprise.
Nimoy certainly plays
the mustache twistingly evil villain well doesn’t he? No wonder he was Galvatron. We’ve seen him as emotionally uncontrolled,
but even his Mirror version wasn’t this nasty.
Between his deviltry, and Shatner looking like the only direction he was
given to play Sargon was, “LET IT FLY, BILL!” it must have been an interesting
few days on set.
We learn more of Spock’s
home planet. This episode asserts that none of the Ancient Astronaut theories
on Earth are true. (Contradicting what was said before, and will be said in Season 3 and the Animated Series.) However, those types of visitations are a fact on
Vulcan. Considering almost every race they
meet looks like Earthlings, maybe the Vulcan documentation exists because they
chased the ancients away before they could sneakily seed the planet with more
humans. Sargon does refer to the crew as
“my children.”
They also point out the
dangers of being treated as gods, with what sounds like the voice of
experience. There are an awful lot of
non-corporeal aliens and eons old society controlling machines trying to be worshipped
in and around the Federation. This invasion
has been going on an exceedingly long time.
Their big plan is to
construct advanced robot bodies to live in, which nicely explains the ancient androids
on Mudd’s world, Exo III and Omicron Delta, all built long ago using highly advanced technology. Sargon and company’s skills must have
atrophied being stuck in light globes all those years.
They could have stayed longer
in the human bodies, but it caused dangerously high heart rates and
temperatures. If only doctor McCoy had
some kind of tranquilizer in stock? He might
have, if he hadn’t recently used up the entire supply up by injecting the whole
crew. More bad timing.
The true give away that
the sphere people are connected to the extra-galactic invasion capable of
Talosian like illusion generation and mind control is Doctor Anne Mulhall.
She’s an Astrobiologist,
clearly a scientific post, and wearing red. Why?
Because she’s an
illusion generated to talk the others into letting aliens take over their
minds. She pushes for it when the others
doubt.
The strongest proof she
isn’t real? (And this is above and
beyond someone else suspiciously involved with a non-corporeal alien showing up
that looks exactly like her next season, not to mention someone else looking exactly like her showing up to mess with the crew chemistry on a whole other Enterprise.)
Doctor Mulhall is a
Lieutenant Commander. Not only is she
the highest ranking woman we see on the ship throughout the original series,
but all totaled and including the bridge crew, there are only about a half
dozen officers on board with equal or higher ranks.
And Kirk, Spock and
McCoy have never heard of her.
Totally fake.
How does the day get
saved? We learn it is because Spock can easily hide his consciousness within
another person. Here’s hoping someone
writes down how to do that, as it may prove useful in the future.
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