“The
Way to Eden”
Air
Date: February 21, 1969
Mom
Title: “Charles Napier- Space Hippie”
This started as a D.C.
Fontana idea where we’d get to meet Joanna McCoy, the Doctor’s daughter. She morphed into Irina Galliulin, a Leila Kalomi for Chekov - so he can better become Spock Jr. I suppose.
The story had enough other changes that she used her version of “Lee Cronin” and was billed as “Michael Richards” again.
The story had enough other changes that she used her version of “Lee Cronin” and was billed as “Michael Richards” again.
“Eden” is normally
grouped in with “Spock’s Brain” at the bottom of the quality barrel. I may get kicked out of the Trekkie Union for
admitting I kinda like this one. I guess
it says something about D.C. Fontana’s ability to do Trek that I still find
much to admire in her two episodes that were altered enough for her to take her
name off them.
Hey, at least it never
gets boring!
And you can’t count it
as padding if it’s catchy. Too bad Uhura missed out on this jam session.
In fact, considering how
successful full episodes done that way have been in more recent times, (Buffy, Batman Brave and Bold, etc.) it’s
a shame they didn’t go further and do as a full on musical.
Hair Trek?
The Trekkie Horror
Picture Show?
It would have rocked!
Y’know, all the times
I’ve seen this episode I was so focused on the fact that the girl was playing a
bicycle tire, I never noticed Charles Napier was playing a T-square.
A group of scientist
hippies are cruising in the Aurora, a groovy stolen warp sled. Today, that gang would probably be heading to
the International Jugglers Association festival, but in the future, they’re
looking for Eden.
Using levels of subtlety
only found on Sixties’ television, their leader, Doctor Severin, is an
acoustics expert. With ears that make
Vulcans go, “Dang!” what else could he be?
Chekov gets some backing
from the Captain, who knows a thing or two about running into past loves.
However, most of his support, and the support of those wacky kids, comes from
Mr. Spock.
Kirk may be the youngest Captain in Starfleet, but his attitudes are completely in line with crusty old Scotty and Bones about the long haired weirdoes. You’d think McCoy would have a soft spot for anyone who hates transporters as much as he does.
Kirk may be the youngest Captain in Starfleet, but his attitudes are completely in line with crusty old Scotty and Bones about the long haired weirdoes. You’d think McCoy would have a soft spot for anyone who hates transporters as much as he does.
Why does Spock connect
so strongly with them, and offer to help them unreservedly and sincerely?
Is it because he’s an
open minded, vegetarian follower of the IDIC philosophy?
Is it because he sees
their idealistic, simplistic lifestyle along the same lines as his time with
Ms. Kalomi?
Is it because they
remind him of his long lost half-brother?
To find the greatest and
uncontrovertibly best evidence of why he could “reach” Severin’s followers
better than even the youngest crew members on the Enterprise, all that’s needed
is look at one of his initial statements to them.
No wonder he resonated
the best with Sixties audiences.
Some random continuity
notes:
Starfleet security is at
its finest again: They put a guard on
Doctor Severin, who is locked in isolation..
in the brig…
behind an energy barrier,
The Enterprise computer
is said to contain the sum of all human knowledge. Remind me again why they need Memory Alpha?
Tongo Rad’s “nerve
pinch” looks less like he studied with Vulcans and more like he (decade
appropriately) hung around fighting the beach party crowd with Professor Bob and Eric Von Zipper.
There is no truth to the
rumor that Doctor Severin is actually a space Nazi war criminal in hiding.
Near the end, Chekov
apologizes to the Captain for acting exactly like he does in every other one of
his appearances. Love does make you do
funny things.
Shortly after that, when
Kirk tells Spock, “We reach,” his first officer’s expression can be summed up
in one word:
"The
Cloud Minders”
Air
Date: February 28, 1969
Mom
Title: “City in the Sky”
Wow, this is
embarrassing. I’ve been calling this episode the wrong name my whole life: “The
Cloud MINERS.” I guess I’ve seen Empire Strikes Back too often.
Either Spock is
suffering from feedback after making Kirk “Forget,” or he spent far too much
time with the Free Love crowd last week.
His little monologue does sound quite hippie-ish, and he even makes the
“one” gesture.
Yes, we know he has
knowledge and appreciation of art, and Droxine did say, “Fascinating,” but
Spock almost let himself die before discussing Pon Farr with his best
friends. This week, he’s using it as a
pick up line.
Even Captain “Magic
Pants” Kirk himself gives a double take when Spock answers Droxine's statement
that she’s never met a Vulcan before with:
“Nor I a work of art,
madam.”
If this was a first
season episode, the mine would probably have been in Vasquez Rocks instead of a
set. It’s probably better this way as paper mâché stones are much easier to dig
by hand.
Kirk’s agitated and in a
hurry as per usual, because of another plague. Never stall a Type A on a
mission. This one is vegetation related,
(Quick, hide the Quadrotriticale!) which makes you again wonder why he stopped
for some of Flint’s brandy when that plague threatened his crew.
Did anyone else notice
that this Federation member, besides having the requisite arrogant jerks in
government, practices slavery, or at best apartheid, and no one complained about
it before?
Shatner’s posturing
about unequal treatment gets overshadowed by Nimoy’s demonstration of quiet
disgust, especially toward Droxine one he learns of her racism. Oddly, Spock and Hawkeye Peirce share a
personality trait almost exactly.
Question, since they
could beam people in and out of the mines and city, why didn’t they beam Kirk directly into or Vanna directly out of the jail cell?
Jim gets to become an
unhinged Starship captain like so many others we’ve seen when exposed to the
Zenite gas.
Plasus goes equally nuts, which is hard to notice because he was already quite a jackass. Vanna however, doesn’t seem affected, and figures out what’s going on. I guess it isn’t the gas that making them brutal and stupid, it’s being men.
Plasus goes equally nuts, which is hard to notice because he was already quite a jackass. Vanna however, doesn’t seem affected, and figures out what’s going on. I guess it isn’t the gas that making them brutal and stupid, it’s being men.
The big solutions to the
Ardanna problem are gas masks and supplying one of those crack Federation
ambassadors to mediate.
Great, they’ll all kill
each other in a week, and then Starfleet can use automation and mine all the
Zenite they need.
“The
Savage Curtain”
Air
Date: March 7, 1969
Mom
Title: “Abraham Lincoln”
First broadcast on my
minus one year birthday. Eh, there are
worse ones.
Definitely a Gene
Roddenberry story, he was always patriotic.
Hey, a rare (and the
final) Uhura sighting as the series moves to a close. Maybe her absence is why
Spock acts oddly in the other end episodes. It couldn’t be that the writers
gave up caring, could it?
Uhura gets a typically intellectual and graceful moment, letting the time lost leader know, “We learned to no longer
fear words.” Thanks to the those afraid of a few pronouns,
we have a loooooong stretch to reach that point in our cultural evolution.
Shape shifters who pull
images from the Captain’s mind, can change the state of the planet from lava
covered to habitable, and perform experiments in morality. Yup, the Andromedans
are at it again on Excaliba.
How else can creatures
that are simultaneously made of rock and carbon based be explained? Makes you wonder why the crew didn’t question
it since they met the Horta, which was silicone based. Then again, maybe the
Excalibans are made of charcoal?
Either way, it’s a cool looking Rock Monster. Too bad they didn’t pull the suit out of mothballs for the ones cut out of Star Trek V.
Either way, it’s a cool looking Rock Monster. Too bad they didn’t pull the suit out of mothballs for the ones cut out of Star Trek V.
Scotty, the practical
engineer, and McCoy, the other experienced old guy, think the whole concept of
a long dead president showing up in outer space is ridiculous. And, frankly, they have a point. Luckily, Lee Bergere’s portrayal of
self-belief as Lincoln, and Kirk’s enthusiasm at meeting a hero who didn’t go
completely homicidal, helps this one to avoid total collapse. It’s odd that the Captain never mentions also
being from Iowa to his idol and fellow Midwesterner. Possibly when they pulled
people from his brain, they bumped that memory and broke it.
Then again, we’re way
past where Star Trek maintains any
kind of internal consistency. Kirk tells
Abe they can “convert” to minutes. I’d
hope so since they’ve never shown a single indication their time system is any
different from ours in all three seasons.
However, matching scenes
on either side of one a commercial break reduces the countdown timer from four
to two hours. Maybe they do tell time
differently than we do. Either that or they all sat on Excaliba and stared at
each other for two hours.
Speaking of Excaliba- down
on the planet, we meet other historical figures from past and future.
Surak, the founder of
all Vulcan philosophy is there in his scalloped, rainbow muumuu.
I guess even on Vulcan, fashion is illogical.
I guess even on Vulcan, fashion is illogical.
Pulling images from the
Captain’s mind may explain some of the villain choices and appearances.
To represent the dictators
of the Eugenics War is Colonel Green. Of
course we all know he wasn’t the most dangerous member of that group of
despots. However, Kirk has met Khan and developed admiration for him, disqualifying his use on the bad guy side.
Then there’s Kirk’s
interpretation of their first emperor, uniter of their people, and greatest of
all Klingon warriors – Kahless the Dumpy.
There’s a massive flaw
in the explanation of the Excalibans’ experiment, which our highly observant
crew misses completely.
The fact that all of the
bad guys are not who they claim to be but are reality warping shape shifters
pretending to be evil invalidates any results based on what they’re supposedly promised
for victory.
Spock may unconsciously
realize this, as deciding the neck pinch won’t work on Rock Monsters makes him
look smarter than once more forgetting he knows it.
That means, much like
the supposedly different “Vians,” “Melkotians,” and “Metrons” this must be the energy based
Andromedans concocting a test for the Enterprise crew with the intention of
teaching them a lesson.
Looking at it from
Kirk’s side: discovering that evil is bad, dishonest and sneaky isn’t much of a
revelation. However, Spock is subjected
to a much harsher lesson:
Following the Vulcan path in its purest form leads to death and failure.
Following the Vulcan path in its purest form leads to death and failure.
The overarching plan of
the extra-galactic invaders is beginning to reveal itself.
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