Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Star Trek: Operation: Annihilate!

Episode: "Operation: Annihilate!"
Series: Star Trek: The Original Series
Season 1, Episode 29
Original Air Date: April 13, 1967
via Wikipedia
"Operation: Annihilate!" was the final episode of Star Trek's first season.  In this story, we get to meet part of Captain Kirk's family, though the reunion is a tragic one.  His brother Sam is a scientist on a planet in the path of a mass insanity which is sweeping its way through the galaxy, destroying civilizations as it goes.  The Enterprise crew arrives too late, Kirk's brother dead, his nephew unconscious and his sister-in-law in the throes of madness.  The rest of the planet is losing it, too, though the cause is not immediately apparent.  Eventually, predatory parasites are discovered to be the culprits and one of them infects Spock before the landing party is able to return to the ship.

I didn't care for the episode in the early going as everyone infected screams incoherently.  However, the story gets more interesting as solutions are explored.  First, Kirk must grapple with the possibility of having to destroy the planet and its million inhabitants just to keep the creatures from spreading further.  Then, when the parasites' vulnerability to intense light is discovered, Spock submits himself as a test subject with dire consequences.  He is left blind.

Immediately after the test on Spock, Nurse Chapel reveals that the creatures are only vulnerable to ultraviolet light - great news for the population on the planet but not so great for Spock who was blinded needlessly.  Spock takes it like a Vulcan, of course, but both Kirk and especially Dr. McCoy are racked with guilt.  Considered independently, the story might have been better if it had ended there.  But this is television and the series must go on, a blind Spock too much of a limitation for the screenwriters going forward.  Due to a peculiarity of Vulcan eyelid anatomy, Spock's condition is only temporary and his sight is restored.  Kirk and Bones are off the hook.

*****

Thoughts on Season 1

 General Impressions

I was very impressed by the first season of Star Trek.  A more casual fan of the series growing up, I thought of Trek as stilted and formulaic.  Exploring in-depth, I was more impressed by the acting than I expected to be, particularly that of William Shatner.  Yes, he can chew the scenery from time to time but his investment in character is total from Day 1, as if he had been Jim Kirk his whole life.  That's a lot harder than most people realize and contrasts with the stiffer performance of other cast members in the early going.

As to formula, I know that becomes more of an issue in the next two seasons but the writers did a respectable job of mixing things up in the initial run.  A lot of their story lines became franchise staples over the decades to follow.  All of those cliches had to start somewhere.


Favorite Episode: "Balance of Terror"

The episodes I enjoyed most in Season 1 were the ones in which Kirk engaged in mental sparring with a well-established adversary: Khan in "Space Seed" or Kor in "Errand of Mercy."  The Romulan Commander in "Balance of Terror" is unnamed.  He and Kirk bear no hatred toward one another - merely soldiers, playing their parts, seeing to their duties.  Mark Lenard's performance in the role is subtle, convincing and thoroughly chilling.  Other episodes have garnered more praise over the years but for me, this was the best of the batch.


Least Favorite Episode: "Mudd's Women"

Perhaps it is not fair to judge a story from the 1960s by the moral standards of the 2010s.  But for a television producer who made admirable efforts at social progressiveness, Gene Roddenberry dropped the ball with this one.  Harry Mudd is essentially a pimp who keeps his interstellar mail order brides beautiful with drugs.  When off the meds, they're not so much ugly as ordinary and all of the men are horrified.  This episode left me feeling icky.


Favorite Guest Star: Mark Lenard as Romulan Commander in "Balance of Terror"

See above.


Onward?

This would be a logical jumping off point if I were to discontinue my weekly Star Trek posts but I'm definitely up for more.  The months in between the two seasons were certainly interesting times in world culture.  In June of '67, The Beatles would release Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, an album that transformed the music industry.  The Summer of Love was soon to follow.  The audience had been through a lot by the time the series resumed in September.  I don't expect similar upheaval between now and next Wednesday, but you never know.

Set a course, Mr. Sulu...

18 comments:

  1. My hubby and I totally used to sit down every night and unwind with an episode of Star Trek. Man, it's been ages! I especially love the movies. They're so classic.

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    1. I'm alone on this adventure, I'm afraid. My wife and daughter are devoted Dr. Who fans but far less keen on Trek. I watch after they go to bed. Thank goodness for the blogosphere!

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  2. I kind of remember blind Spock.

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    1. Hey, me, too!

      One doesn't actually see much of blind Spock - focus is more on the remorse of McCoy. And, of course, one knows from 47 years' hindsight that the blindness isn't permanent. I did, however, try to keep in mind the perspective of one watching for the first time back in '67.

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  3. Good point about "Mudd's Women" since it wasn't like the Twilight Zone episode.

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    1. ... Okay, I don't know Twilight Zone so well. How was their take on the story different?

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  4. I liked Mudd's Women! I was what, 16? And they had these actors --women-- with faces of character and interest, but paved in the stylized commercially spun beauty of the time. So the drug wore off and they just looked better, less mysterious and more intelligent to me. It was a lesson I figured Roddenberry wanted to include. I hope girls learned something from it too. 4 years later, I married a girl who didn't wear makeup. She's looking at me.

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    1. I married a girl who doesn't wear makeup, too. Totally the way to go.

      I'm sure I would have seen it differently at 16, too, though I'd have been worried about my mother walking in at the wrong moment.

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    2. I haven't worn make-up for decades but this week I went into a department store and bought this brightening thing for under the eyes and a subtle blush that smells nice. I also let a guy wearing mascara who called everything at the Clinique counter 'fan-tas-tic' (and who then mouthed the word again for good measure) convince me to buy a Raspberry Crush lipstick.

      I don't know what's happening.

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    3. Thank you for the little character sketch of the Clinique counter man. Sounds like he could talk anybody into buying lipstick.

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    4. He had curly bangs reinforced with with what I would guess is a potent affinity for hair gel. A very nice person. And he was right about the lipstick. It is nice.

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  5. What I most remember is that giant thing hitting Spock on the back...or maybe I remember seeing the promo for that episode...I had bought TOS years ago and it contained the original promos for each episode and for some reason this one has always stuck with me.

    I like your choices of favorite and least favorite episodes of the season; Balance of Terror is definitely in the Top 5 of all time, and Mudd's Women just makes me cringe. I don't understand how Roddenberry can have Lt. Uhura and Nurse Chapel on one hand, and then have Mudd's Women on the other!?

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    1. He clearly liked the idea of women in positions of power. But he was also definitely a sucker for a pretty face.

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  6. This was an interesting episode, if only for the illustrative example of the lack of TV show continuity back in the day. Do you think a show nowadays would introduce the main character's dead brother and emotionally/physically wrecked in-laws in one episode, and then never mention them again?

    I was always creeped out by the pancake parasites. I forget if the episode showed the mouths/teeth underneath, or if that was just in a spin-off Trek creature book that I had. Yeccchh!

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    1. Interesting point regarding continuity. I have the sense that writing staffs are more consistent on television. I looked it up and this episode's writer, Stephen W. Carabatsos, only wrote this one story. He served as teleplay writer for another but this was his only one as lead writer. Just for comparison, I looked at Star Trek: Enterprise, an their writer list was far more consistent from week to week.

      I don't remember any teeth. I may have missed it.

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  7. Sounds like another amazing episode.

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