8.07.2013

Captain's Blog pt. 50: The Alternative Factor

Kirk and Spock: Under the Dome
On March 30th, 1967, NBC aired:


Title: 1 out of 3 pts. A better name would be "Lazarus, Go Home."

Script / Theme: 1 / 6 pts (out of 10/10). This is a good example of cool idea, bad script.

On the bad script side: 

- Kirk and Spock don't act like themselves (Kirk in particular seems quick to assume people are pulling pranks or giving him poetic answers, like some generic Captain from any generic military show,) and they fail to put very obvious things together. Except when they need to, in which case, they make deductive leaps that are not at all obvious.
- Repetitive dialogue.
- Contrived mystery and set-up.
- Spock's telling Lazarus he is a liar, so matter-of-factly, doesn't make much sense. When Kirk does, a little later, it makes a bit more, but it's still kind of silly.
- Does the entire galaxy quake each time the cross-dimensional hiccups happen? If not, why not?
- Lazarus is not a very well-conceived character. Neither of them.
- Why is everyone so amazed at the possibilities inherent in the idea of matter vs. antimatter? Hadn't it already been established at this point that that's how the warp core works? Actually, maybe it hadn't. 
- The last line ("But what of Lazarus? What... of... Lazarus?") aches for a profundity the story has not delivered. It just doesn't land.

On the cool idea side, two alternates whose struggle threatens the omniverse and who must be trapped in the dimensional corridor between worlds is pretty cool.

DC sure must have thought so, as it's been the basis for every "Crisis" event since.
Lazarus' ship looks like the submersible from this old Choose Your Own Adventure story, doesn't it?
Lazarus would have been much cooler played by Jacques Cousteau.

Visual Design: 1 pt out of 3. Is there any essential reason they couldn't have filmed the planetside scenes on a soundstage? Does it improve the visuals/ episode by any discernible amount? I can almost hear the line producers grumbling about this each time it cuts to the scenes on the surface. Still, always nice to see. As with "Arena," "Shore Leave," and "Friday's Child," not to mention "Darmok" from TNG and a few others, the exteriors were filmed at Vasquez Rocks.)

This cross-dimensional hullabaloo is effective enough, I guess.
At least the first forty times we see it.
 
It happens every 4 or 5 minutes.

Guest: 2.5 pts out of 3. Drew Barrymore's Dad was originally cast as Lazarus, but when the first day of filming came, he was a no-show. (A big deal, especially in 1967. He didn't work again for 6 months as a result.) So they grabbed Robert Brown at the last minute.

How'd he do?

Well, like I say, he's not helped by the script. His character exists only to give very generic explanations / nonsensical rage.

Granted he's supposed to be mad/ driven to distraction by knowledge of his counterpart's existence.

When I watched Mr. Plinkett's review of Star Trek (2009) I was taken aback by his insistence that "Parallels," the TNG episode where Worf learns of countless alternate Worfs and realities/ dimensions, was the worst TNG story ever. What? That's a top 3 ep for me; what's his problem? Apparently, argues Mr. Plinkett, such knowledge would rob anyone of their sense of uniqueness/ drive anyone crazy. "Worf discovers nothing he does matters."


That really struck me as kind of wackadoo. How would learning you were not one but several negate the relevance of your own actions? Why exactly is it a given someone would snap upon learning this? Unless you're so egocentric to think not just the world, not just the galaxy, not just the universe, but the omniverse revolves around you, I just don't see how that would be the case. (And that wouldn't even be egocentrism; it'd be insanity.)

That gets back to the failure to properly characterize Lazarus. He is driven to frothing-at-the-mouth-and-wispy-beard-rattling rage at the thought of "the creature," and he must destroy the entire multiverse to get at him. We're told of his planet being destroyed and his blaming it on his duplicate, but all we're shown is this:


I mean, this is so over-the-top it's in orbit. When such things happen, I have to wonder if perhaps it's been exaggerated to draw explicit attention to itself as cover for something else. If that's the case here, it sailed over my head. Nevertheless, Brown does the job required of him, i.e. alternate between insane and not insane, and he does get to scream "KILL! KILL! KILL! KILL!" before the commercial break, so... that's a win of sorts, right?

Never saw this show, but Brown went on to star in Primus.

As for the other guest star:


This part was originally written as a love interest for Lazarus, but then they went and cast a non-white lady in the part and everyone got crazy and TV stations in the South allegedly refused to air such a thing. 


I say allegedly because I can never tell if these sorts of decisions were made in fear of / anticipation of such an action or if they actually received Boss-Hog-accented threats they wouldn't air such race-mixing malarkey. So, it was cut out.


She doesn't have too much of a role, but apparently she likes to spend her coffee breaks with this futuristic Connect 4 thing. MacLachlan went on to have a long career, mostly in television, including a remake of Valley of the Dolls which starred Gillian from Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home. 

Internal Logic: -5 pts out of 3. First off, things start off with a disturbance so profound that it hits every quadrant of the galaxy "and beyond." Okay. Even if we assume the Federation has enough outposts and technology sophisticated enough to make an estimated projection, the "beyond the galaxy" bit is a bit of a stretch. Maybe the Admiral who relays this info is just a big exaggerator. As previously mentioned, I'll be forgiving of TOS for a lot of this stuff, as they were basically writing the rules as they went along. But a few things I must mention:

If that's the case, they're pretty casual about letting their only suspect / only guy at the crime scene lollygag about the ship.
Those are the Dilithium crystals there, tucked under his arm in a blanket. Please read that sentence again.
This really cracks me up. It's not really an error, just seems a little retro to me. Reminds me of this business from TAS:

Kirk and the Gang: 3 out of 10 pts. Everyone turns in a rather perfunctory performance.

McCoy comes across more or less like himself. He refers to Lazarus having the recuperative powers of "a dinosaur." Seems kind of an odd reference, but hey: Bones.

Memorability: If you've been adding up these points, you'll see a rather paltry sum. (9.5) Yet this episode has always stuck with me. Part of it is what I described way back in Captain's Blog pt. 1: episodes that weren't on my parents' VHS tapes remained the ones I hadn't seen as often. As such, "The Alternative Factor" had that special rare B-side/ bootleg quality to it, in my imagination. And despite all of the above, still does for me.

Side-note: I came of age in an era where "alternative" meant non-commercial radio music, but not all non-commercial radio, only stuff like The Smiths and Love and Rockets or Sisters of Mercy, what Rolling Stone called college rock before that became the commercial radio stuff. (I remember "the alternative has gone mainstream" being a profound thing to say circa 1993. By 1995, such an insight was cliché. So it goes.) I mention this because for many years, "The Alternative Factor" actually had an "alternative" factor; it was always one of the episodes I never heard anyone talk about, mention, or caught in re-runs. These days, of course, you can google the episode, find a summary, production detail, several re-watches, essays, clips, and side-trip blogs like this one.

I do like the scene between rational-Lazarus and Kirk once he goes through the corridor, though.

Nevertheless, if we end up on the same desert island and I got to pick the 50 TOS episodes, you'd likely be angry that I wasted a pick on this one. But, I would have to. 9 out of 5 pts. (Extra point for the terrible beard. That stays with you.)

Total Points Awarded: 18.5

8.05.2013

Captain's Blog pt. 49: Return to Tomorrow

When "Return to Tomorrow" first aired on February 9th, 1968, its timeslot competition was an episode of Gomer Pyle, USMC where someone sends Gomer a baby carriage by mistake. Compelling stuff. Over on NBC, this gem of an episode explored themes of possession, eternity, love, betrayal, and galactic progeny.

Let's start with the title. 1.5 pts.

Kind of a Back to the Future thing, I can dig that. Nothing too fancy or poetic, more or less just a description of events.

Where this episode excels is in its Script and Theme (out of a possible 10 pts.): 7.5 / 8 pts. It's really a great slice of sci-fi with no "plot coupons," as Torie Atkinson calls them over at Tor. Every line and scene makes sense and moves the story along without contriving any circumstance.


Despite Sargon and the gang's considerable powers and evolution, they are recognizably motivated by the same things Kirk and the gang are: science, compassion, intelligence, love, and - as we see with Henoch - not above a little murder, abuse of power, and deception to achieve those ends. Even Thalassa is briefly tempted to use her superiority to take what she wants rather than respect the lives and sovereignty of the crew.


The body-swap trope was by no means an innovation in 1968, but it's handled with sophistication and sensitivity here. (Compare, for example, to "Turnabout Intruder," only a year later.)

"Since exploration and contact with alien intelligences is our primary mission, I've decided to risk the potential dangers and resume contact."

Visual Design: I'll go with 2 out of 3 points here. There's some wonderful surrealism going on here.

Like wax figures in some future museum, depicting its past imagining itself. Return to Tomorrow, indeed.
Not much going on with costumes this episode, but the traditional Trek color palette plays well against the lighting composition. I've really come to admire the light and shadow choices of TOS through screencapping these eps, and it's delightful to discover there are aspects of these episodes that can still pleasantly surprise me after all these years. "Return to Tomorrow" features a return to the mostly green and purple backlighting, something much more prevalent in the early episodes than they were by this point in season 2.


And then there's this, of course:


Internal Logic and Consistency: 2.25 out of 3 pts. Not bad at all. If two of Sargon's ancestors were the models for Adam and Eve, as he claims, and if said civilization ended their galactic colonization 600,000 years ago, that would put their appearance on Earth somewhere around the advent of Homo heidelbergensis, an early ancestor Humans share with the Neanderthals.

"Your probes have touched me, Mister Spock."
But it makes a certain amount of sense with Vulcan, as Spock notes, given the whole katra thing and its energy-transference analog. 

It's a bit unclear why they didn't just build the androids for themselves, before they made the switch to "pure energy/ matter without form."

Given everything else of which they're capable, seems like they probably could have mastered something like this well before they went the whole spheres and eternal tomb route.
And I know no one on the Enterprise ever brings up anything that happened on any other mission/ episode, but Sargon might have appreciated a heads-up about the work of Roger Korby or the androids on "I, Mudd."

Kirk and the Gang: 20 out of a possible 10 pts. Everyone does a great job here. The economy of the script helps, but Nimoy clearly enjoys being able to smile, leer, and cackle.


Majel Barrett gets only a handful of chances to really do much of anything on TOS, but she gets a nice character arc here, and her surprise turning of the tables at the end is a nice touch.


Of course, we learn Sargon hid Spock's consciousness in her, so her "agency" is somewhat compromised from a certain point of view. Nevertheless, Barrett does a good job. And of course, this is the episode where Shatner delivers his famous and often-parodied "Risk is our business" speech, combined here with Eric McCormack's spot-on take on it from Free Enterprise. (Link disabled, alas.)

(This also accounts for the episode's Memorability, I'd wager, which I value at 3 out of 5 pts.)

Beyond that, Shatner embraces the opportunity to wrest as much physicality from the being-possessed business as possible:


Nimoy and Muldaur don't seem to react quite the same way, do they?

Speaking of Diana Muldaur, she is the guest star of note:

She does a good job as Astrobiologist Mulhall, who presumably avoids the Captain and Spock as much as possible for the rest of her tenure aboard the Enterprise.
I had to go back and find out who this was when I saw the name I didn't recognize during the end credits:

It appears from Ms. Lou's imdb page that "Return to Tomorrow" was her high water mark as a working actress. I'll just assume no script ever seemed worthwhile after having cut her teeth on this one. 3 out of 3 pts. (3.5 if you count Doohan's voice as Sargon.)

Total Points Awarded: 47.75

"Kirk out."