Sunday, May 22, 2011

The Corbomite Maneuver: Season One Episode Ten

So we've got a pretty big problem here. This episode has far more Uhura than we've had in recent stretches, but she says almost NOTHING but "Hailing frequencies open," and she says it more than five times. They may as well have just reused the clip of her saying it. Very disappointing.
Uhura aside, however, this episode was actually completely awesome. It had most of the things I look for in Star Trek: everyone hanging out, McCoy cracking wise, and Kirk erratically shifting between obnoxious anger at his subordinates and eerie, heroic calm. Just give us more Uhura, already. The people demand it!
So the gang is exploring a previous-unexplored part of the galaxy when they suddenly come upon an enormous screensaver. The navigator, a frustrated dude/humor columnist named Dave Barry, tries to maneuver around the cube, but it keeps following them! It keeps getting closer and closer, and Spock decides he needs Kirk's help with this one. But where is Kirk?
Oh, just being shirtless in another room, whaling on his glutes with McCoy. No, seriously, he's having his physical, and obviously he's in perfect health, except that he could stand to lose a few. But no time for that now, he's gotta go deal with Rubik and his Kube. Also, McCoy cold drops a "I'm a doctor, not a..." bomb, which was exciting. On Kirk's way out, he throws a towel over his towel, which, paging Xzibit.
On the bridge, tensions are running high as Dave Barry is campaigning to be Barry Goldwater's running mate, which is to say, he wants to explode things first, ask questions later. Spock makes Vulcan fun of this brash young paduan, and Sulu cracks up laughing, probably because he just read Dave Barry's column about this experience ("Dave Barry Does Star Trek"). Kirk decides to call a meeting in the War Room.
I don't think we've seen the War Room yet, but I think Thomas Schlamme got here first because we have an awesome tracking shot around a long table with technology and seriousness. Kirk decides to try to evade the QB, which Dave Barry doesn't like, but eventually the kewb begins emitting so much radiation (!) that either Kirk will need to explode it or Erin Brockovich will need to get involved. So they explode it.
Spock is like, "Hey Kirk, you think that cube thing is something to worry about?" and Kirk's like "Nah. Fuck it, dude. Let's go bowling."
Kirk is chilling in his quarters, letting McCoy yell at him about how chubby he's getting lately ("At this rate, by the time we get to the movies, you'll be completely bald!"), when we reach another Workplace Inappropriate Situation. Yeoman Rand (Rand is my Norm - when she shows up, you just want to shout her name) walks in and serves Kirk a salad (because of his health). I want you to look at this picture and tell me what you see:Now, I ABSOLUTELY do not want this to get inappropriate. I promise Rand is not serving Kirk an HJ. It looks like that, and that's funny, but we're here to be serious and talk about Issues. According to Wikipedia, "In the United States Navy and United States Coast Guard, a yeoman is a rating usually with secretarial, clerical, payroll or other administrative duties." The act of serving salad and placing a napkin in the captain's lap (which is what is happening in this picture) does not strike me as secretarial, clerical, payroll, or administrative. Am I wrong here? I'm not saying Rand needs to call Jackie Chiles and file suit against the Federation, but at the very least she should be able to say, "Sorry, Peter Sagal, that's not my job." Right?
Anyway, salad be damned, because now the Enterprise is coming up on a new foreign object - an enormous glowing death star. Looks like Spock was right, AGAIN. They try to communicate with whatever this thing is, but Dave Barry is having bluetooth problems, so they finally settle on asking Uhura to do her job (just step back, guys, stop asking Dave Barry to do what you know Uhura can). Finally they get through and get threatened like crazy by Balok, who is kind of upset with them for destroying his Rubik's Cube before he could solve it. Kirk attempts to explain that they didn't know what its deal was, and radiation, but Balok is having none of it and decides to scare them even harder by showing them his most recent Halloween costume.
Seriously, when I saw this, I was like, "Come on, Star Trek, this thing is obviously rubber." This episode has some really stellar effects (see: the cube, and the death star), and I was surprised that they would show us an alien that looked like this. But it does make some sense that in a galaxy where interplanetary travel is common, it would be considered pretty rude to accuse an alien you've never seen before of being a Halloween costume. I get why no one brought it up. But eventually they would wish they had!
Balok tells them that he's gonna kill them in eight minutes. Things get extremely tense, no joke. Kirk wastes some time trying to talk Balok out of it, and wastes even more time delivering extemporaneous speeches to his crew on teamwork and responsibility and winning one for the Gipper. Eventually Spock mentions chess to Kirk, which gets Kirk thinking about games, then he talks about poker with McCoy, then he thinks about bluffing and decides to give it a shot. He tells Balok that his ship is made of corbomite, which will kill Balok if Balok tries to kill them. A risky move, since everyone knows that corbomite is just a mispronunciation of the material you freeze Han Solos in, but Balok seems to buy it. He says they're going to tow the Enterprise to a nearby planet to check out this corbomite situation. Kirk has the Enterprise resist, eventually breaking Balok's ship, meaning it will just sit in outer space until its crew dies. Problem solved, right?
WRONG. Kirk decides they need to save the people onboard this hostile ship. Look, we all kid Kirk here, and he's a good sport about it, but this was the most Hawkeye Pierce-ish I've ever seen him. Because you know what? They SHOULD help this crew. Teamwork. Responsibility. Let's win one for the Gipper.
Kirk, Dave Barry, and McCoy beam aboard Balok's ship, and something's fishy. Scotty tells them that based on his readings, they will need to duck a little bit in the transporter. They comply, and look hilarious, and Scotty definitely takes a picture with his cell phone while they're not looking. They beam aboard Balok's ship, and pretty much the very first thing they see is Balok -- OR IS IT? It isn't. It's a rubber dummy, just like we suspected all along! When your show occasionally uses fairly low-tech special effects, you can always keep your audience guessing about whether or not what they see is meant to look cheap or not. As it turns out, Balok is not a terrifying green monster at all! Balok is actually a small child who looks a little bit like Andy Taylor's son. The idea of Balok being a child is definitely scarier than this cloaked Roger Smith. Balok offers the boys a drink, and it turns out this whole thing was kind of a test (hardcore test, dude), and now he wants to initiate a cultural exchange with the Enterprise. "I want to learn how to grow hair on my face, and you want the secret to eternal youth" is not how it is phrased but it is definitely what everyone was thinking. Before Baclintok can even finish the word "exchange" Dave Barry says, "Hey, can I live with you guys forever? I kind of hate Kirk and Spock and want to party with babies forever." You just know he's planning his next hilarious book ("Dave Barry Takes On Adult Alien Babies"), but he doesn't say so. Kirk thinks, "Yeah, maybe I'll replace this guy with a boyish Soviet," and everyone decides it's cool. The end.
This is actually a really boss episode. It is tense, and reveals a lot about the characters, and it has a very hopeful end about a world that can work without war. It just needs at least one party to be populated only by babies. And considering the life expectancies in some nations today... (DARKEST JOKE IN THIS BLOG SO FAR). But seriously, we needed MUCH more Uhura, but otherwise I have zero complaints.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Dagger of the Mind: Season One Episode Nine

Here comes another Kirk-heavy episode. What is this, The Kirk Show? Don't they know that the people DEMAND more Uhura? Well, at least Uhura's in this one, you know?
When our episode begins the Enterprise is picking up some cargo from a penal colony - the planet TantalOz. Two things to note here: 1) Why is the Enterprise picking up cargo from this planet? I thought they mainly had to explore and rescue stuff. This makes it seem like they're Planet Express. That's cool, though, I figure this is official business. 2) Opinions are divided on the efficacy of Planet TantalOz. Kirk thinks it's totally cool and forward-thinking, which is just so Kirk. McCoy says "a cage is still a cage" because he is an Angela-Davis-style prison abolitionist which is BOSS. Spock is all "Vulcans don't need prison because we have no emotions and so we commit no crimes and we must be socialist because a lot of human crimes are committed out of need" and McCoy's immediately like "Shut up Spock nobody wants to hear about your idiot Buddhist/socialist species" and we remember that McCoy is pretty racist against Vulcans for someone who hates prisons, if that makes sense (in my mind all progressive viewpoints necessarily lead to all other progressive viewpoints, which is why everyone who supports gay marriage is vegan, you know?).
Anyway we're getting off-track here. This box that the Enterprise has just beamed aboard also has an ESCAPED CONVICT in it, which is kind of TantalOz's bad, you know? Like, please make sure your boxes don't include escaped convicts before you beam them aboard a military spaceship. In the future, at least.
The Convict knocks out a couple of dudes for basically no reason until he can make his way to the bridge. Before we get to that, I just want to point something out. This dude sees the Convict running off, and calls the bridge. And look at the sign behind him:
Yes, that's right. PERSONNEL DIRECTOR. The Enterprise does in fact have an HR department. What are the duties of this personnel director? Is it exclusively hiring/firing? I'd have to assume so, especially considering what comes soon (remember this for later).
Anyway, the Convict makes it to the bridge, and we find out his name is van Gelder, and he is immediately subdued by Spock's Vulcan Nerve Pinch. Pinch'D. They tie him down and figure out that he's not a convict at all! He's an insane person who used to work alongside Tim McManus, this doctor who is running the show down on TantalOz. McManus asks for van Gelder back, and Kirk thinks that's cool, but McCoy is not so sure. He's got a weird feeling about stuff, and his weird feeling requires Kirk to investigate the prison planet of TantalOz, which is a cool way of doing things. McCoy has so much power he should just tell Kirk to abolish all prisons ever because he doesn't like them. But he doesn't, because he knows not to abuse his power, unless it can result in some Vulcans getting their feelings hurt.
But Kirk can't go down to a prison planet alone - he needs to be accompanied by a specialist:
We zoom in tight on her, so my first thought is "Dang the camera people are really into how hot this lady is." Then it is revealed that we were in Kirk's POV, and he was eye-zooming her because at the Christmas party a couple years ago (according to the internet, TOS's only mention of Christmas bah humbug) they totally hooked up. Where is the personnel director when you need hir, which is now, because Kirk is INCREDIBLY hostile toward her for hooking up with him and then continuing to exist. Her name, by the way, is Dr. Noel, because Christmas.
The prison planet looks remarkably similar to the abandoned distillery planet from "Where No Man Has Gone Before." Observe:
Fun fact: This is because it was the same matte painting, with a few changes made. Still looks beautiful, though, right?
Kirk and Noel meet with McManus, who explains that on TantalOz, criminals are rehabilitated by being convinced to forget about their past crimes and basically become new people. McManus shows them how his machine works, and it's obvious none of them saw the historical movie A Clockwork Orange, because if they had (or even read the book!) they would find something weird about this:
This guy has to stare at a flashing light for a while until everything in his mind is fixed. No Beethoven plays, but that might be because there's only one "van" per episode allowed.
Kirk keeps asking McManus questions about this system, and McManus compares Kirk to the parable of the skeptic who asks a wise man to teach him the mysteries of the universe while he's standing on one foot. Sorry, Star Trek, this is actually a Jewish story about Rabbi Shamai (the writer of this episode of Star Trek was Jewish, and supposedly snuck in Jewish stuff to his episodes, which does not explain the Christmas party), and it was super easy for Rabbi Shamai to teach the skeptic Torah. This butchering of a Jewish folktale, combined with his uncanny resemblance to the Senator from The Manchurian Candidate, makes Kirk very suspicious. Noel is not suspicious at all, but either one of them could just be trying to be contrarian because of the I-hate-you sexual tension.
Meanwhile, back on the Enterprise, Spock and McCoy are having a very hard time getting information out of van Gelder, so they decide they have only one choice: The Vulcan Mind Meld. This was apparently selected because the CBS insisted that if Spock hypnotize van Gelder, as in the original script, they would have to make clear that he is a doctor, or at least an expert on hypnosis. This was easier, and way awesomer. This is a two-Vulcan-move episode, and I am getting high on life watching it.
From this Mind Meld they learn that McManus has been running EXPERIMENTS on prisoners, including on van Gelder. They start to worry about Kirk, but transmitter reception is terrible on TantalOz. Also, has this allowed McCoy and Spock to bond a little more? I'm gonna say yes. Maybe now you learned that Vulcans are humans too, McCoy, and being a doctor necessitates not being ridiculously bigoted against your patients. I'm pretty sure it comes across in this expression:
Back on TantalOz, Kirk wants to investigate with Noel in secret. They sneak into the Chair Room and Kirk instructs Noel to try to use it to make him do things. This has the potential for intense comedy. First Noel uses the machine to make Kirk hungry, and it works. Then he asks her to push it a little more. So she uses the machine to convince Kirk that the time they hooked up at the Christmas party, they actually got more romantic than just dry-humping behind the punch table. He immediately recalls this:
But before she can remind him that this is all a fantasy, a beautiful, beautiful fantasy, McManus bursts in and turns the machine up pretty high and convinces Kirk that he's in love with Noel, and that Noel wants him to toss aside his phaser and transmitter. As he's doing it, Kirk calls Spock for help because he is Just That Tough. Kirk and Noel are sequestered in a locked room (a cage is a cage, man). Even though he's brainwashed, Kirk is strong enough to recommend that Noel climb into the A/C ducts to deactivate the planet's force fields, which would allow Team Enterprise to beam down and rescue them.
Just as she climbs in, Kirk gets called away for more brainwashing. McManus turns up the machine to 50 and is all "War is peace; hate is love," and notes how tough Kirk is. Meanwhile, in Die Hard:
Noel takes down the force field, Spock and the gang beam down, and Adams is neutralized. Then the BEST THING IN HISTORY HAPPENS.
Kirk is reunited with Noel and smooches her way hard. She smooches back, and then is like "on second thought you're brainwashed into loving me, so, uh, weird." Here's a picture of that:
Spock bursts around the corner with a phaser, ready to kick ass if necessary, and comes upon this tableau. His response:Like, "What am I gonna do with this guy?!" Kirk notices Spock, and Spock gives him one of these:
"Kiiiiiiirk." Don't tell me you have no emotions, Spock, or is WRYNESS not an emotion?
Anyway, they catch up with McManus, who's died from overexposure to the brainwashing machine, because it emptied his mind and nobody was around to fill it. McCoy gives Kirk a "He's dead, Captain," and then it's back to the Enterprise. Van Gelder is now in charge of TantalOz and has destroyed all the equipment, which makes me kind of wonder what van Gelder's system of rehabilitation is. I hope it involves helping convicts get their space G.E.D.s. Kirk ruminates on how sucky it was to be brainwashed, then tells Spock to get them the hell out of there as fast as possible, and he and Spock share a smirk, which makes me wonder if I missed a joke. Anyway, it gives us Kirk's Smug Mug: