Star Trek: Season Three Movie Review
Star Trek: Season Three Review
"Star Trek: Season Three" Overview

Rating: NR
1968
Cast and Crew
Director : Marc Daniels,Joseph Pevney,Marvin J. Chomsky,Jud Taylor,Herb WallersteinProducer : Fred Freiberger,Gene Roddenberry
Screenwiter : Gene Roddenberry,Gene L. Coon,D.C. Fontana
Starring : William Shatner,Leonard Nimoy,DeForest Kelley,James Doohan,Nichelle Nichols,George Takei,Walter Koenig,Majel Barrett
Everyone knows the sixties were a time of rapid social change, but just how
rapid becomes obvious when re-watching the original Star Trek -- daring and
original in some ways, retro in others. For better or worse, modern liberal
idealism owes a lot to the naive, multi-ethnic utopian vision promulgated by
Star Trek (and just like Starfleet's Prime Directive, liberal tolerance is
honored mostly in the breach). And the first interracial kiss shown on TV was
in season three. (Though it's not exactly an inspirational moment -- Captain
Kirk and Lt. Uhura are forced to kiss by evil aliens.)
But the original Trek also drew heavily on Cold War-era sci-fi series like The
Outer Limits and The Twilight Zone -- groundbreaking and experimental in their
ideas, but with a traditional moral and dramatic approach. Their serious tone
fit the fifties, that uneasy, schizoid time of cultural confidence, space
exploration, and looming nuclear Armageddon. Star Trek's cautious presentation
probably helped viewers to swallow its innovations, from flip-phone
communicators and automatic doors to alien characters like Leonard Nimoy's
Spock. The idea of a character motivated by "logic" instead of emotion is
pretty silly (they're not opposites), but it was perfect for the liberationist
sixties -- and it was a powerful gimmick that generated years' worth of story
ideas. (In one of season three's last episodes, "All Our Yesterdays," Spock
goes back in time, loses his civilized veneer, and develops a primordial
passion for Mariette Hartley.)
The original Star Trek was never a big hit, and for its third and final season
(1968-'69) it was moved to a Friday night graveyard slot and had its budget
slashed. Not coincidentally, the series' worst episodes are in season three --
starting with the season opener, "Spock's Brain," which is exactly as good as
its title. The allegorical or "message" episodes (antiwar, anti-superstition,
etc.) like "Day of the Dove" are fairly entertaining, but lack the nuance of
earlier, more thoughtful episodes such as "A Private Little War" and "A Taste
of Armageddon." Still, there are a few high points in season three, such as
"The Enterprise Incident" (in which Spock gets another shot at romance).
Without recourse to expensive effects or sets, episodes like "The Empath" are
essentially theatrical, and some scenes are surprisingly intense.
The messages are mostly naive, but after all, it was the sixties... and how
many TV dramas since then have even tried to make us think? By 1969, the likes
of Sherwood Schwartz were already demonstrating the mindlessness of the medium,
and in the politicized, often vapid landscape of seventies TV, the innocent
introspection of the sixties was lost forever. How Star Trek would have changed
if it had lasted into the seventies is an interesting hypothetical. By the time
Star Trek moved to the big screen in the eighties, the influence of Lucas and
Spielberg had turned sci-fi into pure mainstream entertainment. Today, even the
best sci-fi series (Battlestar Galactica, Firefly) are basically dramas or
action shows with an out-there setting -- not morality plays. (Even the
mediocre TV incarnations of Trek in the nineties were more cerebral than say,
the Star Wars prequels, which is probably why Star Wars is much more popular
now.)
All three seasons of the original Trek have now been re-released on DVD in
remastered format with new CGI effects added. The additions are less egregious
than Lucas' in the Star Wars re-releases, but still misguided -- half the charm
of the original Star Trek was its brave struggle to make believable science
fiction on nano-sized budgets. Still, it's fun to rent the original series
again and enjoy the innocence and originality of a TV show which was both of
its time and ahead of it.
Aka Star Trek: The Original Series (TOS): Season 3.
Reviewer: David Bezanson





