Tuesday, August 27, 2019

A GOOD KIRK, A BAD KIRK, BUT IS ANY KIRK THE REAL KIRK?


Episode Title:  The Enemy Within

Air Date: 10/06/1966

Written by Richard Matheson

Directed by Leo Penn

Cast: William Shatner as Captain James T. Kirk    Leonard Nimoy as Lieutenant Commander Spock             DeForest Kelley as Dr. Leonard H. McCoy AKA "Bones"              James Doohan  as Lieutenant Commander Montgomery Scott AKA “Scotty”   George Takei  as Lieutenant  Hikaru Sulu    Nichelle Nichols as Lieutenant Nyota Uhura     Jim Goodwin  as Lieutenant Farrell       Grace Lee Whitney as Yeoman First Class Janice Rand       Eddie Paskey as Crewman Connors       Ed Madden as Geological Technician Fisher            Frank da Vinci as  Crewman          Ron Veto as Crewman           Sean Morgan as Crewman Gerald Thompson       Don Eitner as  photo double for Captain James T. Kirk

Ships: USS Enterprise NCC-1701

Planets:  Alpha 177

My Spoiler filled summary and review: The episode begins with the crew of the Enterprise exploring a strange new world.  The planet is Alpha 177, it doesn’t have much for intelligent life it’s most interesting life form is a doglike creature that has the a horn.  I call this creature "the unicorn dog," and I bet I’m not the only one who does.  The planet has radical changes in temperature where a daytime its normal humanlike environment the temperature at night drops to -160°. 
Is this what you thought you would see when I told you we would seek out new life?

            As the away team is collecting samples of the minerals and even one specimen of unicorn dog, Geological Technician Fisher is injured in a fall. His injuries aren’t that severe just cuts to his hand but he is covered in this yellow like substance that neither he nor anyone else knows what it is.  As he beams up to the ship to get medical attention the strange substance on him seems to cause a slight problem in the transporter.  Nevertheless, he successfully transports onboard.  Captain Kirk follows Fisher back up to the Enterprise through the transporter.  When Kirk emerges from the transporter however he seems to be a little lightheaded, so much so that Scotty feels he has to personally escort the Captain back to his quarters.  After they leave another Captain Kirk emerges from the transporter and this one has an angry look on his face.
Two Kirks come out of the transporter and both seem to be a bit off. 

            The disturbed Captain Kirk goes to the sick bay where Dr. McCoy is treating Fisher for his wounds.  When Fisher tries let his Captain know that his hand is better he is surprised when the previously concerned Captain ignores his improved medical situation.  When McCoy tries to talk to him Bad Kirk demands McCoy give him a brandy, which interestingly enough the doctor has plenty in store in sick bay as opposed to his quarters where you normally would keep that sort of thing.  McCoy gives Bad Kirk the brandy he demands and Bad Kirk leaves the sick bay chugging the stuff.
Brandy doesn't belong in sick bay it belongs in my belly.

            Mr. Spock having been notified by the Doctor of Captain Kirk’s weird behavior, goes to check on the Captain in his quarters.  When he questions Good Kirk he is simply told that he hadn’t been the sick bay and he thinks Dr. McCoy may be playing a trick on him.  Since Good Kirk was never in sick bay he is telling the truth. 

            Captain Kirk’s strange behavior starts to make a lot of sense to Mr. Spock when Scotty summoned him to the transporter room.  It turns out the unicorn dog creature that they beamed up was duplicated by the transporter.  One unicorn dog is nice while the other unicorn dog is nasty.  Scotty said that we cannot chance this happening to a man and so they have no way of bringing up the landing party.  Now this point I really want to know why they don’t grab a shuttlecraft to go pick them up.  The suggestion never comes up in the episode I considered to be huge dent in what is a generally enjoyable episode.  I don’t want to hear about how they hadn’t invented shuttlecraft yet they clearly had a bay door in the back of the ship so someone thought about shuttles.  The transporter was invented second because the budget wasn't big enough to allow landings.  Later in the episode they explain that the thermal heaters they try to beam down duplicated and they were nonfunctional.  I don’t know why they couldn’t come up with some in story reason to say they can’t use or a shuttlecraft; it would’ve been appreciated had they tried.

(Found this video from about ten years ago I am glad I am not the only one to find this odd.)

            Bad Kirk decides that it’s time for some sex so he uses his authority as Captain to allow himself into Yeoman Rand’s quarters.  When the Yeoman returns she is approached by her drunken commanding officer.  Now it is been hinted at that Yeoman Rand has a crush on Captain Kirk but her fantasies probably did not include the Captain surprising her in her quarters while he is drunk.  At first Bad Kirk tries to seduce her but when it’s clear she’s not going to be seduced he decides to resort rape.  Rand resists that she successfully scratches the Bad Kirk’s face.  During the attempted rape the door from her quarters opens just as Fisher walks by and he sees the Captain attacking the Yeoman.  Rand asked Fisher to get Spock so Fisher runs the intercom and calls the First Officer.  Unfortunately for Fisher the Bad Kirk received all of the incredible fighting skills that Captain Kirk possesses any easily kicks the crap out of Fisher sending him to the sick bay. 
Yes it turns out Bad Kirk is evil.

            When Spock confronts Good Kirk he of course denies it.  The two men both head down sick bay where Rand and Fisher are being treated.  In sick bay Grace Lee Whitney puts on a great performance as someone who’s just been a victim of an attempted sexual assault.  She’s able to project all the natural emotions of the shock of someone that she knows having tried to assault her and the irrational feelings of guilt and hesitation to report for fear of ruining his career.  Not knowing why he did it she tries to look to her own actions no matter how unfair that is to herself for an explanation.  Good Kirk doesn’t have the injuries that Rand inflicted on Bad Kirk, but both Rand and Fisher still insist it was him.  Spock having seen what happened to the unicorn dog figures out exactly what has occurred.  Spock explains that it is an impostor who is currently on the ship.

            Spock encourages the Captain to keep most of this a secret because if the crew learned the complete truth the captain might appear less-than-perfect and could undermine Kirk’s ability to command the ship in the future.  Personally I think Spock is underestimating the crew of the Enterprise, but Good Kirk agrees with him.  Unfortunately, appearing imperfect may be the least of Good Kirk's problems because it  is also apparent that his inability to command is growing.  While all this is going on Lt. Sulu is bravely leading the away team in survival techniques to fight off the cold.  But all the survival techniques in the galaxy won’t save them indefinitely.
Mr. Sulu and the away team freezing to death.

            Good Kirk performs the ship wide announcement that there is impostor on board who looks just like him but I scratches on his face and he orders a ship wide manhunt for the false Captain with phasers ordered to stun.  Bad Kirk hearing the announcement goes into a frenzy of anger at the other version of himself taking command of his ship.  Bad Kirk finds a makeup in his own quarters, which makes me wonder what exactly Captain Kirk actually has makeup for, and uses his appearance to fool a crewman into giving him his phaser.
Bad Kirk hears Good Kirk giving orders from his chair

            Good Kirk, under the guidance as Mr. Spock, comes to the conclusion that Bad Kirk is hiding in the engineering decks of the ship. Good Kirk and Mr. Spock go down there to try to confront him.  They do so and Good and Bad come face-to-face. Good Kirk tries to talk Bad Kirk into surrendering, by pointing out that they need other.  Bad Kirk rejects the offer from his counterpart and actually tries to shoot him with the phaser.  Mr. Spock however uses what will be known as the Vulcan nerve pinch to subdue Bad Kirk.  This prevents Bad Kirk from shooting Good Kirk but he still fires his phaser and damages part the ship’s engine.  The part that he’s damaged is connected to the transporter so not only is the transporter broken in terms of the normal function is now completely deprived of power.  The fate of Mr. Sulu and his away team are getting grimmer by the moment.
When your internal struggle becomes external

            In sick bay they restrain Bad Kirk.  Mr. Spock makes an interesting observation, despite calling Bad Kirk “the impostor” in reality both sides are parts of what is the actual Captain Kirk.  Each contains an element of Kirk’s nature. The Good Kirk is compassionate, intelligent, and brave.  Without his other half however he is weak and indecisive.  The more he remains separate from his other self he loses ability to focus and take command.  The Bad Kirk is strong, bold, and a fighter.  Unfortunately without his other half he is prone to violence whenever he gets scared or just annoyed.  The longer he remained separated from his other self he becomes more and more like an animal.  Also neither Kirk can survive without the other which is demonstrated as Bad Kirk starts to die in sick bay his vitals get better with the arrival of Good Kirk.

I bet there are many days Spock wants to nerve pinch his Captain.  Today was a dream come true!


            
            Scotty, being the miracle worker that he always is, finds a way to get the transporter working and thinks he can reverse the problem that caused separation.  They do a test on the unicorn dogs and although they succeed in recombining the animal into one creature the animal dies as a result.  Spock concludes that because the animal lacked intelligence it didn’t understand what was happening thus causing become terrified and died.  He reasons Captain Kirk can be recombined and he will most likely survive because his intelligence can comprehend what is happening to him.  Dr. McCoy disagrees he says that it unknown what caught killed the unicorn dog and if they try this with the Captain he was likely end up just as dead.  As each moment passes the away team is inching closer and closer to their own deaths.
The final and sad fate of the unicorn dog

            Good Kirk makes the decision to take the risk and Bad Kirk agrees but it is merely a ruse to trick Good Kirk so that he can escape.  It is unfortunate for Good Kirk that his other self is the part that inherited his mad fighting skills as he is easily beaten.  Bad Kirk scratches his counterpart so they look more like and heads to the bridge take command.  He orders the ship out of orbit condemning the away team to its fate; however a recovered Good Kirk and McCoy arrive.  Bad Kirk insists the ship is his and that his counterpart can’t take it from him.  Bad Kirk begins to falter because he has been separated from the rest of him for so long; this allows Good Kirk and McCoy to take Bad Kirk down and drag him to the transporter room.  Bad Kirk rejects this the whole time claiming he wants to live to which his counterpart says that they both will in each other.

            In the transporter room the two Kirks board the transporter pad and it is activated.  In a testament to the skills of Scotty, Captain Kirk is successfully restored.  The first thing the restored Kirk does is he orders that the away team to be brought back up to the ship.  With the away team rescued in the nick of time, Dr. McCoy confirms that they’ll be all right in the long term, Kirk heads back to the bridge. On the bridge Kirk thanks Spock for “the both of us,” but he does also confides that he is disturbed to see a part of himself that he wished not to have seen.  Yeoman Rand attempts to clear the air with the Captain was clearly having trouble doing so, Kirk puts her at ease.  That is how the episode should have ended but unfortunately we are also given a glimpse into how out of touch Mr. Spock can be with human emotions where he says the most tone deaf thing to Yeoman Rand about how Bad Kirk had interesting traits.

Additional thoughtsSo Captain Kirk has makeup in his drawer. Is makeup fashionable for men in the 23rd century?  Or is Captain Kirk more of a style trendsetter? Maybe he just has it in case a woman gives him a hickey?

            Joking aside this episode is the first to introduce what would become a common plot device in many great Star Trek episodes: bizarre transporter accidents.  Originally conceived in order to save money on the budget, the transporter, a device that takes objects both living and inanimate apart molecule by molecule turning them into energy and moving them from one place to another has endless possibilities for great stories.  When you think about it the concept is absolutely terrifying.  Yet they’re used in every episode and we’re later told that transporters of the safest form of transportation and accidents are almost always unheard of. But when they do have accidents watch out the strangest and most bizarre things can happen.  A person can be split into two different people and one of those people can desire to consume the other.  Funny thing is in this case we’re talking about the Good Kirk wanting to consume the Bad Kirk.

            There is of course also the inevitable question on rather it is morally ethical to force Bad Kirk to go over the recombining procedure against his will.  The episode never really explores this but I would say yes.  Bad Kirk isn’t a person he is half a person and in his separated state he is incapable of making rational decisions about himself or anyone else. Now in the episode the Good Kirk does, a bit reluctantly, choose to be recombined with his other half, and the episode does point out that Good Kirk is the one that retained Kirk’s intellect.  However I would argue that had both been unwilling it would have fine for Spock to force both of them.  As they are not two people but one person whose mental state in such a shape that they can’t be trusted to make a rational judgement on the matter, so Spock and McCoy would be well within their rights to force such a procedure on dissembled Captain for his own good.  Good Kirk had been shown to not be completely capable at making decisions without the help of either Spock or McCoy.  
  
One of the things I’m thinking about after this episode is when Captain Kirk reflects on this adventure he had how exactly does he remember it?  Does he only remember from the perspective of the Good Kirk? Do both sets of memories run simultaneously?  Can he recall the memories of both halves with equal precision?  It is a shame this is never addressed.

            This episode also features another common plot point in Star Trek one that I don’t particularly care for.  That is Starfleet’s demand for some form of perfection from its officers particularly its captains.  It’s unrealistic and goes against the concept of an idealized future.  In this episode Spock and McCoy prop up Good Kirk like the corpse in The Weekend at Bernie’s.  They realize that Good Kirk is no longer capable of functioning as a starship captain but continue to help him do it because to do otherwise would undermine the crew’s confidence in him and also potentially ruin his career having been formally relieved.  When you think about it this attitude is a disservice to all involved and rather insulting to the crew of the Enterprise.  I find it absurd that a fully trained crew of men and women who have chosen to explore the unknown depths of space can’t be reminded that their Captain is a human being with frailties like every other human being because if they are they may all lose faith.
Good and Bad the final struggle

            In a rational world Captain Kirk would’ve immediately been relieved of command the moment Rand and Fisher made their assault allegations against him, at least temporarily as the ship’s senior officers investigated the allegations.  Once it was determined that Kirk had been split into two people Spock would’ve remained in command up into a time Kirk was restored.  Once he has been restored Kirk should be allowed to his resume command without any dent to his career or reputation.  After all it wasn’t his fault of the transporter split him into two people, so his reputation shouldn’t suffer from it.  But no Starfleet is run by irrational boob heads and if Spock and McCoy don’t prop Kirk up he’ll stay out.  How does Starfleet even function?

            Also for those who think William Shatner’s a bad actor really should watch this episode. Not only does the character of Captain Kirk tend to suffer from popular misconceptions and stereotypes about him, but unsurprisingly the actor associated tends to suffer them as well.  If William Shatner was such a horrible actor how the hell did he start a TV show on a major network in almost every decade of his career?  In this episode Shatner has to play three different versions of the same guy and he pulls it off exceptionally well.

FINAL GRADE 4 of 5

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