Tuesday, March 31, 2020

“LET ME HELP” THREE WORDS, A LOVE LOST IN TIME, AND THE GREATEST EPISODE OF THE FRANCHISE



Episode Title:  The City on the Edge of Forever

Air Date: 4/6/1967

Written by Harlan Ellison

Directed by Joseph Pevney

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          John Winston as Lieutenant Kyle           Eddie Paskey as Lieutenant Leslie                 Bill Blackburn as Lieutenant Hadley          David L. Ross as Lieutenant Galloway                 Joan Collins as Sister Edith Keeler                      John Harmon as Rodent                Bart La Rue as The Guardian of Forever           Hal Baylor as unnamed Policeman                   Bill Borzage as unnamed drunk               Joseph Glick as unnamed Man in Mission        Max Wagner  as  unnamed Man in Mission          Carey Loftin as unnamed truck driver    Noble 'Kid' Chissell as unnamed Server      Walter Bacon as unnamed onlooker on street       Dick Cherney as unnamed passerby on sidewalk

Ships: USS Enterprise NCC-1701

Planets:  Guardian’s unnamed homeworld, Earth

My Spoiler filled summary and review:  The episode begins very dramatically with an unexplored planet that is pulsating large displacement waves that are distorting both time and space.  The Enterprise is sent to investigate the phenomenon.   The ship is knocked back and forth as it tries to head toward the strange planet.  An explosion at the helm causes injury to Lt. Sulu, so Dr. McCoy is summoned to the bridge.   McCoy uses a substance called cordrazine to treat Mr. Sulu.  The treatment gives Kirk a little pause as the substance, although lifesaving in small doses can be very damaging if used too much.  Then if fate or the writer of the episode were listening the ship is stuck again and McCoy accidentally injects himself with an overdose of the substance.
Oops

This causes Dr. McCoy to lose his mind and worse in his drugged state he seems more invincible than if he took PCP.  He is able to out mussel everyone even Spock and run off the bridge.  The deranged doctor finds his way to the transporter room, knocks out Lt. Kyle, steals his phaser, and beams himself down to the planet’s surface.

Kirk quickly forms a landing party; this away team consists of himself, Mr. Spock, Mr. Scott, Lt. Uhura, and a number of security personnel.  They beam down to the planet’s surface.  When they get down there they divide the landing party into two main groups one led by Mr. Scott and the other led by Lt. Uhura.  As a two group search the area for Dr. McCoy the Captain and his First Officer decide to explore some of these ruins.  They come across a giant doughnut shaped object that according to the readings for Mr. Spock’s tricorder is the source of all the temporal disturbances that they have been seeing.   They then find themselves getting the shock of the year when the giant donut starts talking to them!  It calls itself the Guardian of Forever.  The Guardian claims to be older than our sun, that it is neither a living being or a machine but both, and that it is more sophisticated than their primitive minds can possible comprehend.  It also seems very happy to meet everyone because it has been waiting a long time for a question. 
Looking for McCoy
At this point Dr. McCoy is found and in his drugged state still dangerous but a Vulcan nerve pinch from Mr. Spock shuts him down pretty quick.  This allows for Kirk and Spock to study the Guardian more closely.  The Guardian now starts showing off its abilities by running off imagery of Earth history in its hole completely in black and white for added old fashioned effect.  Kirk starts to wonder if they could use this thing that can disrupt time to go back and prevent McCoy’s accident, but Spock points out that the images are moving too fast to change something with such precision.  Kirk asks the Guardian if it can slow down but the Guardian says it was programed to show history this way, which is a long way of saying “no.”  Despite being a near living entity the Guardian is a very poor user-friendly time machine. Spock realizes he is missing an opportunity and begins recording what they are seeing with the tricorder.
Guardian putting on a show
 The cordrazine in McCoy’s system allows him to wake up from the nerve pinch early and when no one is paying attention to him he leaps at the Guardian and goes through the picture making hole.  (That sounds a lot dirtier than it is.)  With that McCoy has disappeared into the time stream.  As they tried to call up to the Enterprise for support they find no answer on the other end.  The Guardian explains that McCoy has changed what was.  This action has wiped out reality as they know it.  For now there is no Enterprise, no Starfleet, and no United Federation of Planets.  The only reason why they are still here is because of how close they were to the Guardian of Forever when history changed. 

Realizing they must undo what McCoy has done they asked the Guardian to replay the time show from before.  They will use Spock’s tricorder to pinpoint the exact moment for them to jump and hope that it takes them to the right location.   Kirk and Spock are the ones who are going to go but if they do not return within a short period time the remaining members of the team as a fallback are to, in pairs, follow Kirk and Spock giving them multiple opportunities to correct this or at least allow the survivors to find a home somewhere in the past.
Oh, no!

Kirk and Spock go through and find themselves in New York City in the year 1930.  The two notice that they tend to get a lot of attention as they are dressed rather strangely, not to mention Mr. Spock’s Vulcan ears.  In desperation Kirk notices some clothes hanging on a fire escape so he decides to steal them.  They are lucky that the clothes that Kirk stole happened to be a perfect fit for both him and Mr. Spock but they are unlucky when a police officer sees this theft.  Since the officer notices Spock’s ears Kirk tries to explain them away, by telling a tall tale of a child Spock getting his head stuck in an automated rice picker when he was growing up in China.  The cop has had it and he starts to search Kirk and Spock fortunately the Vulcan nerve pinch trick works again in the cop is out like a light.

The two men run away and they enter the basement the local 21st Street Mission.   They start to make some general plans on how to locate Dr. McCoy and even try to see about building a computer to work with Spock’s tricorder.  As they finish putting on their stolen clothes they’re discovered by the head of the mission, a woman named Edith Keeler.  Keeler demands to know why they’re in her basement. Kirk decides confess he says that they sought shelter because they were on the run from the police. Keeler demands to know why they’re being chased by the police.  Kirk again confesses that the clothes they wore were stolen by them.  They stole the clothes because they didn’t have any money and they didn’t want to be naked.  (Actually he didn’t say naked I just added that.)
Find men in the basement put them to work

Keeler is the best person for Kirk and Spock to run into.  She immediately takes them under her wing and finds them some honest jobs for a fair wage.  She allows them to eat at her soup kitchen and also sets them up at in an apartment.   While having a meal at her soup kitchen they get the pay the same “price” as the other beneficiaries and that is to listen to one of Edith Keeler’s sermons.  Keeler encourages the people in the room to hang on even though they’re in the middle of the Great Depression.  She says she won’t tell them what should make them happy that’s up to every individual however she claims that the times coming will be great times.  She says that Man will learn to master the atom and achieve spaceflight.  When this occurs they will cure great diseases and achieve lasting peace throughout all mankind.  Kirk is taken aback by her positive outlook and her perceptions that many of which came true by Kirk’s own time.

Spock sees some men using tools at the mission and he realizes he needs those tools in order to complete his computer so he steals them.   Edith Keeler confronts him about this rightfully feeling betrayed and her generosity to the men.  Spock tried to tell her that he was only going to borrow them and he was going to return them when he was done.  Before she can get another word out Kirk tells her that Spock’s word is gold if he says he was going to return them that he was.  Keeler, who is clearly as equally smitten by Captain Kirk as he is about her, agrees to drop the matter so long as Captain Kirk promises the walk home with her so she can ask him questions about where he belongs.  Spock is intrigued by her response and asks where she thinks they belong.  In her answer she gives a single best description of the relationship of Spock to Kirk: she says that he belongs at Kirk's side as if he’s always had been there and always will.  Kirk she says belongs elsewhere then a mission in New York.
 
As Kirk walks Keeler home the two of them talk and she asked him all sorts of questions.  She wants to know why Mr. Spock calls him “Captain” and asks if they’ve been in the service together.  Kirk doesn’t answer quite directly and Keeler says that she knows something is wrong and then utters the magic words to the Captain, “Let me help.”  After she says that Kirk turns to her and tells her that in the future a great author would pen that those three words were more romantic than “I love you.” When she asks where this author comes from he takes her into his arms and points to Orion’s belt in the sky showing her the star where the planet he comes from orbits.  Two people have fallen in love.

While Kirk is out courting Keeler Spock has gotten his computer working with the tricorder and he sees a newspaper obituary that shows Keeler dying in a traffic accident.  Later when running it again for Kirk it shows a different future.   In this one Keeler is the leader of a peace movement and she becomes acquainted with Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936.  Kirk becomes very excited for his love exclaiming “she is important!”  Then Mr. Spock gives him the grim news that there are two possible futures one where she lives to meet the President and another when she dies this year.  However he was unsure of the date as he was unable to see it.  Kirk asks which future is the one that must be and Spock doesn’t know.  McCoy either kills this woman or prevents her from being killed.  Already you can see in Kirk’s face that this begins to tear him up.  When Spock asks what is to be done if she must die Kirk doesn’t commit. 

Dr. McCoy finally arrives still maddened by the cordrazine he continues his raving about killers. His rants scare a poor homeless man.  When McCoy sees the man run away, he notices he looks human and asks him not to run for he won’t kill him.  As McCoy reaches the man he notices that he is human not just looks.  Although McCoy’s mental instability undermines his senses he gazes around and notices the constellations in the sky.  He mutters that they even got the stars right. McCoy starts to assume that this is all a trick played on him by some unknown alien they must have encountered.  Considering their ship’s history that isn’t completely unreasonable for him to believe.  McCoy notices the clothing and buildings all appearing as if in the past, he thinks about what medicine was like in those days.  The drugs combined with his own strong empathy starts to feel horror when he thinks about 20th medicine with people “sewed up like garments!”
Good cranial development 

McCoy collapses and the homeless man takes his phaser.  While trying to figure out what it is the poor man ends up disintegrating himself with it.  When McCoy comes to he gets guided to the 21st Street Mission where he ends up in the warm hands of Edith Keeler, who clearly sees that he needs some help.  She takes him away just as Spock is beginning his shift. 

Kirk and Spock have gotten the computer working again, it had shorted out from earlier, to Kirk’s heartbreak they discover that in the “true” timeline Edith Keeler is supposed to die in a car accident later this year, but exact date is unknown.  Keeler surviving means she goes on to found a peace movement that become so powerful and prevailing in the United States that delays our entrance into World War II.  That delay allows the Nazis to develop the atomic bomb first and with that advantage the Axis powers win the war and Fascism triumphs throughout the world.   When they’re done viewing the tricorder, Kirk confesses that he is in love with Keeler.  Spock reminds him of their mission and the millions, if not billions, of lives will be affected if the timeline is allowed to be changed.
Good news we got the computer working, bad news.

McCoy wakes up in a bed and is being cared for by Keeler.  He is now fully recovered from his accidental injection in his mind is his is again.  However since he is surrounded by the world of 1930 he comes to the conclusion that he still must be under the drug's influence and that he is hallucinating.  Nevertheless he finds is Keeler to be a very pleasant hallucination and they engage in friendly discussion.
Spock sees two people who fancy one another

As Kirk and Keeler are finishing up another date, Keeler trips and nearly falls down the stairs before Kirk saves her.  Spock witnesses all of this and after Kirk has made sure that Keeler has been settled in for the night Spock confronts him.  He points out the Keeler could’ve died then in the future would’ve been saved.  Kirk goes back and forth saying she supposed to try to traffic accident not by falling down the stairs, McCoy is not even there yet.  Then he moves into a defense of the future being unwritten and we don’t really know what’s going to happen.  Spock correctly assumes that Kirk is becoming compromised in order to protect the woman he sleeping with.  (I mean he’s in love with.  They never mention sleeping, however the way he and Keeler going on I assume it’s obvious.  They don’t say outright as they were trying to keep everything rated G to use a modern expression.)
   
Edith Keeler visits with Dr. McCoy again and finds that he’s in much better spirits.  He is more accepting of his new reality and that one point he even offers to help around her mission.  She tells him that there’ll be plenty of time to talk about that but right now she’s excited for her date with as she describes her “man friend .“ She tells McCoy that he’s going to take her to a Clark Gable movie.  This actually turns out to be a little bit funny later because she actually hasn’t talked to Kirk about going to the Gable movie but she’s a made up her mind and taking her to that movie is what Kirk is going to do. 

As Kirk and Keeler stroll along on their date Keeler brings up the Clark Gable movie that she’s decided Kirk is going to take her to and mentioned a man she recently met named McCoy who kind of reminded her of Kirk.  Kirk stops and puts his hands on her and exclaims “Dr. Leonard McCoy ?”  At that moment Kirk sees McCoy come out of the mission across the street and coincidentally Spock walks out as well.  Kirk crosses the street and calls out to them and the three men have a reunion. 

They start talking to each other about a mile per minute and Keeler sits on the other side the street wondering what’s going on.  Her fascination with these three gentlemen leads her to walk across the street heading straight for them and she makes the fatal error of failing to look before she crosses.  That one moment of sudden carelessness brought on by the moment’s excitement and confusion cost her her life.  However McCoy almost saves her but Kirk stops him allowing the motor vehicle to hit her head on.  McCoy is shocked telling the Captain that he could’ve saved her and asking him if he realized what he is done.  Spock says “He knows, Doctor.  He knows.”
Worst moment in his life!

The three men return to the present and according to the rest of the away team they have been gone only seconds.  They can once again communicate with the Enterprise.  The Guardian of Forever proclaims that the timeline has been restored and all is as it once was.  Except for of course the poor homeless man in the 20th century who getting a hand phaser from over 300 years in the future, having no idea what it was, and no reasonable expectation that it could be a danger to him, who ended up disintegrated.  Of course the all-powerful Guardian is some sort of elitist and clearly doesn’t care about that poor innocent life that was taken as a result.  Oh well, maybe he was supposed to die that day. As the Guardian tells them that many such journeys are possible, the idea now sickens, not excites, Captain Kirk.  He says it’s time to get the hell out of there and calls for the Enterprise to beam them up.

Additional thoughts: Far and away the greatest episode of the Star Trek franchise.  It’s a challenge to come up with something original to say about an episode so celebrated and discussed so much.  One of the things that I notice about certain episodes of television is that the truly great individual episodes can mark their greatness by not only how they are celebrated by their fan base and genre, but how that individual episode can transcend its genre so that I can be enjoyed by almost any viewer.  If I had to choose one episode to show a non-Star Trek fan that would represent the franchise this would be this episode.  I think any TV series that is truly good will produce one of these.  One that immediately comes to mind is “College” from the first season of The Sopranos.  Also from my childhood I would bring up “The Boogieman Cometh” from The Real Ghostbusters.  

There were a lot of hard feelings after this was all said and done between Harlan Ellison and Gene Roddenberry. However I have no desire to discuss it.  Both Roddenberry and Ellison were brilliant and both could be jerks from time to time.  Of the two Ellison was the bigger jerk and was also a major copyright troll; however that doesn’t take away from his brilliance as a writer.  I also have no interest in discussing previous drafts that many other people find so fascinating.  All original drafts may be more interesting than the episode you get because they all have to be whittled down to fit a 60 minute plus commercials program that often has a limited budget.

What I do want to discuss is the utter tragedy of the character of Edith Keeler.  Edith and her destiny are what tug at the heartstrings in this episode.  Here you have this wonderful person who tries her best to make the world around her a better place.  An intelligent individual who if she wanted to pursue anything else that might have been more materially rewarding she most likely would have been very successful; who chooses instead to work in a poor area in a major city trying her best to help any individual that she can.  She tries to put food in people’s bellies, she tries to put hope in their hearts , and she tries her best to aid those in need of achieving independence by finding them work and in some cases finding them place to live that is affordable.  Yet this wonderful person is destined for death by traffic accident, and the cruelest fate of all is that is a good thing.  Because if she’s allowed to continue living given her wonderful nature she will by being in the wrong place at the wrong time but with the best of intentions allow the evil Axis powers to win World War II.   So the bright light from the 21st Street Mission that is Edith Keeler must die so she doesn’t damage humanity too much.
Good person, horrible world

Captain Kirk has a romantic life that is similar to the comic book character Batman.  Superman has Lois Lane.  Lois Lane is Superman’s one true love who he is destined to be with.  She was there from his first appearance in Action Comics #1 and has been in part of his world in every incarnation.  If they ever find themselves in the arms of another those relationships are ultimately not to last and they find each other again.  Batman has never had a Lois Lane.  There have been numerous women over the years from Vicki Vale to Vesper Fairchild to Julia Madison to Selena Kyle.  Various groups of fans prefer one over the other but DC comics has never come out and said: “this person is it.”  At this point in Captain Kirk’s career fans have heard about the young blonde technician that Gary Mitchell set him up with in “Where No Man Has Gone Before” and there was Ruth who Kirk mentioned and met a copy of in “Shore Leave.”  Later there will be others but no one crowned as Kirk’s one true soulmate by the officials of Star Trek.  It’s up to each fan who they view his one true love to be.  However as far as this fan is concerned his one true love is a woman who when he was getting to know her said “Let me help.”  In allowing her to die he amputated a piece of his soul.
Let me help!

So were there any alternatives?  I imagine throughout this adventure Captain Kirk wish he had traveled back here using his starship.  With the Enterprise at least he would have some control over how he moved through time.  Relying on the Guardian for his journey through the timeline denies him the option of bringing his Edith to the future with him.  I suppose maybe he could to arrange for himself to stay in this time period and simply try to convince Edith Keeler not to go through with the peace movement in the 30s, maybe he could use his knowledge from the future to expose to her what a horror Adolf Hitler actually was or is.  Of course what would be good for Captain Kirk would not necessarily be good for the actor William Shatner and the various fans of Star Trek. If Captain Kirk be permitted to leave his responsibilities behind it and live in the 30s with his one true love the show would lost its main hero and Shatner would have been out of a job.  I love Mr. Spock as much as anyone but somehow I don’t think the series would have been nearly as interesting if it continued with the Enterprise being led by a Captain Spock.  The series is ultimately driven by the interactions of all the characters. 
So little time with his soul mate
I will say I do feel a little bit sorry for the Guardian of Forever.   With all its knowledge it’s too bad he couldn’t reach through time and learn a thing or two about making friends.  It seems really excited at first to meet other intelligent beings but then it began talking in riddles and insisting on its superiority.  As a time travel device it wasn’t very user-friendly.  It didn’t seem to have any standards on who entered it.  When Kirk and Spock return having retrieved McCoy, the Guardian excitedly proclaims that many such journeys are possible.   However with his heart so recently been ripped out of his chest the last thing Kirk wants to do is have it happen again.  He wants nothing to do with the Guardian of Forever.  In all honesty would you?  As they beamed away I got the impression of the Guardian was going to be alone again for quite some time.

FINAL GRADE 5 of 5

2 comments:

  1. That line, "It’s up to each fan who they view his one true love to be. However as far as this fan is concerned his one true love is a woman who when he was getting to know her said “Let me help.” In allowing her to die he amputated a piece of his soul." would make a great eulogy for Keeler!

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