A Taste of Armageddon
-
Star Trek TV
Episode
[ Synopsis
|
Editorial Reviews
]
Production # 23 Episode # 23
Air Date: 2/23/1967
Stardate: 3192.1
Synopsis:
The U.S.S. Enterprise is ordered to pick up
Ambassador Robert Fox, who is headed to planet Eminiar VII on a diplomatic
mission. Upon arriving at the planet, the ship is warned away.
Beaming to the surface with a landing party, Kirk and
Spock are met by a young woman, Mea 3, who tells them that Eminiar VII has been
at war with its neighboring planet, Vendikar, for over 500 years. Mea 3 takes
them to the council chambers where they find banks of computers. Eminiar's head
council Anan 7 informs them that the two planets have learned to avoid the
complete devastation of war because computers are used. When a "hit"
is scored by one of the planets, the people declared "dead" willingly
walk into antimatter chambers and are vaporized. Anan 7 further tells Kirk that
his ship and all the crew aboard her have been declared casualties and will be
executed. When Kirk flatly refuses, the landing party members are taken
prisoner.
The council members are unable to convince Scotty, in
charge of the U.S.S. Enterprise, to lower shields without a direct order
from Captain Kirk. Meanwhile, Ambassador Fox has beamed to Eminiar and is also
taken prisoner, marked for death. Kirk and Spock escape and gain the council
chambers where they destroy the computers. Kirk tells the council members that
they have made this war too easy for themselves and that they will truly
experience the horrors of war if they do not learn to make peace first.
Ambassador Fox volunteers to stay behind and negotiate a peace between the
neighboring planets.
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Volume 11 in the classic Star Trek series
on DVD contains the delightful episode "A Taste of Armageddon," a
time-travel story with an infectious blend of suspense and humor. After
dropping into a black hole, the Enterprise ends up orbiting the Earth
in the late 1960s, and is spotted by U.S. Air Force Captain Christopher (Roger
Perry), who happens to be flying by in his jet. Inadvertently giving poor
Christopher an unwanted glimpse into the future, and wrecking his jet with an
overpowering tractor beam, Capt. Kirk (William Shatner), not having a good
day, beams him aboard the Federation starship. The collision of sensibilities
and reference points between characters born several centuries apart has a
fresh, urgent tone that subsequent Star Trek series have never captured
(though Deep Space Nine came close with its dazzling episode
"Trials and Tribble-ations"). The problem, of course, is what to do
about Christopher now that he knows what he knows, and history demands that he
stay put in his own world: the pilot's unborn son, it seems, will one day make
a space flight of historic importance. Terrifically entertaining and something
of a precedent-setter for Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (the
theatrical feature set in contemporary San Francisco), "Tomorrow Is
Yesterday" is Trek at its best.
Also on this disc is "Return of the
Archons," a cautionary story about mind control written by Gene
Roddenberry. The tale begins when Ensign Sulu (George Takei) is taken hostage
on an Earth-like planet with a primitive culture. Zapped by a weapon that
leaves him under the control of someone or something named Landru, Sulu is
then pursued by Kirk and Spock (Leonard Nimoy), who discover that Landru has
the same grip on everyone else. Once Landru becomes aware of efforts by the
captain and first officer to interfere with its bidding, Kirk and Spock become
the target of a massive hunt by locals. A minor episode with a somewhat
obvious scenario, "Return of the Archons" does have novel appeal in
its heightened role for the ever-charming Sulu, and in Roddenberry's
characteristically humane interest in elements that make people (and
intelligent aliens) everywhere free to fulfill their destinies. The solution
to the who-is-Landru mystery won't surprise anyone, but it may strike you as a
prototype of several future episodes, from all the Trek series,
involving centralized caretaking on various planets. --Tom Keogh
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