The Devil in the Dark
-
Star Trek TV
Episode
[ Synopsis
|
Editorial Reviews
]
Production # 26 Episode # 25
Air Date: 3/09/67
Stardate: 3196.1
Synopsis:
The U.S.S. Enterprise arrives to investigate
reports of an unknown monster deep in the mining tunnels of Janus VI. The being
is apparently destroying machinery and killing the miners, and has the ability
to burrow through solid rock. Janus VI is a source for the rare mineral, pergium.
Soon after the landing party arrives on the planet's
surface, a reactor pump is stolen and the colony is in jeopardy from fluctuating
life support functions. However, this convinces Spock that they are dealing, not
with a mindless monster, but with an intelligent lifeform.
Kirk and Spock, along with members of the ship's security
team, enter the mines to find the creature. They discover a large, rock-like
creature that burrows easily through the stone walls, as a mole might burrow
through dirt. Wounded in a phaser blast, the bulky creature manages to escape
through the stone wall.
They continue pursuit and eventually Kirk is trapped by
the creature. When it doesn't attack, Spock attempts a Vulcan mind meld with the
entity and discovers that it is, in fact, an intelligent being. A native of the
planet, the creature is normally peaceful, and called a Horta. It doesn't mind
sharing the planet with the miners, but when the men broke into the Horta's
hatchery and unknowingly destroyed many of her eggs, it attacked to protect its
remaining unborn children.
With Spock acting as interpreter, the miners explain that
they thought the eggs were some king of silicon nodules and that no hostility
had been meant.
McCoy treats the silicon-based creature with a trowel and
patch material, and heals it. An alliance is formed between the Horta and the
miners; the young, newly-hatched Hortas will mine the pergium at a far faster
rate than the humans could and the miners will be extremely rich. Kirk retrieves
the missing reactor and the landing party leaves the inhabitants of Janus VI
living in peaceful co-existence.
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
The Vulcan-born first officer of The Enterprise,
Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy), generally smiles about as often as Greta Garbo. But
in "This Side of Paradise," Spock not only smiles but laughs,
dangles from a tree, kisses a good-looking blonde woman, and gets into a fight
with his best friend. It all starts when Spock, Captain Kirk (William Shatner),
Dr. McCoy (DeForest Kelley), Sulu (George Takei), and a couple of crew members
beam down to Omicron Ceti III to find out what happened to a group of
scientists who built a research colony on the planet. What they discover is a
little spooky. The colonists claim they've created a true paradise where
everyone is part of a collective mind bent on positivity. Kirk, naturally,
argues that paradise robs people of their need to suffer and crawl toward
progress.
Meanwhile, Spock is zapped by an exotic flower
that is the real source of all this community goodwill, and he instantly gets
happy, acting like a kid, renewing a romance with a comely biologist (an
angelic Jill Ireland), and giving the sputtering Kirk an earful of
entertaining insubordination. Story editor D.C. Fontana's script contains some
obvious parallels between a chemically induced "paradise" and a
drug-induced high in the 1960s. But the real draw here is Spock's
uncharacteristic joy and the drama behind Kirk's shattering decision to break
his friend's heart.
"Devil in the Dark" opens with an
emergency on Janus VI, a planet rich in raw materials crucial to the
running of Federation operations. There's a lot of money to be made by the
mining contractor involved, but a swift, unseen monster is roaming the snaky
tunnels of Janus's interior, turning miners into acid-drenched goo. It's up to
the Enterprise crew to find the alien culprit and defuse the lynch-mob
mentality spreading among the paranoid working stiffs there. Captain Kirk
(William Shatner), Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy), and Dr. McCoy (DeForest Kelley)
beam down to initiate the detective work, leading Spock to quickly conclude
that the thousands of silicone balls mysteriously strewn about the planet's
deepest level might have something to do with the reasons behind the
atrocities.
Written by series guru Gene L. Coon and
directed by mainstay Joseph Pevney (who alternated directorial chores with
Marc Daniels during the show's second season), "The Devil in the
Dark" is a breathlessly paced episode reflecting a delightful variety of
cross-genre influences--Westerns, creature-features, gritty noir. Add one of
the most effective and moving instances of the Enterprise's search for
new life on Star Trek (plus McCoy's infamous complaint, "I'm a
doctor, not a bricklayer!"), and this is a memorable program indeed. --Tom
Keogh
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