What Are Little
Girls Made of ? -
Star Trek TV
Episode
[ Synopsis
|
Editorial Reviews
]
Production # 10
Air Date: 10/20/1966
Stardate: 2712.4
Synopsis:
The U.S.S. Enterprise arrives in orbit around Exo III, to
search for exobiologist Dr. Roger Korby. When Kirk asks Spock if Korby could
possibly still be alive, Spock glances at Christine, then quietly shuts off his
monitor. Christine Chapel, McCoy's chief nurse, is Korby's fianc?e. Chapel had
signed on with the U.S.S. Enterprise in the hope of finding him. Korby is known
as the "Pasteur of archeological medicine."
At Dr. Korby's request, only Kirk and a very excited
Christine Chapel beam down to the planet. They find the doctor living in an
underground cavern built by what is known as "The Old Ones," the
extinct natives of Exo III. He tells them that he discovered the caverns while
suffering from severe frostbite, five years before.
Using equipment left behind by these now-dead beings,
Korby has learned how to construct androids who look and act like humans. His
android companions, Ruk and Andrea, amaze Kirk and Chapel with their realness.
Although, Korby explains, Ruk existed long before he arrived - a product of
"The Old Ones."
Christine recognizes Dr. Brown, Korby's aide, but is
mystified by his failure to recognize her. The reason for his behavior becomes
clear when they discover that he, too, is a sophisticated android. Korby's plan
is to slowly replace key people in the Federation with androids, integrating the
machines into other worlds.
Taking Kirk prisoner, Korby creates a perfect duplicate of
the Captain, which fools even Nurse Chapel. During the duplication process,
however, Kirk plants false memories and ideas in his double's brain which makes
Spock realize that something is very wrong. Korby, convinced that his android
will fool the U.S.S. Enterprise crew and allow him to take over the starship,
has the double beamed aboard. The false Kirk is to look over their proposed
route and pick a likely planet on which to begin colonization.
Spock immediately becomes suspicious of his captain until
finally, after spewing an ethnic slur at the first officer, Spock is certain
that this is not Captain Kirk. He orders a landing party to meet him in the
transporter room after the Captain has beamed down to the planet. Meanwhile, on
Exo III, Christine Chapel realizes that somehow Roger Korby has changed; he's no
longer the wonderful man she'd fallen in love with. He's become somehow distant
and unfeeling ... though he obviously still has a great fondness for his fiancee.
Separated from Christine, Kirk is being guarded by Ruk.
The Captain convinces the hulking android that Korby is a threat to his
continued existence and must be destroyed. Ruk attacks Korby and is eliminated.
It is discovered, to Christine's horror, that Korby has housed his essence
inside an android body. Kirk convinces the doctor that he's become more machine
than human. In front of his horrified fianc?e, Korby grabs Andrea and fires a
phaser blast that kills them both. Spock arrives with a landing party to find
only Kirk and Christine remaining. Chapel announces that she would like to stay
with the U.S.S. Enterprise to complete her tour.
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Volume 5 from the DVD collection of original Star
Trek programs includes "What Are Little Girls Made Of?" Written by
Robert Bloch (author of the novel Psycho, the basis of Hitchcock's film), the
episode finds Captain Kirk (William Shatner) and nurse Christine Chapel (Majel
Barrett) beaming down to planet Exo III, where Christine is to be
reunited with her fiancé, Dr. Roger Korby (Michael Strong). The meeting is
less than joyful, however, when it becomes clear that Korby has been
developing androids that he intends to spread throughout the galaxy--using the
Enterprise as his delivery vehicle. This was certainly the first significant
performance for Majel Barrett in the Trek family; longtime fans know she went
on to play Lwaxana Troi on The Next Generation (and Mrs. Gene Roddenberry
in real life). An entertaining episode all around, with the notion of an
android Kirk somehow amusing. (Maybe it was the android who sang on that
notorious Shatner album.) Fans of '60s TV will also enjoy the performance of
Ted Cassidy (the original Lurch from TV's The Addams Family) as the giant
android, Ruk.
Also on this DVD is "Dagger of the
Mind," another mad-doctor drama. This time, Kirk delivers supplies to a
penal colony on Tantalus V, where he meets the renowned Dr. Tristan
Adams. Adams has been working on the development of a neural neutralizer to
control and manipulate dangerous patients. When Kirk threatens to expose him
as a dangerous megalomaniac, Adams uses the technology on the unfortunate
captain. This tense piece set in a madhouse atmosphere makes for a riveting
episode, with a few unhinged performances adding to the fun.--Tom Keogh
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