Tuesday, December 28, 2021

TOS Episode 36: Catspaw

“Aliens on a mission of conquest hold the crew captive”


Since all of Star Trek is moving to Paramount+, I’m not sure if this is a different episode description than what Netflix would have had.  Hopefully they aren’t all quite so vague.


Also, I have no clue what this episode is going to be.  It isn’t familiar at all, but that’s OK.


***


Uhura is back!  And she’s trying to contact Scotty and Sulu, who are leading a landing party on the surface of the uninhabited planet they’re orbiting.  They’re half an hour late in checking in, so Kirk is concerned.


Someone in the landing party named Jackson is able to contact the ship, and says he’s ready to beam up, but alone.  He doesn’t respond when Kirk asks about the rest of the party.


McCoy and Kirk meet Jackson in the transporter room, but he drops down dead as soon as he materializes.  A disembodied voice, evidently emanating from the corpse’s open yet otherwise unmoving mouth, declares the ship to be cursed and if they don’t leave they’ll all die.  Cut to opening credits (which are unskippable on Paramount+, evidently)


(Yes, I’m aware I can fast forward.  It’s just the principle of the thing ðŸ˜‚)


***


Scotty and Sulu are still unreachable, so Kirk, Spock, and McCoy all beam down to find them, leaving Assistant Chief Engineer DeSalle (from Squire of Gothos!  Yay continuity!) in charge.  It’s foggy, even though that should be impossible.  They explore a bit and Spock begins picking up multiple life forms nearby, even though the ship’s sensors previously indicated the planet was uninhabited.  The ship is still only showing the three of them, despite Chekov’s terrible wig’s best intentions.


The wig is spectacularly terrible.  Seriously.  They were going for Davy Jones mop top and got freshly-shaved hobo.  In the future, there are no combs.


The trio suddenly lose contact with the Enterprise, and continue exploring.  They hear wind howling, which turns into people wailing.  Suddenly, the witches from Macbeth (or a close approximation) appear and warn Kirk, in rhyme, to go back.


Kirk (to Spock): Comment?

Spock:  Very bad poetry, Captain.


According to Spock’s readings, the witches aren’t real, but there are life forms ahead.  They continue on through dry ice fog and discover a creepy castle.  The life forms are inside.


Once inside, they encounter an angry little black kitty wearing a crystal around her neck.


Back on the Enterprise, Chekov and his ungodly wig report to DeSalle that this party has also disappeared.  According to Wikipedia, this was supposed to be Chekov’s first episode, but they delayed airing it so it could coincide with Halloween.  There, that’s a thing you know now.


On the planet, Kirk’s party follows the angry kitty deeper into the castle, where they fall into a pit and are all knocked unconscious.  As happens, of course.  When they wake up, they’re chained to the wall of a dungeon.  They speculate on why the dungeon exists until Scotty and Sulu enter, completely vacant-faced and pointing a phaser at them.  


Kirk tried to communicate, but they don’t respond.  He asks Sulu if he knows who he is, and Sulu nods weirdly, then holds up a key.  He unchains the three, and Scotty motions for them to walk ahead of him out of the dungeon.  They do, but Kirk and Spock turn on Scotty and Sulu.  Before anything can happen, though, someone yells “Stop!” and they’re suddenly standing in a throne room.


A weird, round-headed bald man with just the beard part of a goatee is on the throne.  He has a pretty epic robe, which is cool.  It has a creepy eye embroidered on the front and everything.  I don’t know that I’d wear one but hey, if you’re gonna have a dungeon and a throne room, why not wear a flashy, yellow and green, eyeball-themed robe?


And the kitty is there!  Yay kitty!


His name is Korob, and he says he didn’t bring the party there, they came to him.  Can’t argue with that.  


The kitty keeps meowing at him and head booping him, and evidently he can understand her because he says he’s been told he’s an inattentive host.  Spock speculates that she’s his familiar.


Korob points out that Spock is different, but it’s unimportant.  He makes a feast appear on the table in front of them and insists they eat, but Kirk says no.  He turns the feast into gemstones.  He says they can keep them, as long as they leave.  Kirk says they can make them on the Enterprise. 


Korob says that they have passed the tests - they are loyal, brave, and cannot be bribed.  The kitty then meows at him and leaves.  Two seconds later a woman enters.  Naturally, she’s wearing the same crystal as the kitty.  Korob introduces her as his colleague, Sylvia.  She has turquoise eyeshadow and very tall hair, because 1967.  I’m wondering why she has a human name if she’s hanging out with a guy called Korob, but that probably doesn’t matter.


She acknowledges having control of Scotty and Sulu, while fidgeting with the crystal.  McCoy seems to be way too interested in that.  While she’s talking, though, Kirk jumps on Scotty and takes the phaser.  Sylvia is unimpressed.


She holds up the crystal, and it has turned into a tiny replica of the Enterprise.  She explains that she made a replica of Jackson, and using sympathetic magic, when she focused on it and wished him dead, he died.  She then has Kirk contact the Enterprise, while holding the replica in a candle flame.  DeSalle informs Kirk that the ship’s temperature is dramatically rising, and we cut to Chekov’s sweaty face as he says “We’re burning up, sir!”


And cue commercial.


***


Back on the planet, Kirk takes the replica ship from Sylvia.  The Enterprise’s temperature returns to normal, but they are again unable to contact Kirk.


Kirk discusses the nature of Korob and Sylvia’s powers, saying they had “tele-kenny-sus.”  I’m going to assume he meant telekinesis.  Korob starts to talk about their powers, but Sylvia cuts him off.    She wants to know about their technology.   Kirk says they just need to wait for a search party to come find them, but Korob uses his wand/scepter/thingy to encase the replica Enterprise in a block of resin.


When they won’t answer Sylvia’s questions, Korob has them returned to their cell.  Sylvia keeps McCoy behind, 

though.  She says Kirk’s turn will be next.


On the Enterprise, they are working on ways to break the resin force field.  DeSalle declares that he’ll bet “credits to navy beans” that if they can’t break the field, they can put a dent in it.  Because that’s a common saying.


In the dungeon, Kirk wonders out loud what they’re doing to “Doc,” something he has never before and most likely never since called Bones.  


Spock theorizes that Korob and Sylvia tried to get the answers they wanted from the crew’s conscious minds, but missed and hit the subconscious instead, which is why they’re using Earth imagery (specifically European, or at least from people of European descent).  It seems to be a miscommunication, but Kirk still doesn’t like potentially unfriendly aliens trying to get information out of them.


McCoy enters, just as blank-faced as Sulu and Scotty.  Sulu unchains Kirk and he is led out of the dungeon.


Meanwhile, Sylvia is telling Korob that he’s a traitor and a fool, and also that she likes having a body.  Korob says she’s going against their ways, but she says she can squash him, and might like that.  Kirk enters, and Korob exits.


Oh dear.  Kirk tells Sylvia that she has no compassion, and that a woman should have compassion.  Of course a woman should have compassion, but so should a man, so why gender this?  Ugh.


Also, she comes from a world “without sensation,” but sensation excites her and she wants more.  That’s Kirk’s cue, but he doesn’t take it right away.  She asks how power feels, and then he starts getting handsy.


This scene is getting weird.  Korob is watching through a lattice off to the side, while Sylvia tells Kirk she wants a “joining.”    Bow-chicka-bow-bow!  And they make out while Korob watches.  Welp.


Kirk is asking questions while they kiss and she realizes he’s using her.  She’s upset, but Kirk says he’s been using him and his crew, which, well, I mean…you get what you give, lady!  Kirk is led back to the dungeon.


***


On the Enterprise, DeSalle and Chekov are scanning the force field.  Uhura doesn’t see a change, but evidently there is a tiny one.  DeSalle orders Chekov to continue weakening the field.


Back in the dungeon, Korob frees Kirk and Spock and says he’s released the Enterprise, although he says they would have gotten free soon.  He tells them to go, but the rest of the men can’t leave.  He says they should have entered this galaxy in peace.  Kirk asks if they have a ship, and Korob answers that they used the transmuter, which is apparently the source of their seemingly magical powers.


Korob warns them that Sylvia means to destroy them all.  He leads them out of the dungeon, but Sylvia has turned herself into a giant cat, which is shown by having a shadow of the cute little kitty from earlier projected onto the wall in order to appear huge.


Korob leads them down another hallway, pursued by the grumbly cat shadow.  They’re back at the hole in the floor they originally fell through.  Korob ends up being crushed by a door as the giant kitty tries to get through.


Kirk grabs the wand/scepter thing and determines it must be the transmuter.  After he climbs up through the hole, McCoy appears and attacks him with a mace.  Kirk knocks him out, but then there Sulu doing a completely unknown form of karate, because Asian.  Scotty attacks Spock, who uses the Vulcan neck pinch on him, so it’s a very short fight.  Kirk knocks out Sulu, but giant Sylvia cat is just around the corner.  


Kirk grabs the transmuter, and Sylvia transforms bank into a woman.  She transport herself and Kirk back to the throne room.  She tries to convince Kirk to stay with her, because she can be any woman he wants.  He destroys the transmuter and the castle disappears.  Everyone returns to normal, but we see Korob and Sylvia’s true forms - funky little puppets that look like background critters from Fraggle Rock.  They quickly die, which sucks because Korob wasn’t that bad.  The crew beams back to the Enterprise and the episode ends.


***


This was an interesting  episode.  I hate that they killed off Korob, honestly - it would have been nice to establish a new race from another galaxy without pointless death.  If they could have had him imprison Sylvia and return to their galaxy, that would have been a much better ending. 


Also, I genuinely missed doing these, so I hope I can keep up with them.  Wesley wants to join me in reviewing everything Next Generation and onward.  That should be a blast!

TOS Episode 35: The Doomsday Machine

“The Enterprise encounters the wrecked Constellation, whose distraught captain is determined to stop the giant ship that killed his crew”


And we’re back.


I vaguely remember this as the one with the planet-eating thing (maybe), and I know my brother likes it.  Commodore Decker is the father of Captain Decker from ST:TMP, pre-Seventh Heaven...


***


Kirk enters the bridge in a looser-fitting version of his green tunic (I’ve heard rumors of crash diets) and is immediately given a report by not-Uhura.  So far, so weird.


They’ve received a garbled distress call from the Constellation, and the system they’ve entered has been reduced to rubble and asteroids.


They discover the two innermost planets are intact, but can’t raise the Constellation.  Then they find the ship adrift, and go to red alert as we go to the intro.


***


The Constellation is heavily damaged but able to sustain life outside of the bridge.  Subspace interference is making it impossible to communicate.


Kirk puts together a landing party to board the Constellation.  Aboard, they conclude that whatever happened wasn’t without warning.  There are no survivors aboard, but no bodies either.


They find Commodore Decker catatonic in the auxiliary control room.  McCoy gives him a shot of something, and he’s able to talk again.  He tries to tell them about a “thing” that attacked the ship, then goes catatonic again while Kirk yells at him.  They begin playback of the ship’s log, and Decker is able to tell them that he beamed the crew to the third planet.  The thing (the devil, evidently, straight out of hell) continued attacking the ship and knocked out the transporter, then attacked the third planet.  Decker wasn’t able to beam them back and had to watch the planet and his crew being destroyed.  A great deal of Acting occurred during this scene.


Evidently the thing uses an antiproton beam to cut up planets.  It was also able to render the Constellation’s antimatter inert.


Based on information from the Constellation, the “thing” is an automated weapon that breaks apart planets for fuel.  Sulu was able to plot its course, and it came from outside the galaxy, headed for the most populated part of this galaxy.  Welp.


Kirk theorizes that it’s a doomsday machine, like “the old H-bomb,” which isn’t said in quite as goofy a way as it looks written down.  Decker doesn’t care about Kirk’s theory, he wants to destroy it.  Kirk convinces him to go back to the Enterprise with McCoy and then sits in some dramatic lighting to order them beamed aboard.


Back aboard the Enterprise, the planet killer has returned.  It’s long and blue with a big red opening in the front for eating planets.  It appears to be pursuing the Enterprise!  Cue dramatic music and cut to commercial.


***


The planet killer is gaining on the Enterprise.  Kirk asks if it can be deactivated, and Spock declares it to be highly unlikely.  Kirk says to lower shields and beam the landing party back, but as soon as shields go down, the planet killer fires on them, and everyone stumbles dramatically to the left.


Transporters and communications are out,  leaving the landing party stranded on the Constellation.  Kirk has Scotty work on the engines and random crewman Washburn fix the viewscreen.


Apart from minimal damage, there are no casualties, and the planet killer returns to its course toward the Rigel colonies.  Spock has the ship follow at a distance.  Decker disagrees, and says if the planet killer reaches Rigel, millions of people will die.  Spock believes the best course of action is to retrieve the landing party and contact Starfleet Command, but Decker takes command of the ship and wants to attack the planet killer at close range.  Spock advises against it because it didn’t work last time, but Decker insists on taking command.


McCoy strongly objects, and Spock tells him that if he can certify Decker is unfit for command, Spock will relieve him of duty, but he needs to provide medical records to back up his certification.  McCoy isn’t able to do that and Decker gets all shitty and smug about it.  Now, this guy just lost his crew and ship, and McCoy already declared him to be in shock, and the Enterprise has psychiatrists on board when the writers need one to be, but I guess they didn’t need one for an episode with a guy with severe mental trauma taking control of the Enterprise.


McCoy leaves the bridge, and everyone stares at Decker, who manages even to sit  in the captain’s seat like an asshole.  I’m not certain I’ve seen a character in Star Trek go from zero to dickhead quite this fast.  If I’m wrong, and I probably am, post your character suggestions in the comments :)


Meanwhile, the landing party is hard at work getting the Constellation back to some kind of working order.  I guess that was to break up the Enterprise bridge scenes.


The Enterprise continues the very stupid plan of attacking the planet killer by itself, even though it very clearly isn’t working.  Spock recommends they back off, but Commodore Dickhead insists they keep up the attack.


Kirk gets the viewscreen working and sees the galaxy’s most ill-advised plan in action.  Scotty continues working on the impulse controls so they can try to put a stop to all this.


Back on the Enterprise, the shields have failed and they are being pulled into the planet killer by a tractor beam.  They have 60 seconds to get out of the tractor beam,  but Decker refuses.  Spock informs him that to continue the attack would be suicide, and if he refuses to break free of the tractor beam, he will relieve Decker of command due to mental instability.  Decker agrees to veer off, but the Enterprise doesn’t have the power to break free, and we go to commercial.


***


On the Constellation, there’s just enough power to move.  The camera tilts dramatically and Kirk and Scotty flail and roll around.  Eventually they stabilize and head toward the Enterprise.  They have one phaser bank and impulse power, and attempt to get the planet killer’s attention away from the Enterprise.  This works, fortunately, but the Enterprise still has no shields or warp.


Not-Uhura (Lt. Palmer) is able to contact the Constellation, and Kirk is less than pleased to find out Decker has taken command.  He tells Decker to get the Enterprise out of there, but Decker refuses.  Kirk then orders Spock to relieve Decker, which he does.  Decker refuses to recognize Spock’s authority, and Spock tells him to take it up with Starfleet, assuming they survive.  After a bit more pissiness, Decker gives up and Spock has him escorted to sickbay.


On the way to sickbay, though, Decker gets into a weirdly-choreographed 60s fight with the redshirt escorting him, and even though he disarms him, he never actually picks up the phaser laying very obviously on the floor, preferring to weird-fight and then drag the redshirt into another room.


Decker then makes his way to the shuttlecraft bay and steals a shuttlecraft.  He tells the Enterprise he’s going to blow up the planet killer from the inside.  Spock insists he return, but he says he’s responsible for the deaths of his crew.  Kirk tries to convince him to return as well, but he flies into the planet killer anyway.  It appears to have no effect whatsoever, making his death pointless.


***


After the commercial break, they discover that the shuttlecraft explosion may have reduced the planet killer’s power slightly.  Kirk has Spock beam the landing party aboard apart from himself and Scotty.  He asks Spock if blowing up the impulse engines of the Constellation would destroy the machine, but Spock needs to research further. 


Scotty rigs a delayed detonator that Kirk can use from the auxiliary control room, and Kirk has him beamed back to the Enterprise.  He tells Spock his plan is to blow up the Constellation, but Spock doesn’t believe he can get back to the Enterprise on time because of the funky transporters.  Kirk is willing to risk it.


The transporter shorts out again after the detonator is armed - Scotty has 30 seconds to get it fixed.  After a few unsuccessful tries, we cut to the Constellation exploding and destroying the planet killer.  Then we cut back to the transporter room, and Kirk materializes.  All is well.


Kirk and Spock have a moment where they wonder how many more doomsday weapons are out there.  Kirk says he finds one to be more than sufficient.  Odd way to close the episode, but there you are.


***


This was a pretty good episode.  It stuck to what Star Trek does best:  smart people using intelligence to solve problems.  I mean, yeah, Decker was a dick, but only because he was suffering a major trauma and wasn’t thinking straight.  He made bad choices thinking he was saving lives.  You don’t always need an overt villain to have conflict.  Look at Encanto - they had a problem to solve, and part of the problem was a trauma response leading to worse problems down the road.  This is definitely and episode I’d recommend to a Star Trek newbie.

TOS Episode 34: The Apple

“Kirk and a landing party beam down to what seems like an ideal, Eden-like planet.”


Space California incoming (probably)!


***


We open with a landing party beaming down to a soundstage, thus immediately disproving my pre-recap snark.  Kirk, Spock, and McCoy have some expositionary dialogue about how beautiful the planet is but that the last ship got some strange readings.  Kirk compares it to the Garden of Eden, which Chekov declares to be just outside Moscow.


They start off toward a nearby village, but a black flower turns toward a redshirt and shoots thorns into his chest, killing him.  Kirk angrily declares the planet not to be paradise at all, and we go to commercial.


***


Kirk contacts Scotty to have him beam the body aboard and finds out something weird is going on with the antimatter pods on the Enterprise.  


Spock determined there are artificial vibrations underground.  Kirk sends two redshirts to investigate, and Spock then says there’s a humanoid hiding in the bushes right behind them.


Chekov starts macking on Yeoman Landon, who seems to be into that.  Kirk tells them to knock it off and they all start exploring.


Spock finds and interesting rock.  He analyzes it, then breaks it in half to demonstrate how fragile it is.  When he tossed half of it away, though, it explodes.


***


Scotty reports from the ship that the drain on the antimatter pods is coming from the village on the surface.


***


McCoy has been analyzing the thorns and declares them to contain a very powerful poison.  As he and Kirk discuss this, another black flower starts turning toward them.  Spock sees this and pushes Kirk out of the way just in time, but gets hit with the thorns instead.  


McCoy starts first aid on Spock, but needs to get him back to the ship.  However, when Scotty attempts to beam them up, the transporter fails.  


Spock then sits up - whatever McCoy did worked, because he’s totally fine.


Suddenly, there’s a storm, completely out of the blue (or red, going by this planet’s sky color).  Another redshirt, Kaplan, is vaporized by lightning.


Another redshirt, Mallory, has made it to the village.  He tries to report in, but there’s too much interference.  The rest of the landing party heads toward him, but as he’s running back to meet them, he trips over and explosive rock, and that’s it for Mallory.


Kirk blames himself, even though Spock says each death was unavoidable.  Then they realize they’re still being followed.  Kirk has Spock and Chekov create a diversion, so they start cartoonishly yelling at each other.


Kirk sneaks up behind the person following them and flushed him out, then punches him.  The alien starts crying.  He looks like an ordinary white dude in a bad wig and reddish body paint - it’s a particularly goofy choice.


His name is Akuta, and he is the “eyes of Vaal.”  He has metal antennae implanted in his skull so Vaal can see and hear everything on the surface.  Kirk asks him to take them to Vaal.


***


Meanwhile, Scotty reports from the Enterprise that a tractor beam is pulling them toward the surface, and with the warp drive out, they don’t have enough power to escape.  Kirk says if he can’t find a solution, he’s fired.


***


Kirk asks Akuta who Vaal is.  Vaal appears to be some kind of god.  He leads the landing party to a papier-mâché cave shaped like a lizard head, with glowing eyes and stage fog coming out of its mouth.  Spock examines it with his tricorder and walks into a force field that knocks him down.  Spock is taking quite a beating this episode!


Akuta says Vaal is sleeping, but when he wakes he might talk to Kirk.  He leads them back to his village, where Kirk notices there are no children.  Akuta doesn’t know the word “children,” then says Kirk must mean “replacements.  He says they are forbidden by Vaal.  Yeoman Landon asks what happens when a man and woman fall in love, and Akuta doesn’t know that word either.  She and Chekov attempt to demonstrate, but Akuta says love is forbidden too.


One of the women wraps a garland of flowers around Spock’s wrist and asks what his name is.  When he tells her, evidently it’s the funniest thing they’ve ever heard.  The joke is not explained.  Akuta leads them to a hut and declares it to be theirs.


***


Scotty reports that the Enterprise is still unable to escape the tractor beam.  Kir is grumpy about this.


***


McCoy tells Kirk that the people on this planet are showing no sign of aging.  He can’t tell how old they are, other than “adult.”


They hear a gong and go outside to see the villagers heading to Vaal’s cave.  They follow, and watch as the villagers are able to enter the cave without the force field.? However, when Kirk tries to approach, the cave’s eyes glow and the ground starts shaking, so he backs off.


He and Spock determine Vaal might be weaker when it’s feeding time, so Kirk has Spock start an analysis.  McCoy arrives and says this culture is stagnant, but Spock states that if the culture is working for them, the Enterprise crew has no business interfering.


Scotty confirms that there’s a power fluctuation when Vaal is hungry, but that it’ll take 8 hours to reconfigure the circuits to put enough power into the impulse drive to escape.


***


Back in the hut, Yeoman Landon is upset about their situation.  Kirk tells her to sit down and have some fruit.  A really awkward discussion ensues about how the villagers would produce a replacement if someone died, considering “love” is forbidden.  


Meanwhile, Akuta is receiving some kind of instructions from Vaal.


Chekov and Landon wander off to make out.  Two villagers watch them, and then try it out for themselves and declare it to be “pleasant.”  The scene goes on way longer than it needs to.  Then Akuta shows up and confronts them.  He receives a message from Vaal:  kill the landing party.


Akuta demonstrates to the male villagers how to kill the landing party - find a heavy stick, sneak up behind them, and crush their skulls.  Welp.


***


Back in the hut, Spock tells Kirk that whether they like it or not, this is a viable culture.  Kirk disagrees, but Spock invokes the Prime Directive.  Kirk maintains that the villagers should have the choice.


They go to Vaal and attempt to communicate, but the lightning comes back.  Spock gets struck by lightning but isn’t vaporized because of plot armor.  Kirk carries him back to the hut.


Then the villagers attack.  They kill the last redshirt, Marple, but the rest of the landing party easily overpowers them and puts them all in a hut.


***


Scotty is ready to try to break free of the tractor beam.  Unfortunately, he isn’t successful.  He gained another hour before they crash, but it burned up the circuits.


Kirk decides to go see Vaal again.  He has Scotty lock onto Vaal and fire, in an attempt to weaken it.  The Enterprise fires continuously until Vaal loses all power and dies.


Kirk let’s the villagers out of the hut and explains to them that they’re free.  Akuta explains that Vaal took care of them, but Kirk says they can take care of themselves, and they’ll like it.


***


Back aboard the Enterprise,  Spock reiterates that he isn’t certain they did the right thing.  Kirk and McCoy both say they’ve put the villagers back onto a normal evolutionary path.  For some reason, Spock compares them to the story of Adam and Eve.  Kirk asks if that means he’s Satan.  Spock says no, but Kirk asks if anyone on the ship looks like Satan (a reference to people who thought Spock looked satanic in the first episode).  This is a Big Joke and we’re supposed to laugh at Spock for being different.  Yeah.


***


This is quite possibly the worst episode I’ve seen so far.  Even the iffy ones earlier had something going for them.  This IBS just had all the tropes that people laugh at - bad acting, goofy aliens, pseudo intellectual concept with no real depth, multiple dead redshirts, and plot armor for the main characters.  And how many episodes so far have had something on the surface preventing the Enterprise from leaving?  At least it wasn’t a giant hand this time.


I think I especially disliked both the arrogance of Space America being infalliable, and the complete mockery of any dissenting viewpoint.  If they had ended it with Spock being right, it would have been a much better episode.

TOS Episode 33: Mirror, Mirror

“Kirk, McCoy, Scotty, and Uhura find themselves in a mirror universe aboard a parallel Enterprise run by barbarians.”


Ah, yes.  The episode that launched a thousand plot lines...and not all of them good...


***


We open on a planet where Kirk is being told by a group of people dressed like Roman aristocrats, the Halkans, that they can’t mine for dilithium on their planet, because Starfleet is a military organization and this planet’s culture is one of total peace.  Their leader tells Kirk that they have the might to force them to give up the dilithium, and Kirk replies that they won’t.


Meanwhile, there’s an ion storm going on.  When the landing party beams up, they appear on a different Enterprise, wearing different uniforms, and are greeted by Spock...with a goatee of evil!


Evil Spock asks Kirk about the mission status, then orders Sulu to fire on the Halkans.  He then upbraids Kyle, the transporter chief, for having problems beaming the landing party through the ion storm, and demands his agonized.  He zaps Kyle and we cut to the intro.


***


Kirk makes an excuse for the landing party to go directly to sick bay, where they can talk in private.  Once there, Scotty speculates that the ion storm interfered with the transporter and sent them somewhere else.  Kirk determines it to be a parallel universe.


He sends Scotty to engineering to both figure out this universe’s technology and sabotage the phasers to stop the attack on the planet, then sends Uhura to the bridge to find out what his orders are.  She hesitates, but Kirk tells her she’s the only one who can do it.


On the bridge, Evil Sulu with the world’s fakest facial scar sleazes over to Uhura to make a move, but she slaps him.  Kirk arrives and Uhura quietly gives him his orders from Starfleet - to destroy the Halkans.


Scotty is unable to sabotage the phasers, so Kirk has to improvise - he contacts the Halkans and says they have twelve hours to comply.  Evil Spock cautions him that he’s putting himself in danger, but Kirk says the Halkans may have more than just dilithium to offer, and has Uhura summon Scotty and McCoy to his quarters.


Meanwhile, Evil Chekov does something sketchy on his console.


Kirk exits the bridge, taking the turbolift with Evil Chekov, who creepily asks him if he wants deck 5.  When they reach deck 5, Kirk steps off the turbolift and us immediately popped in the nose with a palm heel strike.  It seems Chekov has a squad, and if he kills Kirk, they all go up in rank.


Unfortunately, Chekov didn’t vet his henchmen very well, because one turns on him and kills his henchmen.  Then Kirk’s own henchmen show up to take Chekov to “the booth.”  The one who turned on Chekov asks Kirk if he’ll make him an officer.  Kirk says yes, he might even make captain.  Then he punched him and says “not on my ship!”  It doesn’t seem like a great choice, punching the guy who just saved him, but ok.


In Kirk’s quarters, Scotty reports that Evil Sulu is the security chief, which he compares to the Gestapo.  McCoy says sick bay is a torture chamber.  Kirk asks the computer if a parallel universe is possible, and how to switch places with their parallel universe counterparts.  Evidently this is an easy one for the computer because it records the procedure to a disk, which Kirk hands over to Scotty.


McCoy wonders what kind of people their mirror counterparts are, so Kirk asks the computer.  Evidently Evil Kirk became captain by assassinating Captain Pike, and one of his first actions was to kill 5000 colonists.  So yeah, they’re evil too.  McCoy then wonders what the evil counterparts are doing, and we cut to some EPIC SHATNERING as Evil Kirk is dragged to the brig by security.  He then tried to buy Spock off, but Spock merely declared this to be fascinating and leaves him and the other mirror counterparts in the brig.


***


Kirk goes to the mirror Enterpriss’s brig and sees Evil Chekov being tortured in the agony booth.  Evil Spock points out that Chekov deserves death for the attempted assassination, but Kirk says he hasn’t decided.  Spock warns him again that his unusual behavior is dangerous, and that he would prefer to remain first officer.  Kirk says Spock would find him a formidable enemy, and Spock replied that he would be one, too.  He leaves, and Kirk orders Chekov released from the booth and confined to quarters.


Kirk returns to his quarters and is surprised by a woman in a skimpy blue uniform asleep on his bed.  She wakes up and asks him what his brilliant scheme is this time.  Before anything can happen, Spock contacts Kirk and says he’s received orders from Starfleet Command to give him until dawn to kill the Halkans, and if he doesn’t, Spock is ordered to kill Kirk and take over the ship.


Evil Kirk’s girlfriend, Marlena, appears to exist solely for exposition.  We now learn through her that Kirk has a thing called  Tantalus Field, which can target and vaporize people at a distance.  She wants to use it against Spock, but Kirk says no.  She’s impressed that he isn’t afraid of Spock or Starfleet Command, but wants to know where she fits in.  He asks where she wants to to fit in, and she slinks flirtatiously away.


Kirk then contacts Scotty to warn him they only have 3 hours to get back to their universe, but Scotty says it’s more like half an hour, because technology.  He asks Kirk to give him ten minutes, then go to the transporter room to transfer power.


Meanwhile, Spock’s computer notifies him that there are hijinks going on in engineering, involving Kirk and Scotty.  He then realizes Sulu is monitoring his computer activity.  Sulu suggests they collaborate, but Spock points out he doesn’t want to be captain.  If he becomes captain anyway, making Sulu first officer, he cautions Sulu that his operatives would avenge his death, and some of them are Vulcans.  Sulu appears suitably chastened.


***


Kirk is preparing to go to the transporter room when Marlena returns, wearing what is allegedly a sexy getup but happens to cover way more of her body than her uniform.  She tried to seduce Kirk, but he has to leave.  She takes this as a breakup, but he kisses her.  Then she gets suspicious, but he says she’s the captain’s woman until he says she isn’t, so I guess problem solved?  Maybe not - she reactivates the Tantalus Field after he leaves and watches him.


Kirk contacts Uhura and has her distract Sulu.  Naturally, the only way is to put the moves on Sulu.  She does this, but as soon as she sees that the power transfer is complete, she tells him she’s changed her mind again.  Sulu gets angry, but she pulls a knife and heads to the transporter room.


Evil Spock confronts Kirk in the transporter room and orders him to sick bay, where Spock can question McCoy.  This does not go to plan, as the entire landing party (Uhura included) jumps him.  Ultimately, Kirk beats Spock by bashing him over the head with a skull Uhura hands him.


They have 15 minutes to transport to the real Enterprise, but McCoy examines Spock and determined he’ll die without immediate treatment.  Scotty objects, but Bones says it’ll only take a minute, and Kirk agrees to let him treat Spock.  


Marlena is watching all this remotely.  


Then Sulu enters with a team of redshirts.  He says that Spock has orders to kill Kirk, but it will appear that Kirk also killed Spock after a fierce battle, leaving Sulu in command.


Suddenly, one of the redshirts disappears.  Marlena is using the Tantalus Field.  They disappear one by one until Sulu is alone, and she shuts down the field.  Sulu then attempts to fight Kirk but is quickly defeated.


Scotty says they only have 10 minutes, but McCoy is still working on Spock.  He says to go ahead and he’ll be there in 5 minutes.  Kirk, Scotty, and Uhura exit.  Spock wakes up and demands to know why Kirk spared him.  Bones doesn’t answer, so Spock mind melds with him.


***


Marlena is waiting in the transporter room.  She wants Kirk to take her with him, but he says he can’t.  She pulls a phaser, but Uhura has Had. It. and easily disarms her.


Scotty announces the power has been cut,  and while they can use auxiliary power, they can’t have it on a timer - someone will have to operate the controls manually.  He volunteers to stay, but Kirk orders him and Uhura onto the pad.


Spock enters with McCoy, and says he’s the one who cut the power.  He orders the power back on so they can return.  Kirk tells him that he can change the Empire, and about the Tantalus Field.  Spock days he’ll consider it, and activates the transporter.


***


On the regular Enterprise bridge, McCoy says he liked Spock better with a beard.  Spock replies that the mirror counterparts were brutal, savage, treacherous, and uncivilized - the very flower of Homo sapiens.  Kinda glad Spock got Bones back for all the speciesist jabs in the first season.  And then a new lieutenant enters - Marlena Moreau, who was just assigned last week.  Welp.


***


So this was a pretty iconic episode.  It was definitely fun to see the characters acting completely against type, and I was very glad Uhura had more to do this episode.  I’m less thrilled about how often the Mirror Universe started showing up in DS9 and Discovery, though.  Like, I think I only liked one mirror episode of DS9, and they kind of overdid it in Discovery, even if it did mean more Michelle Yeoh.


Then again, it also gave us an episode of MST3K, so...