STARDATE: 5501.2
The
U.S.S. Enterprise sets course for the planet Lactra VII in order to discover
the fate of a missing six member science team.
The crew finds a Class-M planet capable of supporting human life, but
more atypically, a variety of alien creatures living on the surface.
Captain
Kirk (William Shatner), Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy) and Dr. McCoy (De Forest
Kelley) are soon captured by the Lactrans -- giant, intelligent, slug-like aliens -- and held captive in an
alien zoo.
There,
they find that the missing science team is also being held. Worse, the team’s navigator is ill and
possibly dying…
Now
it is more important than ever to talk with the telepathic Lactrans, who
consider humans a lower life-form, especially if Kirk and his team are ever to
return to the starship.
The
“people zoo” is a recurring trope in
the science fiction genre, and has appeared frequently throughout television
history.
The
idea has been featured on The Twilight Zone (“People Are Alike
All Over”) and even in Star Trek history, in the first
pilot, “The Cage.”
The
Animated Series
presents its own people zoo variation with “Eye of the Beholder,” a tale which
finds the Enterprise crew trapped in a cage while alien masters regard them
with curiosity, and not a little bit of disgust too.
Written
by David P. Harmon (“The Deadly Years”) “Eye of the Beholder” is a pretty run-of-the-mill episode of the Filmation Star Trek series, neither an overt insult
to the intelligence (like “Mudd’s Passion” or “More Tribbles, More Troubles”),
nor a high-water mark such as “The Survivors,” “The Slaver Weapon” or “The
Magicks of Megas-Tu.”
“Eye
of the Beholder” instead is a fairly routine show with an obvious message: both
beauty and intelligence are in the “eye
of the beholder.” All life-forms, it
seem, judge that which is "different" as something as less intelligent, and even ugly. This is a fine message for a kid’s show on
Saturday morning, but most adults will find the story conventional and a bit trite.
One nice quality of this episode is that the Lactrans resemble giant slugs, the lowest of the low here on Earth. It's a clever idea that something which we regard as so disgusting is featured here as the zenith of refined intellect and sensitivity. Therefore, the episode not only discusses prejudices based on appearances, but plays on viewer prejudices too.
Here,
Spock is able to telepathically receive impressions of the Lactrans’ great
intelligence, but communication is finally possible only after a Lactran child is imperiled, beamed up to the Enterprise
transporter room. The message here is
that sometimes advanced life-forms may not want to communicate with that which
they feel is inferior, unless they must do so to preserve their own. Sometimes, we really need to have something at stake to consider communication, and thus compromise.
“Eye
of the Beholder’s” ending scene also recalls the Original Series’ episode “Arena.” There, the Metrons informed Captain Kirk that
humanity had much promise, and that in many centuries, humanity would be a welcome
friend. Here, The Lactrans tell Spock
that humans should return to their planet in twenty or thirty centuries…
Next
week, a real classic of The Animated Series: “The Jihad.”
John nice review. TAS “Eye of the Beholder” episode is another episode that fit into TOS live-action potential.
ReplyDeleteSGB
Those creatures were kind like slugs but bigger and very intellgent and their child could operate a star ship but needed help in navagation and those critters traveled to other worlds and brought back speimens
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