STARDATE: 3183.3
The
U.S.S. Enterprise conducts a routine geological survey of “Type 4” asteroids, but comes under surprise attack from Romulan
forces.
The
Romulan commander accuses the Federation starship of violating its territorial space,
and Captain Kirk (William Shatner) engineers a dangerous escape by ordering the
Enterprise through an “unidentified
energy field” of “highly-charged
subatomic particles.”
Although
Kirk’s ship and crew are safe from further Romulan attack, his ship begins to
suffer from a series of strange practical jokes. Spock (Leonard Nimoy) ends up with black-eye
circles on his lids after gazing through his library computer hood, and the
food dispenser throws a pie in Scotty’s (James Doohan’s) face.
Meanwhile,
Bones (DeForest Kelley), Uhura (Nichelle Nichols) and Sulu (George Takei)
become trapped in the Enterprise’s rec room, which is able to create any
environment known to man by rearranging matter and energy. Soon, they find themselves moving from one
environment to the next, including a blizzard, in an attempt to stay alive.
Kirk
and Spock soon realize that an alien entity from the space cloud -- a practical joker -- now inhabits the
Enterprise’s main computer. Worse, the
Romulans are back!
The
Star
Trek: The Next Generation plot-device of the “holodeck malfunction” gets its first try-out in this Star
Trek: The Animated Series episode from 1974.
In
“The Practical Joker,” the audience witnesses members of the Enterprise crew
visiting the so-called “rec room,”
and there’s even an early version of the control
arch seen in various frames (though it is a stand-up console, and not a
door-arch.)
I’ve
always considered the holodeck to be a writer’s crutch on The Next Generation, so I’m
not thrilled to see it here, but this episode undeniably forecasts the use of
the plot device (and the idea of crew men being caught in a blizzard, a notion
re-visited in “The Big Goodbye.”) In a
sense, this plot-line actually goes back to Original Trek, and the episode “Wolf
in the Fold.” There, a non-corporeal
life form (Jack the Ripper) “possessed” the ship’s computer. Virtually the same thing happens here, except
the entity is not evil, merely naughty.
Impressively,
“The Practical Joker” also manages a budget-buster that only the format of animation
could have achieved and afforded in this era.
One scene reveals the Enterprise crew experiencing weightlessness when
the alien being begins to play with the starship’s gravity control. Star Trek fans would have to wait
for Star
Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991) to see a starship crew
(Klingon in this case…) rendered weightless in live-action..
Less
enjoyable by far is the underwhelming depiction of the Romulans in “The
Practical Joker.” In this story, they
attempt to start a war with the Federation, even though the Enterprise never
wandered into the Empire’s territory. In
“The Survivor,” the Romulans used a similar gambit, with the same lack of
success. It seems odd that the Romulans
of the Animated Series are so hell-bent on luring the Federation into
a war, and using the Enterprise as the flash-point of such a conflict.
Finally,
the episode’s valedictory conceit, that the alien cloud/practical joker should be
transferred to an enemy, the Romulans, is a clear reflection of the resolution
in the original “The Trouble with Tribbles.”
Next
week: “Albatross.”
This is by some distance my favourite episode of the animated series. I must have enjoyed it tremdously as an eight year old as well because having seen it precisely once in 1974 I could recall all the major plot points before watching it once more, originally on video, in the mid nineties.
ReplyDeletePerhaps it stood out because it is an aytipical story for the animated run: set entirely on board the ship (albeit with different enviroments introduced), room for Arex, M'Ress, no "guest star" alien races, the holodeck itself - tired now, but quite an exciting concept at the time, and an unusual grouping of McCoy, Sulu and Uhuru, quite a refreshing combination.
Admitedly the ending is a mash up of Tribbles and Deadly Years, and some the full size Enterprise balloon pushes the story into positively surreal areas, but no one could say they saw that coming.
I did notice when watching again on DVD that the "Kirk is a jerk" writing vanishes from the rest of the scene once it has been revealed, so I'll be kind and assume part of the joke was disappearing ink.
So even sweeping aside the many veils of nostalgia that cover this episode for me, I think there is still a great deal to admire, most escpecially when we add the caveat that this was constructed for Saturday morning childrens TV, from which viewpoint the quality seems nothing short of miraculous.
Enterprise’s rec room was the high point of this episode because, as you stated, it is an early holodeck. Since TAS depicts the final two years of TOS five year mission, it is good to know this was one of the Enterprise's refits. However, I think that in Star Trek:TMP, Wrath Of Khan, Search For Spock, Voyage Home, Final Frontier and Undiscovered Country we should have saw the Rec Room again because it is an early holodeck.
ReplyDeleteSGB