Stardate: 3541.9
The
Enterprise visits the Malurian Star System, previously inhabited by 4 billion
life-forms, to find all life destroyed.
The
starship soon encounters the destroyer of such life, a powerful space probe,
Nomad, which believes that its mission is to seek out and “sterilize” imperfect
life.
When
Nomad mistakes Captain Kirk (William Shatner) for its creator or father,
scientist and 21st century Earthman Jackson Roykirk, Kirk orders the probe brought aboard the Enterprise
for further analysis.
The
wolf in the fold, however, causes great damage. Nomad wipes Lt. Uhura’s (Nichelle Nichols)
memory, and murders Engineer Scott (James Doohan).
Fortunately, Lt. Uhura can be re-educated,
and Nomad restores Scotty to life.
Spock
attempts a mind-meld, and learns that Nomad is actually a hybrid, or changeling. At some point after launch from Earth, the device collided with an alien probe, the “other” called Tan-Ru, and assimilated its
power, as well as portions of its mission (to sterilize plant samples).
Nomad
seeks more information about the biological units infesting Enterprise before
setting a course to “sterilize” planet Earth, and now Kirk must out-think the
machine, convincing Nomad that it is imperfect and must also be sterilized…
It
is no secret that Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979) is often referred to, not
entirely positively, as “Where Nomad Has Gone Before” because of its
similarities to “The Changeling,” an early second season episode of the
original series.
The
similarities are telling.
Both Nomad and The Motion Picture’s V’Ger are
connected with “The Creator,” a personality of some importance. V’Ger believes
his Creator is on Earth. Nomad believes,
erroneously, that Kirk is his creator, Jackson Roykirk.
Both
Nomad and V’Ger are also, in some way, hybrids. Following an accident, Nomad fused
or joined with “The Other,” an alien probe, Tan Ru, which altered its
programming and made it super-powerful.
By comparison, V’ger fell into a black hole, emerged on the far side of the galaxy was made
part of a giant spaceship by the denizens of a machine planet, in order to
fulfill its programming.
Both
Nomad and V’Ger similarly consider humans (carbon based life forms) to be pesky
infestations, not true life forms.
And
both Nomad and V’ger also communicate at a rate of speed not immediately detectable
by the Enterprise. In both adventures,
Spock must modify rate of communication for the Enterprise’s friendship
messages to be fully understood. His efforts occur as the Enterprise comes under fire from terrifying weaponry, and its shields begin to buckle.
Of
course, both V’Ger and Nomad possess that incredible destructive power mentioned above, which they
wield on their long journey to Earth. Nomad destroys 4 billion lives in the
Malurian system. V’Ger destroys three
Klingon battle cruisers, and the Epsilon 9 outposts.
Lastly,
Spock conducts a mind-meld in both “The Changeling” and The Motion Picture, and
the information he gleans from it proves crucial in understanding and “defusing”
their opponent.
The
Motion Picture
is much better visualized, certainly, and features a visual/thematic subtext of
birth, or rebirth. The Enterprise,
entering the V’ger cloud and spaceship, is basically the corollary for a sperm
moving through the birth canal of a human female. That sperm is delivered (in
the person of the Creator; Decker), and a new life-form is born, a hybrid of V’Ger
and humanity. This concept is
literalized at the end of the film, when McCoy muses upon how it’s been a long
time since he “delivered a baby.” But
really, The Motion Picture is (beautifully) about the conception of that
baby.
Notably,
the Enterprise/sperm also carries the foibles of humanity/carbon-based life-forms,
which turns out to be the very thing V’Ger requires. We see Kirk’s obsession with the
Enterprise, and the drive to “overcome” it.
We see Spock, cold and sterile, after attempting “Kolinahr” (the ritual
to purge emotions) beginning his journey to embrace humanity and emotions.
Personally,
I feel that Star Trek: The Motion Picture, while erected from familiar pieces
(namely, the ingredients of “The Changeling”) is nonetheless one of the most beautiful
and rewarding science fiction films of the late 1970s. It is also a very
fulfilling Star Trek movie because the main characters, particularly
Spock, grow in life-altering, humanity-affirming ways. I feel that the visuals and themes involving the
Enterprise delivering genetic material, essentially, for the birth of a new
life form, is handled in a remarkable fashion.
Although lacking that feeling of apotheosis, “The
Changeling” is a compelling and ambitious episode in conception, especially
considering the nature of Nomad.
The small probe (parodied to perfection in The
Mystery Science Theater 3000 [1989-1999] episode “Laserblast) is not a
typical guest star, and I can’t even imagine how difficult this episode must
have been to shoot, with the floating Nomad moving and hovering under its own
power, through doorways, into turbo-lifts, and so forth.
However,
in the final analysis, “The Changeling” is not much more than another episode
in which Kirk talks to death a conflicted, evil computer (see also: “Return of
the Archons,” “The Ultimate Computer.”)
Worse, some of the details of the story, namely Uhura’s re-education, leave much to be desired.
Specifically,
Lt. Uhura has her mind wiped when Nomad attempts to understand “singing.” McCoy
and Chapel (Majel Barrett) attempt to re-educate her. By the following week''s episode, however, Uhura was normal and
no one ever brought up the fact that she had to be re-educated in a period of
weeks.
If Uhura can be back to college
level of education in just weeks, why does it take years for students to graduate from the Academy?
Here, the scenes with Uhura speaking Swahili and
learning to read vacillate between charming and risible, moment to moment.
Also, Uhura's subplot involves another "sixties sexist" moment. When Nomad reports that Uhura's brain is a mass of conflicting data, Spock notes that, well, she is a woman.
Ugh.
Scotty
also gets killed and revived in “The Changeling” making him the second Star
Trek character, beyond Mr. Spock, who has really “gone where no man has gone
before,” into the undiscovered country (death).
I always laugh when long-time fans complain about Khan’s magic blood and how it
has cured death in Star Trek: Into Darkness’s (2013) Kelvin universe.
“The Changeling” has also conquered death in
the prime universe.
All you need is a house-call from Dr.
Nomad, M.D.
Additionally,
it seems vaguely inappropriate, perhaps even obscene, for Kirk to be joking
about his son (Nomad) the “doctor” mere hours/days after 4 billion intelligent
life-forms have been eradicated in the Malurian System.
This is one of those TV stories in which you
are expected, at the end of the story, to forget what happened at the beginning
of the story.
Instead, we just get a
pat, happy ending, with Kirk and Spock bantering lightly on the bridge.
Finally
“The Changeling” fits in with what I see as one of the key weaknesses of Star
Trek Season Two: it attempts to create drama by forging huge,
galaxy-spanning threats. In the span of one season, The Enterprise vanquishes Nomad (a
killer of 4 billion life forms…), a giant killer space amoeba in “The Immunity
Syndrome,” a space faring cloud vampire about to reproduce in “Obsession,” and
the planet killer in “The Doomsday Machine.”
Of all those episodes, only “The Doomsday Machine” qualifies as a great hour, and that’s because of the human stakes, involving Decker and his feelings of guilt/anger/revenge.
By
this time in the series history, and in regards to Season Two, there seem to be
three types of stories the series is focused on: parallel Earths (“Patterns of
Force,” “A Piece of the Action,” “Bread and Circuses,” and “The Omega Glory”),
giant galactic threats (“The Changeling,” “Obsession,” “The Immunity Syndrome”
and “The Doomsday Machine”) and Kirk vs. Intelligent Machines (“The Apple,” “The
Changeling” and “The Ultimate Computer.”)
Some
of those individual episodes are quite good, even classic, and yet one can
clearly see that the second season is more formulaic, in a sense, than the
first season was.
Many of the stand-out
episodes of the second season include those that exist outside the formula,
notably, presented by those three types: “Amok Time,” “Mirror, Mirror,” “The Deadly Years,”
and forth.
“The
Changeling isn’t a bad episode, and, in fact, I consider it a great “dry run”
for the superior The Motion Picture.
That Robert Wise film features important character
growth for the series’ protagonists, and parallels their development and
maturation with V’Ger’s own. “The Changeling”
is an imperfect first try at such material.
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