1807 Days after
Leaving Earth Orbit
With
Maya (Catherine Schell) feverish and sick, and Commander Koenig (Martin Landau) and Tony
Verdeschi (Tony Anholt) off-base investigating a derelict ship, the moon is
unexpectedly plunged through a space warp.
In just a matter of seconds, it
travels five years through space, stranding the commander and security chief,
with little or no hope of returning home.
On
Alpha, Alan Carter (Nick Tate) is in command, and sends out a re-fueling Eagle,
in case, by some slim-chance, Koenig’s eagle can find the same window in the
space warp that Alpha fell through.
But Carter has other problems to contend with
when a delusional, hallucinating Maya breaks free of restraints in Medical
Center, and begins to transform into alien monsters (as well as Mentor).
Desperate to return to Psychon, the feverish Maya wreaks havoc on Moonbase
Alpha.
In
faraway space, Koenig and Tony access the logs of the derelict crew, and learn
that the vessel became lost from its mother-ship when it went through a space
warp. The captain, Duro, and his crew, were working on finding the same window
in the warp with a space warp locater, when they died.
Now,
Koenig and Tony must use the space warp locator -- and the derelict -- to get
home to Alpha, while Alan and Dr. Russell (Barbara Bain), armed with
tranquilizer darts, must bring down Maya, both for her safety, and the safety
of all of Alpha.
Two
stories go to war in “Space Warp,” an episode of Space: 1999 Year Two
written by Fred Freiberger (as Charles Woodgrove).
“Space Warp” features much promise -- and at
least one brilliant special effects sequence -- but is badly hampered by a
slapdash production, and poor execution.
The
fascinating aspect of this tale involves Commander Koenig and Tony’s discovery
of the alien derelict, and all its mysteries.
The alien captain is fascinating
in appearance, wearing a very strange helmet that reminded me of Japanese
anime, for some reason.
We learn Duro’s story, and his failed attempt to get
back to his people, and it’s both a tragic story and a history that we worry
could be repeated with Koenig and Verdeschi. ''
The design of the alien vessel is amazing, too, and this story generates
real excitement and interest. As is
often the case, Space: 1999 is able, with a few imaginative touches, to suggest
a whole alien race that feels…well…alien.
This
fascinating story of a marooned ship, wrecked on the lip of a space warp,
essentially, is balanced out, however, with a pure time-waster "B" story, as a sick Maya “loses
molecular control” and transforms into one silly-looking and indestructible
alien after another.
Maya’s best moment
in the show comes before the transformation storm, as she warns Helena that
nightmares are taking her over, and that she must be put into restraints. Catherine Schell acts this dramatic scene with
urgency, and with a deeply-vested concern for Maya’s friends on Alpha.
Once
she’s gone, it’s all just mindless action, however.
What is clearly missing, to
contextualize the action, is the connective tissue to Koenig’s story.
Early on,
Helena wonders if Maya’s fever is related to the appearance/proximity of the
space warp. The idea is dropped however,
so that the connection is tenuous at best.
It would have been better, for instance, to learn that Psychon
psychology is damaged or impacted by close proximity to space warps. This would make
Maya a living early-warning system of sorts, for when Alpha encounters them.
Instead,
the two stories trot on, mostly with no real connection to one another.
The
episode’s visual highlight, however, comes in Maya’s story.
In attempting to return to
Psychon, Maya -- in alien form -- attempts to launch an Eagle while it is still
in an underground hangar bay. The ensuing special effects are feature film
quality (for 1977), as the Eagle attempts lift-off, then crashes, and fire breaks
out. The moment is nothing less than
spectacular. Not only do we get to visit a seldom-seen area of Alpha (and a
peek at the docked Eagle fleet), but we get a special effects, pyrotechnic showcase as well.
Alas,
other than this amazing hangar sequence, “Space Warp” feels really
slipshod.
Two points on this:
Point
One: Koenig and Tony require the MacGuffin of the week -- the space warp locator --
to get home. They search for it, finally find it, and hook it up, hoping they
can make it compatible with their ship’s computer. It’s thus an important aspect of the episode.
But it is visualized as a futuristic
microscope, essentially, and is a familiar prop on the series, not something
that looks alien, or even different from Alpha technology. In fact, the “space warp locator” shows up as a
sensing/viewing device in episodes such as “Devil’s Planet.”
It’s a huge disappointment that a familiar
prop was just picked up, spray painted silver and made to function as one of
the most important elements of this storyline.
Point
Two: In the episode-long run-around featuring Helena and Alan chasing Maya-monsters, Carter’s space suit visor flips up for a time, exposing him to the
vacuum of space on the lunar surface.
This is a scene/stunt that should have been
re-shot, as it is not part of the intended action.
Instead, it is an unintentional gaffe that is left in the final cut, and
is, well, embarrassing. Space suits shouldn't be this flimsy, lest they cause instant death for the wearer.
I
realize and understand that Year Two of Space: 1999 was a pressure cooker,
with the main cast often divided, shooting different episodes at the same time,
but in instances like these I've noted above, the series desperately needed someone to keep an eye
on quality, so that the final result would not seem so slapdash or haphazard. There was not a clear enough eye on detail.
“Space
Warp” is action packed, with some good moments on the derelict, and in Alpha’s hangar
bay. But most of the time, fight scenes and mindless action substitute for
science fiction, and that’s a shame.
It’s not all a loss, however.
I do
appreciate the fact that at the end of "Space Warp," the Alphans have a derelict
spaceship in their hands to examine, cannibalize, and replenish resources from.
This is an idea that is necessary to maintain verisimilitude on a "lost in space"-styled series, and I’m glad to
see it featured at the end of the episode.
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