“Miri” is written by Adrian Spies and directed by Vincent
McEveety. It was filmed under production
code 12, was the 8th episode of Star Trek Season 1, and was
broadcast on October 27, 1966.
“Miri” is kind of an odd episode to discuss, mainly because
my thoughts on the proceedings are a bit of a jumble. On paper, it should work: it’s a race against
the clock on a planet that looks just like Earth though technologically is in
the 1960s where a man made plague causes adults to rapidly age after slowing
down the aging of the children. There
are no adults able to care for the children, as they all degrade into childlike
monsters and quickly die. This as a
premise is great and should be brilliant with the crew of the Enterprise
beaming down to the planet, swiftly being infected, and having only about seven
days to find a cure while the children essentially try to thwart them due to
distrust of adults. There are a lot of
ideas in that description, but the episode itself is really split into several
directions so none of them get particularly explored. The most interesting thread is dropped after
the pre-titles sequence, being the planet matching the geography of Earth. It’s established that this is a planet where
there haven’t been any human colonies or mapping so the people on the planet
are not humans, just evolved to look like humans which is fine but the lack of
exploration as to why this planet is Earth means there’s just an unanswered
question over the viewer’s heads. It’s
also unnecessary since there is a distress signal being sent out into space on
a frequency which is why the Enterprise finds this planet in the first
place. That’s enough motivation to get
the characters there and to get the story to happen.
The child characters are also set up by crossing the
Lost Boys from Peter Pan and the characters from Lord of the Flies
but aren’t exactly fleshed out characters.
There are three main child characters, Miri, Jawn, and the boy, played
by Kim Darby, Michael J. Pollard, and John Megna, but there is also a chorus of
children generally cast from the crew and cast.
This means that they don’t quite get lines or characterization outside
of group chants, but the dialogue given to any of the children attempts to
follow rules of language degeneration with grown-ups becoming ‘grups,’ fooling around
or games in general becoming ‘foolies.’ This largely fails due to the extreme repetition
so the children at points only speak in this language degeneration, especially
describing the punishment of adults is this short chant that just becomes
annoying. The trained child actors are
okay, with Darby as Miri being the most interesting as she examines what it means
to grow up and begin romantic feelings, but Megna’s boy is being given
direction to shout his lines while Pollard is trying. Really the acting that’s interesting is the
interplay between William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, and Grace
Lee Whitney as the tension is palpably growing as the time. This is enhanced by Vincent McEveety’s
excellent direction that really plays up the tense desperate atmosphere
throughout, enhanced by the first use of location filming for the series which
just helps make this episode feel different from the seven previous episodes
and a larger scope.
Overall, “Miri” is an episode that honestly has a lot
going for it in terms of its ideas, but Adrian Spies’ script is one that opens
with a lot of intrigue but there are so many plot threads introduced than
promptly dropped. It also has not aged
incredibly well since the main female guest star, a child, is set up to develop
romantic feelings for Captain Kirk (luckily he doesn’t reciprocate and it’s joked
about at the end). There’s a brilliant
science fiction story buried in here but it really doesn’t add up to something particularly
good. 5/10.
No comments:
Post a Comment