“Mudd’s Women” is written by Stephen Kandel, from a
story by Gene Roddenberry, and directed by Harvey Hart. It was filmed under production code 4, was
the 6th episode of Star Trek Season 1, and was broadcast on
October 13, 1966.
Sometimes you remember you are watching a show from
the 1960s. “Mudd’s Women” is a quintessential
example of this phenomenon. I don’t want
this review to boil down to this episode is a very sexist episode that doesn’t
make internal sense, but this episode is very sexist and doesn’t make internal
sense. Gene Roddenberry came up with the
idea and handed scripting duties to Stephen Kandel who wrote for several
television series spanning the 1960s to as late as the 1980s, but this episode
generally doesn’t come together in terms of plot. The premise is that the Enterprise
follows a small cargo ship which gets destroyed under the supervision of one
Harry Mudd, played by Roger C. Carmel.
The twist is that the cargo are beautiful women who enrapture the crew
and are being sold as frontier wives.
Now, this does have its historical roots in the idea of Star Trek
being Wagon Train to the Stars reflecting ideas of the American frontier
but in space. This is perhaps the closest
that Star Trek has gone to explicitly condoning the idea of manifest
destiny and that might be one of the least Star Trek things that the
show has actually established. Yes,
exploration of strange new worlds fits with manifest destiny, but as
Roddenberry has set up the show the point is humanity as not interfering and
not subjugating alien species so “Mudd’s Women” just feels like an outsider.
There is an angle to take on “Mudd’s Women” that it’s
attempting to have a feminist message, the women’s beauty is down to a drug
which sort of represents an unattainable beauty standard, but that is undercut
ending with the reveal that the drug is a placebo and the women can just create
their beauty. This doesn’t work since they
show the women physically transforming and becoming beautiful once actually
taking the drug. This gets at an
underlying issue with Harvey Hart’s direction, it doesn’t really flow
nicely. The direction of this episode is
one where there just is never a static shot that starts and ends being static which
is certainly a directorial choice, but unlike other films and television
episodes that will use a moving camera to convey something these shots just move
to move. It’s also kind of jarring when
it doesn’t necessarily follow who is speaking which again can be done really
well if it’s intending to draw the focus to something else, but here it feels
as if Hart is just doing this for either no purpose or to pander to the male
gaze. That isn’t to say that “Mudd’s
Women” is all bad: Roger C. Carmel’s performance is devouring the scenery with
several insane accents as he lies himself into a hole with the final lines of
the episode being this genuinely funny exchange between Mudd and Kirk, and the
performances are genuinely great with DeForest Kelley being the standout of the
main crew here (and the occasional really nice one line from George Takei).
Overall, “Mudd’s Women” is just an underwhelming experience
where the utter camp of the first half really doesn’t overcome the genuine sexism
and weird messaging that it includes.
There might be an interesting story to tell here, but the bad direction
and script don’t work well. While it
doesn’t make me as uncomfortable as say “Charlie X” did on rewatch, it definitely
reduces its female characters to objects while actively trying to avoid that
and failing to do so. 4/10.
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