“The Galileo Seven” is written by Oliver Crawford and
S. Bar-David, a pseudonym for Shimon Wincelberg, from a story by Oliver
Crawford, and is directed by Robert Gist.
It was filmed under production code 14, was the 16th episode
of Star Trek Season 1, and was broadcast on January 5, 1967.
There have been episodes of Star Trek which
excel at exploring human drama and that’s exactly what makes “The Galileo Seven”
work. Penned by Shimon Wincelberg
writing as S. Bar-David, who contributed “Dagger of the Mind”, and Oliver
Crawford, a prolific writer for television, it feels like an outsider from the
previous 15 episodes of the series since it isn’t one that’s exploring a
science fiction scenario. It’s
shockingly modern in the way it places character over plot, the plot seeing
Spock, McCoy, Scotty, and four other crewmembers stranded in the shuttlecraft Galileo
at the center of Murasaki 312, a quasar formation that has blocked
communication with the Enterprise.
Luckily this planet has an atmosphere to support life, so it’s just a
matter of time for Kirk and company to come and rescue them, or it would be if
the Enterprise hadn’t been on the way Markus III with medical supplies
for plague victims and this planet is inhabited by giant ape-like creatures who
are out for blood. The plague victims create
a countdown clock to the point where the Enterprisie has to leave,
managed by Commissioner Ferris, played by John Crawford, consistently reminding
Kirk that they have to leave at this exact time and he will be taking command
away from Kirk. Crawford’s performance
is earnest and genuinely interesting to watch, but it’s also a character who
really doesn’t need to be there. He
creates an outright antagonist where the episode would have been better served having
the decision be Kirk’s. William Shatner
as Kirk doesn’t have many scenes, but when he’s on screen here there is this intense
contemplation that would only have been enhanced if he was the one to make the call
and didn’t have someone taking command away.
It would have also added impact when time ran out and Kirk clawed onto
leaving as slowly as possible, in the vain hope that his missing crew had
survived.
The actual plot on the planet is simple: it’s one of
desperation as Spock logically deduces any possible way to leave the planet and
get everybody back to the Enterprise.
Star Trek has meticulously set up Spock’s adherence to logic over
his more human side incredibly well in previous episodes and the script in this
one is excellent at giving subtle bits of humanity to Spock. This is the first time Spock has full command
of a team of people and Nimoy’s performance is perfect from the beginning,
showing the character’s very human flaws throughout. There is this subtle wish for approval and
belonging along with everyone else, McCoy being there to convince him to make
more human decisions. When the ape
creatures start killing the crew and not acting logically, Spock essentially
freezes. Nimoy plays it as a man clearly
affected by the death but suppressing that beneath the fact that he was wrong
and that led to someone’s death. Spock
as a character throughout this episode should be making all the right
decisions, but they each go wrong. His final
act which saves them is one of desperation when there is genuinely nothing left
to do, playing it ambiguous as if it’s his human heritage showing through (as
the final shot implies) or if he genuinely had no other options and was going
to die with everyone else anyway. Robert
Gist’s direction also should be praised for avoiding showing the creatures in
full for the majority of the episode. Yes,
they are clearly men in furry costumes, but they are rarely fully seen in the
shot with their weapons seen and they are shot from behind allowing the
audience to build the terror themselves.
Overall, “The Galileo Seven” is another more atypical
episode of Star Trek which not only breaks up the monotony of the
episodes in the season but also really allows several characters outside of
Kirk a time in the spotlight. It works
because it’s a character drama at its core and the science fiction elements are
just the trappings, something that Shimon Wincelberg did in his previous script,
making this genuinely a great episode and probably overlooked since it doesn’t have
any famous Star Trek imagery.
9/10.
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