“Tomorrow is Yesterday” is written by D.C. Fontana and
is directed by Michael O’Herlihy. It was
filmed under production code 21, was the 19th episode of Star
Trek Season 1, and was broadcast on January 26, 1967.
Adding time travel to your media property is always a
bit of a gamble. It’s a trope that doesn’t
exactly have a standard execution, often becoming whatever the plot requires it
to be to fix the plot but often breaking the universe. Star Trek introduced time travel in
the fourth aired episode, “The Naked Time” as a way to resolve the plot point
of the engines failing, resetting the plot to a point before the Enterprise
came into contact with the virus. “Tomorrow
is Yesterday” is an episode that was initially proposed by D.C. Fontana as the
second part of “The Naked Time” with the time travel as the central conceit of
the episode. A black star hurtles the Enterprise
to the late 1960s, losing much of the ship’s power in the process. An U.S. Air Policeman, Captain John
Christopher played by Roger Perry, is sent by to investigate the Enterprise
and is brought on board. The rest of
this episode balances the idea of maintaining the integrity of the timeline,
the fear being that Christopher will take back what he sees of the Enterprise
to the US government. The plane he was
abducted from is destroyed in the Enterprise’s tractor beam and the
government has images of the ship that must be destroyed. This is a genuinely great setup for drama and
the infiltration of a government base, however, much of the episode is undercut
by the ending which literally resets the timeline instead of perhaps the far
more satisfying ending of Christopher being put back with knowledge of the
future but nobody to tell it to. While
the climax is exciting and incredibly well shot, ending with the Enterprise
back in its own time but equally as damaged, it kind of leaves the viewer a bit
lacking. This also might be a bigger
issue for me since I’m such a fan of Doctor Who which by this point had
already done The Aztecs, The Space Museum, The Time Meddler,
and The Massacre, all serials that dealt with the ramifications of time
travel in some way without an almost deus ex machina ending.
Outside of the ending, “Tomorrow is Yesterday” is a
genuinely great hour of television. D.C.
Fontana provides her second script for the series and her first not to be
somebody else’s idea that she adapted for television (“Charlie X” was a pitch
from Gene Roddenberry). The moral dilemma
at the heart of the episode is fascinating, with subtle nods to how different
the vision of the future is despite not being explicit in terms of the racism
and the bigotry of the time. Christopher
is shocked to see female officers, and Leonard Nimoy’s Spock is used
consistently as being the alien outsider that Christopher doesn’t
understand. The character of Christopher
is fascinating as he is driven by wanting to go home and not reacting with
immediate violence when faced with people and aliens from the future. Skepticism, most definitely, but not violence. Perry plays the anger of being told he is not
allowed to go home brilliantly and subtly, acting in his own self-interest. The second act of the episode is Kirk and
Sulu infiltrating the base to steal the photographs and files back before the Enterprise
can go back in time. Kirk is captured and
interrogated by the colonel of the base, played by character actor Ed Peck, and
the way Shatner plays the interrogation scenes are incredibly witty. This is down to Fontana’s knack for sparkling
dialogue and Shatner’s almost unintentional campy performance. There’s also just some great scenes for Sulu,
despite getting minimal dialogue George Takei does an excellent job at facial
acting.
Overall, “Tomorrow is Yesterday” is one of those
episodes that would be a perfect episode of Star Trek if the ending didn’t
end up meaning a lot of what happened didn’t actually matter in the end. Fontana’s script is sparkling and it’s clear
that she’s a writer to bring back whenever they need to do something great and the
performances are brilliant at focusing in on a lot of the character moments. It uses its 1960s setting to both save budget
and contrast the present day society (though not to the fullest) to Roddenberry’s
vision of a utopian future. It’s just that
ending that doesn’t quite work. 7/10.
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