“Space Seed” is written by Gene L. Coon and Carey
Wilber, from a story by Carey Wilber, and is directed by Marc Daniels. It was filmed under production code 24, was
the 22nd episode of Star Trek Season 1, and was broadcast on
February 16, 1967.
Before writing these reviews the only piece of Star
Trek I had consumed was Star Trek: Into Darkness, which I saw in
theaters while slowly becoming sick.
Going into “Space Seed” I was aware of the character of Khan due to several
memes of William Shatner shouting his name and the ending to the second Star
Trek film, but I don’t think I was prepared for just how great the episode
would end up being. The plot for the
most part, outside of the climactic action sequence between William Shatner and
Ricardo Montalban, are people in rooms talking which is something that very
easily could have become stale, but this is an episode with an incredibly tight
script contemplating how the present can interact with historical figures and brilliant,
almost cinematic, direction from Marc Daniels.
Daniels is quickly becoming my favorite director for Star Trek
due to the way he specifically frames shots for emphasis while other directors
either go far too weird or far too standard pointing and shooting. He makes “Space Seed” his own, clearly giving
a reason for the episode to be near the top of several best episode lists for
the original series.
Carey Wilber’s premise for “Space Seed” is quite
simple: the Enterprise discovers a spaceship adrift with 84 humans in
suspended animation. The first to be
revived is Khan Noonan Singh, played by Ricardo Montalban, who presents himself
as intelligent and sharp, especially around the topic of reviving the rest of
the humans aboard, while being suspicious of the crew of the Enterprise. There is this genuine charm to the character
in these early sequences as he innocently wishes to understand the technology
of the far distant future he has found himself in and while the score clearly
indicates that this is a grasp for power, the performances are excellent at
lulling the crew into this false sense of security. It is not until Spock discovers Khan’s identity
as a great dictator from the past, bred for superior physical and mental characteristics
during a time known as the Eugenics Wars, that his villainy actually comes out
and a mutiny is attempted. What is
genuinely fascinating is that Wilber and Coon present the character as a complex
historical figure. There is a scene soon
after the reveal where our main characters are questioning history in general,
Khan is a person and people are complex by nature with the capability of good
and bad. He was a historical monster and
a dictator, but he still accomplished great feats in a very dark period of
history. There aren’t definitive answers
to how one should deal with history, but there is this sense that Star Trek
is looking out at the actions of the world and the United States in particular at
the time of broadcast with scenes like this.
Khan of course attempts a mutiny and the episode
becomes a very tense action thriller, as their superior strength and mental
prowess mean that there is a genuine chance of the ship being taken over. The decision from the writers is made to
allow Khan to adapt to the ‘modern’ technology, something that a lesser writer would
make an issue, therefore lessening the tension and inner workings of the story
being told. Khan is also charming,
getting a member of the crew, Lt. Marla McGivers, played by Madlyn Rhue, becoming
immediately charmed by the man and staying that way throughout the
episode. He also immediately finds a way
to awaken his comrades and is ready to restart the Eugenics Wars and begin the
selective breeding programs. It's only
through trickery and cleverness that Kirk and Spock are able to save the day,
until the actual fistfight breaks out and the Enterprise itself is on
the line. This is also an episode where
the ending is not one where the villain is killed, Khan instead being allowed
to live with his comrades and McGivers on an uninhabited planet which adds to Star
Trek’s overall message of peace and tranquility for the universe as a
whole. It just acts as a great capstone
to a genuinely brilliant episode.
Overall, if there was an episode I have covered on Star
Trek so far that I could use to show someone unfamiliar with the franchise,
it may just have to be “Space Seed”. The
latest in a very long line of great episodes that make up the first season of
the show, it has plenty of brilliant action courtesy of director Marc Daniels,
with a script philosophically interested in how historical figures can play in
modern society. While not a character piece
for any of our crew, Ricardo Montalban as Khan is such a suave and powerful performance,
the character study aspect is almost not necessary. Ending without death and showing that perhaps
there is potential for a character like Khan to reform, even if that wouldn’t
be the case. It’s Star Trek
showcasing what it can do at its best even in the late 1960s. 10/10.
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