“The Alternative Factor” is written by Don Ingalls and
is directed by Gerd Oswald. It was
filmed under production code 20, was the 27th episode of Star
Trek Season 1, and was broadcast on March 30, 1967.
With these weekly reviews going through Star Trek
for the first time, I have been genuinely surprised with the high quality the
show has had to offer after some early episodes that while occasionally rocky,
only really had a couple of dud episodes, but after the first ten episodes or
so a standard of quality had been met and established. “The Alternative Factor” is the episode to
break the genuinely great streak of episodes, though not for lack of trying to
tell an interesting story. First and
foremost the issues with the episode are apparent from the off, the performances
are immediately stiff and stilted, Leonard Nimoy especially giving this very
oddly clipped performance as Spock and the script deciding that Kirk and Spock need
to have this unspoken tension as if they do not trust each other. This dynamic of mistrust is something that
fuels the actions of every character for this episode, and while that perhaps
could have made for a story where some influence has infiltrated the Enterprise
and sowed discord, this isn’t that type of episode. The setup of the episode should work, Ingalls
sets up some sort of break in the space time continuum of the galaxy as the Enterprise
is orbiting a planet that’s at its center.
This causes a human life form to appear, Lazarus played by Robert Brown.
When Kirk, Spock, and a team of redshirts transport
down, they find a ship designed to look almost like a classic UFO and Lazarus
just falls off a cliff. Lazarus falling
down will become a major recurrence of the episode, not really a running gag or
anything, just something as the audience is privy to a recurring effects sequence
indicating Lazarus and his double transporting into and out of the prime
universe. Doing a story about a parallel
universe sounds right up Star Trek’s alley, but this is an episode that
only reveals this particular concept in the last five minutes of the episode
when Kirk is accidentally transported there so the alternate Lazarus, also
played by Brown, can explain what has happened and the episode can almost
immediately be wrapped up. The other 45
minutes are full of characters going from the bridge, to engineering, down to
the planet, and back to the Enterprise, Lazarus ranting about his enemy
and attempting to steal dilithium crystals to power the portal back to his
universe. While there are moments where
this runaround cycle works, especially when Kirk is actually able to confront
Lazarus and the danger sequences in engineering which Gerd Oswald directs incredibly
well, much of this runaround plot just does not work. There isn’t enough information revealed in
nearly any of the scenes to make for an intriguing mystery or really a plot
that would really make “The Alternative Factor” work as a concept. The issues with characterization are really
only compounding, though Robert Brown’s over the top performance is perhaps due
to the fact that he was not the original intended actor for the role. Gerd Oswald’s direction is also just less
interesting than his other episode, “The Conscience of the King”, barely
feeling any of the suspense that made that episode work so well.
Overall, “The Alternative Factor” is an episode that
on many levels should work. Parallel
universes are a staple of science fiction storytelling, and even doing one
without showing alternative versions of the established characters can work,
but this is an episode that just uses it for a climax. Our three main characters of Kirk, Spock, and
McCoy are also just not really recognizable as even parodies of themselves,
Kirk being the closest to the character we know and McCoy barely having a
presence. There is something very
standoffish about the episode as well while the direction from Gerd Oswald
attempts to have some interesting visuals but ultimately feels uninspired. Don Ingalls’ script can be compressed into
people going from one room to another without progressing any sense of the plot
until a few bits of pretty good action leading “The Alternative Factor” to be
quite weak. 3/10.
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