“Amok Time” is written by Theodore Sturgeon and is
directed by Joseph Pevney. It was filmed
under production code 34, was the 1st episode of Star Trek
Season 2, the 30th episode of Star Trek, and was broadcast on
September 15, 1967.
There is something fascinating about watching Star
Trek for the first time with the sheer amount of cultural osmosis that it’s
interesting to see a full season has passed before any true exploration of some
of the most iconic aspects of the franchise.
“Amok Time”, like the opening episode of the first season, was not the
first episode produced of the season but it was the first episode aired and
Season 2 of Star Trek is all the better for putting this best foot
forward. This is the episode where
significant time is devoted to exploring Vulcan culture, now that a full season
has passed and the writers have clearly established Vulcans as logical and
emotionless, Spock being our only example in the show thus far but he has been
given several subtle emotional moments (and a few not so subtle) to emphasize
his human heritage. “Amok Time” is an
episode of two halves, the first half taking place on the Enterprise as
Spock behaves rather oddly, resigning himself to his quarters and lashing out at
all those who try to understand him.
This self-isolation is an interesting theme due to subtext weaved throughout
the episode by Theodore Sturgeon placing Spock as an outsider. Leonard Nimoy’s performance throughout the
entire episode is fascinating and goes through several shifts, but it is
actually Majel Barrett as Christine Chapel whose subtle delivery of care and unrequited
attraction to Spock that sells these things.
While Chapel is a character whose last piece of development was “What
Are Little Girls Made Of?” and she is essentially just acting as the nurse with
a crush here, Barrett’s performance is something that shines through for the
character.
The episode reveals that Vulcan reproduction and
sexual dynamics are on a cycle where Vulcans enter a stage of pon farr where they
must mate or die, Spock manipulating the Enterprise towards Vulcan so he
can be with his betrothed T’Pring, played by Arlene Martel. This mating as stated here is a process
specifically male and specifically heterosexual, though this exclusionary
framework is undercut by a subtext in the back half of Spock not being happy
with his choice of mate. Nimoy spends
much of the back half of the episode without dialogue, but there is this sense
that this arranged marriage is only occurring because it is what is expected
due to Vulcan culture and their alien biological imperatives. The Vulcan’s are also matriarchal, T’Pau
played by Celia Lovsky being our insight into the hierarchy on Vulcan in perhaps
the strongest written female character Star Trek has had to offer in
this series. Especially important as T’Pau
does not conform to traditional female gender roles due to the alien nature of the
Vulcans and Lovsky portrays the power as coming from T’Pau’s independence. T’Pring demands a trial by combat, called a
kal-if-fee, between Spock and a champion she chooses to break the engagement,
not allowing herself into an unhappy union.
Martel’s performance is incredibly reserved, not showing visible emotion
but internal conflict as she is as much a victim here being forced into a relationship. Spock specifically brings Kirk and McCoy down
to the planet Vulcan, being his closest friends, for the support through the
ceremony with full intent to leave T’Pring once the ceremony is over. The fight to the death heightens Spock’s
emotions and ends with the apparent death of Kirk, Kirk stepping in voluntarily
though without knowledge of the nature of the challenge. This primal fight is enough to break the pon
farr for Spock, using rage and violence through to circumvent the need for
mating, the emotions of killing another and losing that connection.
Kirk of course isn’t dead, DeForest Kelley as McCoy
getting to be an almost trickster figure, injecting Kirk with a drug to make
him appear dead on the fly, something Spock is unaware of, leading to Spock’s
most emotional sequence. Spock is
resigned to locking himself up and resigning completely at the loss of Kirk, the
clear subtext being of love between them, though for obvious reasons this is
never stated outright. Nimoy’s emotional
outburst of joy upon Kirk being revealed to be alive is also perhaps his best moment
as Spock thus far, taking a single line and letting it all out through an exclamation
of love. Sturgeon’s script is full of
this subtext of love and it’s translated to screen by Joseph Pevney who directs
the silent action sequences incredibly well. Vulcan is portrayed as very red,
signifying its heat which adds to the sexual subtext of the episode of the
flames of passion driving Vulcans every seven years. Pevney also executes several genuinely
impressive camera movements and zooms for a late 1960s television show, imbuing
the episode with flair and care throughout.
The Vulcan salute and accompanied by the phrase “live long and prosper”
is introduced here as another piece of Vulcan culture and finally as a lesser
note Walter Koenig appears as Chekov for the first time, though this is a
footnote in the first half of the episode.
Overall, “Amok Time” is a perfect episode to open the second
season of Star Trek. Focusing in
on Spock allows Leonard Nimoy one of his best performances and unlike the
several rewrites like on “Shore Leave”, Theodore Sturgeon’s script is allowed
to be presented with Sturgeon’s ideas and some very modern subtext allowed to
pass through without having to be censored.
This is clearly an episode that is integral in the development of fanfiction
as a concept and it is utterly brilliant at exploring an alien culture while
also for once taking the focus of the episode entirely off Captain Kirk who is
in the audience surrogate position for once.
10/10.
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