“The City on the Edge of Forever” is written by Harlan
Ellison and is directed by Joseph Pevney.
Uncredited rewrites were performed by D.C. Fontana and Gene L. Coon. It was filmed under production code 28, was
the 28th episode of Star Trek Season 1, and was broadcast on
April 6, 1967.
Harlan Ellison was both a celebrated author of science
fiction and a difficult person to work with, there is no doubt about that. The history of the production of “The City on
the Edge of Forever” is perhaps just as interesting as the eventual episode,
with Ellison being brought on early in the production of Star Trek with
a very different script but one with similar plot threads and themes that was
rewritten several times by Ellison, though Ellison not wishing to compromise his
own vision would not make necessary changes for Gene Roddenberry, D.C. Fontana,
Gene L. Coon, Robert H. Justman, and director Joseph Pevney to be able to film
the episode with the budget allocated to the episode. Roddenberry, Fontana, Coon, and Stephen W.
Carabatsos all worked on the final teleplay, with Fontana’s revisions being
cited as the most prominent, Coon’s the least, Carabatsos’ the earliest, and
Roddenberry’s as a final polish. It is paramount that while Ellison requested
his name pulled from the episode because his script in his mind was changed too
much, this request was not met. For the purposes
of this review the script shall be attributed to Ellison.
“The City on the Edge of Forever” begins deceptively
like a normal episode of Star Trek, the Enterprise is under
attack from a planet that has the ability to alter time. It almost immediately changes directions, the
danger from the planet ceasing but not before McCoy accidentally being injected
with a dangerous stimulant leaving him psychotic. He transports down to the planet which is a
ruined city, with a sentient arc claiming to be the Guardian of Forever, given
a comfortingly alien voice by Bartell LaRue, giving the ability to travel along
one’s species’ history. McCoy finds
himself going through the portal into the history of Earth and somehow changing
history in such a way that the Enterprise and Starfleet no longer exist,
stranding Kirk, Spock, Scotty, Uhura, and a couple of redshirts as rogue
elements. Kirk and Spock go after him,
arriving in New York City during the Great Depression, some weeks before McCoy’s
arrival, their plan being to find him on arrival so he cannot change
history. This premise clearly sets up a
story based on the butterfly effect, but in traditional fashion for Ellison
there is a very dark twist. Somehow
Leonard McCoy saves the life of one woman, Edith Keeler, a social worker played
by Joan Collins. The effect Keeler
living leads to a mass pacifist movement which takes the US by storm and allows
Germany to be victorious in the race to the atomic bomb and win World War
II. This is already a very powerful
idea, something that Ellison twists even further by having Kirk fall in love
with Edith and have to grapple with the question of what a single life is
worth. This is a very dark idea for Star
Trek to tackle especially within the context of airing just under 22 years
after the close of World War II, doing this without ever showing the war or destruction.
The set design of the Guardian and the city are
perhaps important to note here: it is a very simple and fairly small set, but
the evocation of destruction due to the ability to time travel primes the
viewer to understand the destruction.
The same with leaving Scotty, Uhura, and the redshirts behind with the
instructions to follow Kirk and Spock after some time has passed. The passage of time also develops and analyzes
the Kirk and Spock relationship as this deep friendship, a friendship deep
enough to call love. This adds this
sense of danger that the rest of the crew could be coming through the portal
throughout the episode, something that ultimately doesn’t happen yet it adds
the sense of danger. Ellison then begins
to twist the knife: after a sequence of Kirk and Spock having fun trying to blend
in and find clothes, stealing from the streets and wandering into the basement of
the mission Edith runs. Throughout the
episode Kirk falls in love with Edith, admiring her proactive attitude in the
face of the Great Depression and the service she provides to the less
fortunate, as well as her vision towards the future. Edith believes mankind’s destiny is peace and
exploring the stars, the episode explicitly calling her mission for peace the
right thing to do, but sadly at the wrong time in hindsight. Shatner and Collins also have impeccable
chemistry, the best chemistry of any of Kirk’s other love interests thus far,
the relationship also being stronger through the script itself allowing Keeler
agency. The discovery of how the
timelines diverge is another twist of the knife, but there is also one final
twist. When McCoy appears, DeForest
Kelley’s performance slows down from the manic and drug addled McCoy to the
rational and kind doctor brilliantly.
The death of Edith Keeler is an easily preventable tragedy. McCoy had been taken in by Edith and the
chance mention of him by Edith to Kirk leads to a beautiful reunion, but Edith
crosses the street. She is struck down
by a passing truck.
Overall, despite the troubled production “The City on
the Edge of Forever” is the latest episode of Star Trek to join the ranks
of perfect storytelling. Harlan Ellison’s
penchant for dark but human themes work perfectly. Joseph Pevney’s direction brings out the best
in the entire cast and the ending is one that is genuinely tragic and shocking
to behold, the episode not feeling as if much of its runtime has passed. It ends on this beautiful note of the
Guardian of Forever being abandoned, despite the opportunities of advancement
it may offer. This is among the ranks of
the best of what the show has to offer and is trying to say. It’s definitely worth the hype and praise in
often surprising ways. 10/10.
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