“The Doomsday Machine” is written by Norman Spinrad
and is directed by Marc Daniels. It was
filmed under production code 35, was the 6th episode of Star Trek
Season 2, the 35th episode of Star Trek, and was broadcast on
October 20, 1967.
Star Trek
as a series exploring the universe often has a tendency to make the stakes of
an episode an entire planet or larger, but what’s fascinating about going
through the series week by week for the first time is that “The Doomsday Machine”
is the first episode to make these larger stakes feel real. The fear of nuclear annihilation was prescient
in a world five years out from the Cuban Missile Crisis, and writer Norman
Spinrad had an unpublished novella, The Planet Eater, that was rejected
by several publishers. Spinrad pitched
the novella’s idea to Gene Roddenberry who saw the potential for it to be made
as a bottle episode, and “The Doomsday Machine” being a bottle episode assists
in making the stakes real. The horror of
the episode comes from the fact that the Enterprise crew are against an
entity bent on destruction. Sure, it’s a
robot, but it’s an intelligent robot that targets whatever energy and life it
detects which is converted to energy propelling it to the next source of
energy. It’s out there and it’s still
moving, there are planets in it's way.
While there is a model used for the creature, it’s an almost amorphous design
and clearly not meant to be comprehended by the viewer or characters. It had an open mouth that consumes and that’s
it. This leaves “The Doomsday Machine”
to be an episode that plays out like a cosmic horror story, complete with a
character losing their mind to the horrors beyond their comprehension. There are infinite lives at stake and the
small hints of destruction in the model shots showing asteroids and the reuse
of the Enterprise sets to show the heavily damaged Constellation are
incredibly effective at accomplishing this.
“The Doomsday Machine” is surprisingly one of the few
episodes of the series that doesn’t place its focus on the main trio of Kirk, Spock,
and McCoy, instead placing the main thrust and drive of the story under
Commadore Matt Decker, played by William Windom, the one surviving crewmember
and commander of the Constellation, found alive in a fugue state in the
damaged ship by Kirk and Scotty. In the grand
scheme of a cosmic horror story, Decker is the man who has touched the Old Ones
and lost his mind due to it, though in this script it isn’t just seeing the
destruction of multiple planets in this system, it’s also Decker’s logical
decision to send his crew to the planet to avoid the creature’s
destruction. The creature then promptly
destroyed the planet, and while this reveal in the episode is seen a mile off,
the anguish in Windom’s performance sells it.
Decker is wracked with survivor’s guilt and is motivated by wanting to destroy
the entity by any means necessary, though is blinded by that guilt and
rage. Spock and McCoy spend most of the
episode accompanying him on the Enterprise, both attempting to circumvent
everybody’s destruction as Decker’s plans would lead to more deaths. Spock, in a very subdued performance from Leonard
Nimoy, is also willing to sacrifice other planets if it means getting the information
to Starfleet, reflecting real world events surrounding intelligence agencies
during World War II.
Decker’s final self-sacrifice is perhaps the darkest
moment of the episode, and one of the darker moments of any Star Trek
episode thus far, it being a sacrifice of destroying himself and a shuttlecraft
in an attempt to save the day and this destruction doing nothing. Well, almost nothing, it does allow the
episode to turn it’s focus back on Kirk and build the tension to the final
destruction of the Constitution used to inactivate the creature, leaving
it hanging in space, but once the futility is over the episode then loses it’s
cosmic horror edge and becomes a more standard thriller story. Kirk’s the one to set up the explosion and
save the day, but it honestly feels like it was just written because Spinrad and
the production team knew they had to end happily and couldn’t kill off Kirk. There were ways to mitigate this small mark
against the episode, perhaps by having a redshirt be the one to save the day
and press the button while Kirk escapes, but it’s still a fairly effective
ending to a great episode. The direction
by Marc Daniels is also incredibly tightly done, composing itself of several
tight shots of the characters. This
could be because the episode only has a few sets and Daniels is trying to trick
the audience into not realizing it, but the style adds this great sense of
tension and madness to enhance the performances. Plus it’s enhanced further by the score by
Sol Kaplan, composed specifically to work in this episode and not become stock Star
Trek music like other scores during this second season.
Overall, “The Doomsday Machine” somehow manages to be
an incredibly effective cosmic horror story filmed on an almost shoestring
budget. The conclusion itself has a
couple of less than stellar moments, but shifting focus away from Kirk, Spock,
and McCoy is integral at making the episode work as well as it does. It’s a tale of coming Armageddon and how itt’s
impossible to stop it once certain boxes are opened. 9/10.
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