“Catspaw” is written by Robert Bloch and is directed by
Joseph Pevney. It was filmed under
production code 30, was the 7th episode of Star Trek Season 2,
the 36th episode of Star Trek, and was broadcast on October 27,
1967.
There’s something odd about this episode of Star Trek
being purposefully held back to be aired as a Halloween Special. Produced as the first episode of the second
season of the original series, Robert Bloch’s “Catspaw” is an episode that is
steeped in myth and fairy tales and slight bits of Shakespeare where there is
an impossible castle inhabited by two space wizards who wish to test the Enterprise
crew through a series of tricks and trials.
It’s essentially a big game of trick or treat, though on the budget of a
single episode of Star Trek so many of the trials are mind games and
conversational so the back half of the episode feels a bit close to “The Squire
of Gothos” in concept but not execution.
Joseph Pevney’s direction really must be praised for making the episode
work, evoking quite a few spooks and frights akin to a haunted house
story. There are clear influences from
the work of director William Castle, budget saving techniques used to effect
genuinely good frights plus a classic plastic skeleton or two to make things
fun. There is one sequence where three
witches are encountered on the planet and genuinely the makeup work and
performances are the closest to outright horror the episode gets. Despite Bloch being most well known for writing
Psycho, he’s not trying to really write Star Trek doing a horror
story, just Star Trek having quite a bit of fun at the expense of it
being the Halloween season and that’s genuinely okay for an episode, especially
as the second season of Star Trek thus far has had some amazing episodes
but those often followed by lackluster episodes or just okay episodes.
Theo Marcuse and Antoinette Bower play Korob and Sylvia
respectively, the two space wizards who are in control of this castle, both
providing temptations for Kirk, Spock, and McCoy, while controlling Sulu and
Scotty and killing our pre-credits redshirt which launches the episode with a
great pratfall. Sylvia is a classic
femme fatale, using her sex appeal to tempt Kirk into feeding her his emotion
and there is this absolutely brilliant scene where Shatner as Kirk doesn’t give
it to her. The idea of the episode is that
these two are creations of humanity’s subconscious, given power by their
transmuter and the minds of the crew.
The way Shatner plays it is to subtly communicate that he is not
actually taken in by Sylvia and the implication being not to connect sex with
romance as a good thing, an oddly progressive message to be found in a Star
Trek episode that also has its primary female character turn into a cat at
multiple points during the episode. The
dynamic between Korob and Sylvia is perhaps the episode’s weakest point, Korob
getting much of the second act of the episode to just argue with Kirk, Spock,
and McCoy before being won over to their side of things for no particular
reason. The danger the pair pose to the Enterprise
is a brilliant way to keep the tension of the episode up, Joseph Pevney’s
direction in the scenes that cut back to the ship keep the shots close and
tight so the danger can be implied by some great performances by Nichelle
Nichols, Walter Koenig (in his first recorded scenes), and returning day player
Michael Barrier. There is a point where
Sylvia uses a pendant of the Enterprise to rapidly increase the temperature
by hovering it over a candle, further hints of the episode being about humanity’s
subconscious, and the scenes set on the Enterprise while not quite
harrowing are immediately tense and there is the fear that these people will
just destroy the ship. The further
scenes where the Enterprise is placed behind a forcefield don’t quite
work because the overheating sequence is so effective, but it does keep the
rest of the characters in the episode while Scotty and Sulu are relegated to
being hypnotized which is a shame, though George Takei does do some excellent silent
acting.
Overall, “Catspaw” is kind of the perfect example of a
ridiculous Star Trek episode working with a weird premise, mostly
because the cast and director are all taking this seriously as a threat. It’s not a brilliant horror story or a
thriller by any means but it fits perfectly into the bill of a Halloween
special. It’s not going to be an all-time
classic episode, but it does pass the benchmark of an enjoyable episode in the
first third or so of a season that had been oscillating from brilliant to
outright bad. 7/10.
No comments:
Post a Comment