“A Piece of the Action” is written by David P. Harmon
and Gene L. Coon, from a story by David P. Harmon and is directed by James
Komack. It was filmed under production
code 49, was the 17th episode of Star Trek Season 2, the 46th
episode of Star Trek, and was broadcast on January 12, 1968.
I wish there was something I could do to justify “A Piece
of the Action” as an episode of Star Trek that just kind of works for
me. It’s an episode which has some intellectual
basis in its premise, returning to a planet that an earlier ship interfered
with so the crew of the Enterprise can show the essential need and
limits of the Prime Directive of non-interference which has come up before. This is a perfectly compelling premise for an
episode of Star Trek and it integrates a reason to use older, historical
sets for a planet that has been influenced by a previous culture despite the
futuristic setting of Star Trek.
That culture is not actually a “real” culture, more an amalgamation of
several gangster films and the works of Alfred Runyon, everyone speaking in that
faux 1920s gangster dialogue and New York/Chicago accent. David P. Harmon had the original storyline
and contributed to the script of the episode with Gene L. Coon, and it’s
perhaps Coon’s influence that assists in making this such a marked improvement from
Harmon’s other episode, “The Deadly Years”, since “A Piece of the Action” is an
episode that understands exactly what it is and how it’s going to work. Over the course of the episode, Kirk, Spock,
and McCoy have to integrate into the society of Sigma Iotia II, the episode
immediately improving when Shatner, Nimoy, and Kelley can get into period
costumes and just embrace the insanity of the premise.
The actual plot involves three rival factions at each
other’s throats, Oxmyx and Krako being our two major characters played by
Anthony Caruso and Vic Tayback respectively.
The supporting cast are all veterans of gangster films, so there is this
natural delivery to the dialogue which is purposely dated to the 1920s and
exaggerated, something that could only be done by actors who understand what
the material is going for. Harmon and Coon
make “A Piece of the Action” include attempts at a moral, but there is a point
in the episode where the pacifism of Kirk and the Enterprise crew leads
to a point where the Prime Directive must be broken in the name of ending the
conflict in this society. Kirk has to
meet the Iotians on their own level, with Spock and Bones being put into the
background as the episode goes on which becomes an interesting moment as Nimoy’s
performance in particular becomes exasperated with his surroundings, Spock
providing much of the exposition for the outdated dialogue with this general
idea of the episode. The way Nimoy plays
it is subtly different from his usual portrayal of Spock, underplaying as James
Doohan and Nichelle Nichols also make small appearances in the same vein when
Iotians are taken to the Enterprise.
It’s these moments where the episode generally begins to slow down and doesn’t
quite work as well, the jokes in the comedic bent of the episode become obvious
and like “The Deadly Years” before it there are these moments of just winking too
much to the camera. While this is something
Star Trek does often, especially for the end of episode closer, Harmon
just does a few of them to spell out too much to the audience of what is
happening. William Shatner, however, is
the one to steal the show as Captain Kirk, given extended monologues that Shatner
just revels in. The resolution has Kirk
demand a literal piece of the action with one gangster in charge with two
lieutenants, and the Federation sending a ship for the 40% profits of the
planet. Yes, it’s weird that gangster-like
extortion is the happy conclusion and that certainly mars the episode, it doesn’t
undo much of the fun and utter absurdity of the resolution.
Overall, “A Piece of the Action” only works as well as
it does because the script knows that this is an absurd premise and the actors
are the ones selling the episode as an absurd yet serious situation for the Enterprise
crew. It still suffers from some of
David P. Harmon’s issues of his previous episode, though the rewrites by Gene
L. Coon have smoothed many of them over while the direction just makes the
episode fly by as a very fun time, if a less interesting overall episode than
what Star Trek is used to. It’s a
fun time, but an almost mindless time holding itself back. 7/10.
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