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Saturday, October 14, 2023

By Any Other Name by: D.C. Fontana and Jerome Bixby, from a story by: Jerome Bixby, directed by: Marc Daniels

 


“By Any Other Name” is written by D.C. Fontana and Jerom Bixby, from a story by Jerome Bixby and is directed by Marc Daniels.  It was filmed under production code 50, was the 22nd episode of Star Trek Season 2, the 51st episode of Star Trek, and was broadcast on February 23, 1968.

 

D.C. Fontana’s skills as a script doctor for Star Trek are perhaps something that has a tendency to go largely unnoticed.  She is probably the only reason “Charlie X” isn’t one of the worst things put to television and there is the distinct feeling that her work with Jerome Bixby on “By Any Other Name” was to make Bixby’s rather high concept script work on a television budget, though never enough for Bixby to totally lose his original vision as evident by both Bixby and Fontana sharing scripting duties.  The script is rather high concept, involving the Kelvans, a race of god-like aliens from the Andromeda Galaxy who wish to spread out and conquest the galaxy.  Now the script of the episode is odd, making a distinction between conquest and colonization, showing the latter as a good thing due to the Federation’s colonization and the former as wrong and evil.  Now I’d like to be able to read this as attempting some sort of anti-colonization piece, the Kelvans have to learn to cooperate with the Federation in the end, beginning the episode as cruel and authoritarian towards the crew of the Enterprise, and everything wraps up neatly with a Federation proposal being sent to their home planet and the planet the episode begins on proposed as the new home.  This ending is especially odd because the script points out early on that this could very well be the conclusion that solves this, meaning the episode feels as if we’re waiting with Kirk, Spock, McCoy, and Scotty for the aliens to come to this resolution.  It drags out the episode, only to have it elevated by the utter insanity that the episode decides to go through.

 

“By Any Other Name” takes its title from Romeo and Juliet, and it almost seems as if Bixby and Fontana wish to show some parallels to humanity with the Kelvans, the performances from Barbara Bouchet, Warren Stevens, and Stewart Moss being particularly stilted and becoming more humanlike.  Kirk quotes the line directly early in the episode with the complete comparison to a flower and the plan to “corrupt” the Kelvans are to make them aware of aspects of life, humanity, and emotions.  Spock pretends to be ill so McCoy gets him to the Enterprise and pumps him full of drugs, with a wonderful piece of face acting from Majel Barrett as Nurse Chapel.  Scotty gets one of the Kelvans incredibly drunk which leans into some Scottish stereotypes but James Doohan’s performance is a riot.  Kirk gets the female Kelvan to fall in love with him by getting her to understand the concept of kissing, something foreign to them.  There is some tonal whiplash in this back half of the episode since these hijinks are played as hijinks, but early on the Kelvans outright murder a yeoman and redshirt to show their general power, they are not human and do not follow human morality.  Shifting then from this very serious danger into a humorous runaround on the Enterprise makes “By Any Other Name” kind of a complete mess.  Marc Daniels is in the director’s chair for this episode so it looks great and the scenes are paced incredibly well so it isn’t a total loss.  Once the episode goes into the comedy portion it really does pick up and the insanity of it all is incredibly fun to watch.

 

Overall, “By Any Other Name” is kind of the definition of a perfectly fine episode of Star Trek.  The plot is a plot that by this point Star Trek has done before and the twists on it are to make it into a comedy which is at least an interesting bent for an episode.  The performances and direction are the only thing really selling this one as the emotional whiplash took a high concept script and genuinely attempted to make it work on television.  6/10.

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