“Assignment: Earth” is written by Art Wallace, from a
story by: Gene Roddenberry and Art Wallace, and is directed by Marc Daniels. It was filmed under production code 55, was
the 26th episode of Star Trek Season 2, the 55th episode
of Star Trek, and was broadcast on March 29, 1968.
It’s clear that Gene Roddenberry believed that Star
Trek would be ending after its second season. The budget between the first and second
season had been cut and the ratings weren’t entirely satisfactory for NBC. Cancellation was coming and while in between
seasons fans Bjo and John Trimble would spearhead a letter writing campaign
that would renew the show for a third season, it became clear that Roddenberry
was ready to move onto other things.
With Art Wallace, he had devised a half hour pilot for a show called Assignment:
Earth, mashing up spy tropes and science fiction with Gary Seven being a
human agent from the future sent back in time to stop the alien Omegans from
changing Earth’s history so they can win a war and subjugate humanity. As a premise, it’s one that probably would
work quite well, but no television studio wished to even order the half-hour pilot,
so Roddenberry and Wallace decided to use what may have ended up being the
final episode of Star Trek as “Assignment: Earth”, reworking the pilot
to a full hour with the Enterprise crew, mainly Kirk and Spock,
integrated into the plot, having gone back in time for mysterious purposes, revealed
at the end knowing that interstellar human agent Gary Seven, played by special
guest star Robert Lansing, will be stopping the destruction of a world as the
United States intends to launch a hydrogen bomb into space. The Omegan threat was written out and Teri
Garr was cast as the potential female lead of the show, normal secretary from
the swinging ‘60s Roberta Lincoln.
“Assignment: Earth” has some very big issues, mainly
due to the retrofitting of a pilot to be a backdoor pilot. The big reveal at the end of the episode is
that the Enterprise records showed a knowing that Gary Seven is interfering
to keep history on the correct path, but this means that Kirk and Spock’s
actions, continually being untrusting of Gary Seven making the episode feel as
if there is a collapse of general structure with this one tiny reveal. The episode also puts the Enterprise
crew on the backseat, basically every major character has an appearance here
bar Nurse Chapel, but really Kirk and Spock are the ones to really be involved
in the plot. Much of their actions are
seemingly to discover who Gary Seven is and stop whatever potentially time
altering plan he is executing. The individual
sequences are quite good, outside of that final reveal meaning much of the
episode feels pointless. Marc Daniels is
in the director’s chair and the rather large sets that are built have enough
spectacle to look as some of the best: Gary Seven’s office has several hidden gadgets
and computers that are wonderfully 1960s, almost James Bond-esque. The integration of stock footage of the
Saturn rocket launches are also particularly well integrated, with simple color
separation overlay effects to make it work.
William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy are also giving some genuinely fun
performances, it’s always fun when Spock has to hide his ears while Kirk is in
a trenchcoat and there are some little bits of worldbuilding that are
particularly fun. Nimoy also gets to
hold a cat for a bit and the cat is such a calm actor.
The episode does fall down, however, when establishing
Teri Garr as Roberta Lincoln. Wallace,
who is writing the final script of the episode from his and Roddenberry’s
outline, is clearly attempting to write a liberated and free woman of the
1960s, feeling partially inspired by The Avengers’ Cathy Gale and Emma
Peel, but sadly Garr doesn’t get much material to work with. Gary Seven is also clearly written in the
same vain as John Steed or the quite unlikely inspiration from Adam Adamant
Lives!. Roberta is underwritten:
while there are moments where she spouts ideas of women’s liberation and the
growth of culture in the 1960s, those are few and far between and Garr is forced
to deal with just being wide eyed at the male characters.
Overall, “Assignment: Earth” as an idea for a pilot suffers
largely from being just a bit too stretched for the one-hour format of Star
Trek. Having Star Trek
characters interact with this pilot could be more interesting if there was more
for those characters to actually do and work better. The ideas are there and much of the style of
the episode is quite good, the plot largely working except for one final line
making quite a lot of it fall down. You
can really see why this wouldn’t have been picked up as a series, stylistically
and in terms of characterization it’s going for something like The Avengers
but American and never quite reaches that potential. It’s still at least an enjoyable watch
despite numerous issues holding it back, especially the sexism from Gene
Roddenberry’s outline and Wallace’s script.
6/10.
And with that Star Trek's second season has come to a close and with it comes my Worst/Best episodes of the Season and the show so far:
Top 5 Worst Episodes of Season 2:
5. Who Mourns for Adonais?
4. The Changeling
3. The Deadly Years
2. The Gamesters of Triskelion
1. The Omega Glory
Top 5 Worst Episodes...So Far
5. The Deadly Years
4. The Alternative Factor
3. Charlie X
2. The Gamesters of Triskelion
1. The Omega Glory
Top 5 Best Episodes of Season 2:
5. Journey to Babel
4. The Doomsday Machine
3. The Trouble with Tribbles
2. Amok Time
1. Mirror, Mirror
Top 5 Best Episodes...So Far:
5. Space Seed
4. Amok Time
3. Mirror, Mirror
2. The City on the Edge of Forever
1. Balance of Terror
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