Sunday, November 19, 2023

Spock's Brain by: Lee Cronin and directed by: Marc Daniels

 


“Spock’s Brain” is written by: Lee Cronin, a pseudonym for Gene L. Coon, and is directed by Marc Daniels.  It was filmed under production code 61, was the 1st episode of Star Trek Season 3, the 56th episode of Star Trek, and was broadcast on September 20, 1968.

 

Star Trek was essentially up for cancellation at the end of Season 2, but fans Bjo and John Trimble organized and executed a letter writing campaign to NBC to renew the show.  Gene Roddenberry took this opportunity for some leverage with NBC that if they were to continue they’d maintain an ideal timeslot of 7:30. However, this would not be the case as the third season of Star Trek was shifted to the Friday night death slot of 10:00.  Gene Roddenberry took a backseat, leaving producer duties to Fred Freiberger, a producer who in science fiction circles would become known as the show killer as he oversaw the cancellation of several science fiction series, and script editing duties to Arthur H. Singer.  Both Gene L. Coon and D.C. Fontana throughout production on the season had falling outs with the team and their respective story and writing credits would be replaced with pseudonyms, plus the budget, already cut during production of the second season, was cut one final time and the episode count decreased.  As had become tradition with Star Trek the episodes were aired out of order with the season premiere being “Spock’s Brain”, an episode that is held in Star Trek fan circles as the worst of the entire show.

 

So, of course, “Spock’s Brain” is an episode that is bad, but not quite as bad as its reputation would suggest.  The plot is utterly ridiculous and there is a lot of sexism here, but in the same vain of “Mudd’s Women” there is this utterly odd retro camp appeal that at least watching the episode you have some enjoyment at the insanity.  Leonard Nimoy, however, is not served at all by this episode, the plot being that a child like female humanoid alien boards the Enterprise, causes everybody to pass out after Kirk immediately makes a pass at her (Shatner’s performance here is incredibly over the top which is not good but is at least fun), and steals Spock’s brain.  This leaves Nimoy no real opportunity to act, spending much of the episode just standing or walking through the scenes, whenever his voice is heard coming from the stolen brain Nimoy is almost phoning in the voicework because there really is no material to work with.  Coon’s script almost wants to explore a society divided along lines of sex with the women living underground as these naïve and rather stupid children while the men live above ground and are savage and stupid.

 

There could be an interesting dichotomy there as Coon seems to lead the episode to a resolution where the men and women have to live together, except it’s mired in the sexism of explicitly claiming the gender roles of men and women are objectively split along those lines.  What further drags this down is not only having this society being rather underdeveloped but the performance from Marj Dusay as Kara is this almost insipidly high voice that’s meant to sound sweet and innocent but just is incredibly grating.  The character is essentially viewed as having the mind of a child making the sexual advances feel incredibly weird.  The society itself has a computer that Spock’s brain is needed to operate that somehow gives intelligence in bursts, something to add tension to the final act when McCoy has to perform surgery on Spock to put his brain back in his head.  And then the episode just ends, it’s kind of a mess.

 

Overall, “Spock’s Brain” may deserve the reputation of being quite a bad episode of Star Trek though there are a few moments with some genuine care, largely the brief sequence of trying to trace the aliens that took Spock’s brain, but the dialogue has this weird tendency to repeat, the premise itself is ridiculous and over the top, and it’s clear that nobody in the cast are actually getting material tot use their acting skills.  This is an episode I don’t ever need to see again.  3/10.

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