“Wink of an Eye” is written by: Arthur Heinemann, from
a story by: Lee Cronin a pseudonym for Gene L. Coon, and is directed by: Jud
Taylor. It was filmed under production
code 68, was the 11th episode of Star Trek Season 3, the 66th
episode of Star Trek, and was broadcast on November 29, 1968.
By this point in the third season of Star Trek
both Gene L. Coon and D.C. Fontana had moved on, despite both having story ideas
that would be put into production under the pen of other writers. “Wink of an Eye” is the first of these
scripts, originally pitched by Coon and the story idea is credited to Coon’s
pseudonym Lee Cronin while Arthur Heinemann is responsible for actually writing
the script, and as such much of Coon’s general punchy and fantastical style
feels sucked right out of the episode.
The premise is a pretty great one: the Scalosians are a people on the
brink of total extinction and have found existence in a state of hyperacceleration
and they have decided Captain Kirk must become their king, dragging him into
their world for the episode from which he must use his cunning to escape. The clear ideas from Coon are ones of
examining Kirk’s duty as captain of the Enterprise which is an
undercurrent of the entire episode, however Arthur Heinemann who actually
writes the episode leaves it as undercurrent in subtext. “Wink of an Eye” is an episode that must be
built around the performance of William Shatner as Captain Kirk. The rest of the crew are reduced to minor roles
and it is clear that Heinemann has little interest in writing them, only having
Spock get a larger role later in the episode to save Kirk’s life and repair the
Enterprise. Shatner’s performance
further sinks the episode, he seems bored with the material. Kirk as a character has always been one
romantic and Shatner attempting to be bored with the female Scalosian Deela,
played by Kathie Browne, just doesn’t work.
The characterization of the Scalosians who are largely
the other characters we spend time with is just not there. The designs of the costumes are interesting
enough to look at, partially inspired by the idea of being out of time with odd
designs and these light, faded colors that while campy are effective. The internal politics of the characters
suffer largely from not being there, Heinemann as a writer doesn’t seem to have
the chops to really make even the regular characters shine. For instance the dialogue between Spock and McCoy
is a sequence where they feel out of character, mainly because it’s functional
dialogue and not really character dialogue.
What’s stopping “Wink of an Eye” from being a total loss, however, outside
of the interesting ideas is actually Jud Taylor’s direction. “Wink of an Eye” is an example of a bottle
episode, there is only one set at the beginning that was constructed specifically
for the episode and the action takes place on the Enterprise. For bottle episodes to work the direction
often has to be interesting, and Taylor decides to make use not only of Dutch
angles to indicate scenes in hyper acceleration but also physically tilting the
camera while shooting which adds to the surreal nature of the episode. If this was a script that went down a fully
surrealist route it would have been a much better episode.
Overall, “Wink of an Eye” is an episode of Star
Trek with a lot of potential, something that seems to be a recurring issue
for the third season. It’s an episode
whose quality hinges on the script and the performance of William Shatner and neither
are up to snuff in terms of what the episode needs to be doing leaving just a
bland experience. 4/10.
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