“The Empath” is written by: Joyce Muskat and is
directed by: John Erman. It was filmed
under production code 63, was the 12th episode of Star Trek
Season 3, the 67th episode of Star Trek, and was broadcast on
December 6, 1968.
Sometimes there are just stories that baffle their
audience. “The Empath” is one of those
stories. Another of the episodes of Star
Trek from a fan submission, Joyce Muskat would only sell this single
episode to television, and sadly you can see why. The premise of this episode is essentially a Star
Trek by numbers: Kirk, Spock, and McCoy beam down to a planet that is on
the verge of going nova, there is a pair of powerful telepathic aliens that
capture our heroes, there is a very pretty lady present who is sadly mute, and
the next hour is our characters attempting to escape. What strikes me the most about “The Empath”
is how much of the premise is recycled from “The Menagerie”, specifically the flashback
sequences in particular. This is not
helped by the similarities of the Vians, the episode’s aliens, having a visual
design and performances from Alan Bergmann and Willard Sage far too similar to
the performance of the Talosans. Their
plan is revealed to be different: while they do keep samples in glass tubes though
in taxidermy here, the woman they are keeping is undergoing a test to see if
the Vians have the moral right to save her people.
The woman is named by McCoy as Gem, something adopted by
the other characters, and is responsible for the title of the episode. Gem, played by Kathryn Hays, is a mute
empath, able to take the injuries and pain of others upon herself. Gem is a bit of a problem character for the
episode, Hays’ performance is expressive in its muteness, however, Muskat’s script
has this issue of not really allowing Gem as a character to have her own
agency. This is a character who can only
be characterized through her actions, and much of those actions are performed
as weak. Hays does a good job of expressing
the emotion of the situation, but the script undercuts this by then having
excess dialogue from the other characters explaining them, thus making any agency
the character have lose some of its weight.
The episode is also directed by John Erman, his only
directorial effort for Star Trek, and the way that it looks is
interesting. Since it’s largely set at
the core of a planet, Erman directs this in stark, empty, black sets, with some
scenery giving much of the episode a stage-like aspect. Surprisingly, this would be an incredibly
effective piece of direction and set design, if the script was intentional in
building on heightened emotions and literal giving of one’s pain and suffering
to others in a great sacrifice. The strength
of the script is not there, the central figure is not characterized nearly strongly
enough to allow these interesting ideas and genuine attempts to add something
to the episode from the production team to become interesting. This is also simply a script that feels
padded in what it is attempting to accomplish.
There are scenes set on the Enterprise that interrupt the action
at one point that would usually be the basis of a B-plot, but instead they
honestly serve little purpose outside of informing the audience of the danger
that was already established at the top of the episode. Add to that Erman’s particular style of making
some of the scenes take longer in attempts to wring the emotion out of the cast,
and the episode greatly suffers from some genuinely awful pacing. There is a moment where Kirk is going to give
himself up to the Vians and the camera lingers between them, silently to allow
William Shatner to go ham, but the going ham lasts thirty seconds while not
really giving Shatner the direction of where his emotion is supposed to go. The emotion from Shatner peaks early and for
once I cannot believe that it was Shatner overacting or not caring, it’s clear
that there isn’t the proper direction to communicate in silence anything beneath
the surface of emotions.
Overall, “The Empath” is a mess. This is an episode where the more I think
about it, the more it feels disjointed and unable to explore the ideas it sets
out to in an interesting way or in a way to really bring forward a central
thesis. The bright spots, largely when
our three main characters are able to interact and the interesting choices designed
to heighten emotions, have the trouble of being done better elsewhere or are
just attempts to bring out ideas the script is clearly lacking in design. It’s clearly a low point and makes it the
third week in a row of just a poor episode with once again so much wasted
potential which seems to be the tragedy of Season 3 of Star Trek. 3/10.
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