“Beyond the Farthest Star” is written by: Samuel A.
Peeples and is directed by: Hal Sutherland.
It was produced under production code 22004, was the 1st episode
of Star Trek: The Animated Series, and was broadcast on September 8, 1973.
The fact that there is an animated version of Star
Trek fascinates me. It’s a project
from Filmation and only lasted 22 episodes, but it’s clear the show had
popularity enough in syndication to be commissioned, all with Gene Roddenberry’s
approval but less of his general input as running the show was split between
himself and D.C. Fontana. It’s
essentially a fourth season of Star Trek but in a very different form. Intriguing matters further is Leonard Nimoy
advocating for the inclusion of Nichelle Nichols and George Takei, meaning that
the animated series reunites the entire cast except Walter Koenig who would
provide one script. “Beyond the Farthest
Star” is the opening episode bringing back Samuel A. Peeples, writing his
second script for Star Trek and his second pilot episode after “Where No
Man Has Gone Before”, and the title to this one is particularly accurate. After a brand-new theme that evokes the
original Alexander Courage theme, the episode launches into a far more
contemplative adventure with its own similarities to “Where No Man Has Gone
Before”, the Enterprise finding a destroyed spaceship of alien origin
and an incredible design. While the
animation on this episode and the show is often rough, it is a Filmation
production from 1973 so the limited movement and shortcuts are expected, the
backgrounds on this episode are particularly beautiful. This is apparent on the ship which becomes
the major set piece outside of the Enterprise (itself lovingly recreated
with its own increase in technology), and it is a gorgeous and alien design, something
that could not have been realized in live action.
Peeples writing a contemplative script, however well
suited to the limited animation style actually suffers from being overwritten
in terms of its dialogue. This is a 24
minute episode, standard for animation, but every scene is packed wall to wall
in dialogue, going back and forth between the characters yet still taking the
time to getting to the main idea behind the episode, taking a whole seven
minutes to get to the actual inciting incident for the episode. Sadly these seven minutes aren’t really
devoted to character beats, largely instead building the idea of the problem of
the elevated gravity dragging the Enterprise off-course. It also wouldn’t be Star Trek without
a godlike alien which appears at the climax of the episode to reveal that the
ship found had its crew nearly destroyed.
The idea behind the episode is great, but honestly the pacing of the
dialogue is really the problem here, despite Peeples contributing several scripts
to animation the sheer amount of dialogue sees all the actors struggling to get
it all out in time. There are points where
it almost sounds like the characters are out of breath. The animation does mean that William Shatner has
to be reserved and James Doohan who is contributing extra voices of the
non-regulars in addition to Scotty shows some of his own range as an actor
which is great.
Overall, “Beyond the Farthest Star” is an episode that
does exactly what it says it’s going to on the tin. While the animation is limited, the weaker
aspects of the episode is the fact that there is so much dialogue that the actors
aren’t actually contending with well. It’s
a solid enough start, but the audience of children doesn’t quite work and there
is almost too little happening in the 24 minutes of the episode, instead reintroducing
the premise of Star Trek over really fulfilling the animation in terms
of setting (the animators doing a lot of the heavy lifting on the expansive
ship on-screen than any indication in the script). 6/10.
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