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Space: 1999
Set Seven (Episodes 37-42)
The second half of Space: 1999's second year kicks off with Seed Of
Destruction, an episode which truly shocked me. I've harped quite a bit on
how many Space: 1999 plots seem to have been recycled later as Star Trek: Voyager episodes, but
Seeds was recycled by Star Trek: The
Next Generation. Koenig is snared in an alien trap, an almost-exact
duplicate of him is created and sent back to Moonbase Alpha, and the
doppelganger issues bizarre instructions to an increasingly suspicious crew
while the real Koenig tries to figure out a way out of his predicament. Sound
familiar? Think of Allegiance, an episode from Next Generation's third season, where virtually the same
thing happens with Picard. (Only we're not treated to the sight of Martin
Landau leading his castmates in a round of drinking songs - darn!)

Next up is the reasonably suspenseful Beta Cloud, which has the odd
distinction of featuring Dave Prowse as "the Creature."
Basically,
this isn't the living, breathing personification of evil role that Prowse would
come to embody in his next major SF
project (you know, the role Prowse keeps going on about wanting to play in
the next one). No, this time, Prowse is
basically stalking every possible reconfiguration or redress of the Moonbase
Alpha corridor set, killing various guest artists and uniformed no-dialogue
extras by giving them what appear to be only slightly less-than-affectionate
noogies, and smashing stuff up. The Creature also very conscientiously puts out
any fires on its costume that have been started by people shooting at,
electrocuting or otherwise attacking it. Seriously though, it's a suspenseful
little show, more coherent than most of the second season, and it
sidelines Landau and Bain, giving second-string stars Tony Anholt and Catherine
Schell a chance to take center stage. One wonders if the show's star couple
wasn't being sized up for an enforced exit for budgetary or other reasons in the
event of a third-season pickup. Overall, The Beta Cloud is one of the
better shows in the second year.
Sadly, that's more than we can say for the mishmash that is A Matter Of
Balance. It's a bit of a rip on classic
Star Trek's Alternative
Factor episode, which was miserable enough in and of itself. A guy in
inadvisably tight bright yellow shorts - and with fashion sense like
that, he could only be from an evil universe of anti-matter, right? -
wants to swap places with someone from the universe of matter, so of course, he
picks an attractive young member of the Moonbase Alpha crew we've never seen
before. The high point of this episode is Koenig's clear-thinking,
evenly-weighted command decision: when Maya tells him that forcing a reversal of
the process could bring matter and anti-matter into a collision, Koenig
acknowledges that such an event could "blot out this whole portion of the
universe" - but wants his crewmember returned to the universe of matter
anyway!

The second disc improves this situation quite a bit - so help me God, volume
14 is full of good episodes. First up is the standalone Space
Warp, which involves the moon being sucked into a freak wormhole, and Koenig
having to figure out how to catch up with it. Meanwhile - obligatory goofy
B-plot coming up here - Maya goes nutso on Moonbase Alpha during the space warp
and morphs into any number of forms which are decidedly unfriendly to her
crewmates. I guess the goofiest thing about that plot is the story's notion
that Maya's internal anatomy morphs to match her exterior, which means
that Dr. Russell can't operate on her until she morphs back into her
human/Psychon form. Easily one of the strangest shapeshifter theories I've ever
heard in science fiction, it really defies logic - but it helps keep everyone
busy until Koenig can figure out how to return home.
Next up is what, in all fairness, I must describe as an excellent
two-part episode, The Bringers Of Wonder. The plot's familiar to anyone
who's seen the fourth season finale of Star
Trek: Voyager - a super-fast experimental ship from Earth arrives to take
our heroes home at last. Only their super-fast ship isn't what it seems - and
neither are its occupants. And Seven of Nine, oops, sorry, Maya, isn't so hot
on the idea of going back to Earth anyway. This is easily the most suspenseful
adventure since the pilot, and it plays out nicely - hell, even Martin
Landau and Barbara Bain do an excellent job here, overacting a little bit, but
understandably given the circumstances. The plot is coherent and well
thought-out, lacking that aimless feeling of a few Space: 1999 episodes I could
name. It's my pleasure to recommend this to you not as one of the series'
finest hours, but as two of the series' finest hours. I'm pleasantly
surprised. Bravo!
Adding to my shock is the fact that this two-disc set is the first to give us
any kind of meaningful bonus materials. The theatrical trailers are shown for
the foreign-market movies Alien Attack and Destination:
Moonbase Alpha, both of them consisting of two edited-down hour episodes
sold to regions that didn't air the series. Also, an excerpt from a BBC
behind-the-scenes special is shown, giving away some secrets that I didn't know
about the filming of the show's formidable-for-the-70s lunar surface shots.
It's got its share of strangeness, but the penultimate set of Space: 1999
DVDs won't steer you wrong on enjoyable episodes. My first hearty
recommendation for this series in quite a while - and perhaps the only must-have
set from the second year.
Reviewed by Earl
Green theLogBook.com webmaster / editor-in-chief



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