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Star Trek: The Original Series
Volume Ten: Arena / The Alternative Factor
There are few examples of Classic Trek
action as fine as Arena,
and it may rank next only to Amok
Time as the undisputed king of action episodes from the original
series. Based loosely on Frederic Brown's classic pulp sci-fi tale (and yet
close enough that Brown got a screen credit after the fact), Arena is no
Enemy Mine, but it's also one of the defining universe-building moments
of the first season, as Kirk refuses to kill his Gorn antagonist after a fierce
battle. Once again, the too-often-used chestnut of godlike beings testing
humanity is dragged out, though that particular card is at least played with a
little bit of finesse. The Metrons do a great job of showing the conflict
between Kirk and the Gorn captain to the Enterprise crew, covering the event
from multiple angles and even zooming in on the action - an element of the
episode in question that has always cracked me up. (I mean, what did they do,
send a live sports broadcast crew down to the planet?) In light of the Gorn
fight, it's easier to overlook the action in the episode's first half, with Kirk
and company locked in a fierce ground battle with the Gorn after the destruction
of a Federation Starbase - some of the all-time best action scenes in the
series. That all this action encompasses an interesting story doesn't hurt
either; Arena is a highlight of Classic Trek from any season.
Sadly, from Arena we go to one of my least favorite segments of the
entire original series, The
Alternative Factor. Hollywood history is rife with retellings of the
story about actor Robert Brown being drafted at the last second to replace John
Drew Barrymore, who simply didn't show up for work as the chief guest player,
Lazarus. Barrymore was fiercely sanctioned by the Screen Actors' Guild and
wound up paying for his breach of contract by spending six months being frozen
out of any other work by the union. Still, as much as people blame
Alternative Factor's shortcomings on the production tribulations, I've
always been of the opinion that the episode would've been a mess, Barrymore or
no Barrymore. It barely hangs together in the script, and it seems better
suited to an Outer Limits-style anthology series since it relegates the main
Star Trek players to the back burner. I've never really liked this one.
Reviewed by Earl
Green theLogBook.com webmaster / editor-in-chief



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