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 ColorClosed-captionedDolby
 
 Description:
 
 The continuing adventures of the starship Enterprise, as recorded for  posterity on  DVD, move into their sixth volume with a very interesting pair of shows from  the original series. "Miri," one of the most popular episodes, featured a couple  of soon-to-be-semi-icons from two very different  kinds of films from the late 1960s: Michael J. Pollard (who would appear in Bonnie and Clyde) and Kim Darby (John Wayne's costar in True  Grit). The intriguing story concerns a race of children on an Earth-like  planet who are in fact 300 years old, kept pristine in the summer of their  lives by a disease that also causes madness and death with the onset of adulthood. The Enterprise's  landing party, including Captain Kirk (William Shatner), Mr. Spock  (Leonard Nimoy), and Dr. McCoy (DeForest Kelley), are instantly contaminated  and forced to remain on the planet until McCoy can find an antidote. In the meantime, Darby's character, Miri, falls for Kirk and becomes jealous of his  attentions toward anyone else. Easily one of Star Trek's strongest  shows, "Miri" is a must-see for Trekkers and Trekkies.
   Also on this disk is "The Conscience of the King," a memorable drama about a  traveling Shakespearean troupe led by one Anton Karidian (Arnold Moss), who may or may not be the same man as Kodos the Executioner, former governor of a  Federation planet who oversaw the mass murder of thousands of people rather than watch them starve to death during a food shortage. (Shortly after the  deaths, Federation supply ships arrived and Kodos disappeared, right around the time that Karidian arrived as a classical actor touring the planets.) A nice twist: among victims of Kodos's wrongheaded mercy killings were  relatives of Captain Kirk (William Shatner), adding a personal note to the  mystery of Karidian/Kodos. Well-written (by Barry Trivers) and sensitively  directed by a not-well-known but very interesting Hollywood filmmaker, Gerd Oswald.--Tom Keogh
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