Features:
 - Color
 - Closed-captioned
 - Dolby
 
  
 Description:
  "Metamorphosis"  Captain Kirk (William Shatner), Mr. Spock (Leonard Nimoy), and Dr.McCoy  (DeForest Kelley) accompany a Federation ambassador (Elinor Donahue of Father  Knows Best) aboard a shuttle bound for a rendezvous with the Enterprise. The  ambassador, Commissioner Nancy Hedford, needs to be treated for possible contact  with an alien disease, and she haughtily insists her escorts get through this  interruption in her work as quickly as possible. But a vaporous, translucent  life form called "the Companion" has other ideas, traveling across space in  search of humans who can ease the loneliness of a pilot (Glenn Corbett) marooned  on a barren planet for more than a century. Kirk, however, offers the stranded  man an alternative: a return to civilization. Whether he wants it or not is  another matter--he and the Companion share an extraordinary intimacy of the mind  and heart. A kind of chamber drama largely set in a single locale,  "Metamorphosis" was written by series producer Gene L. Coon and directed by  frequent Trek helmsman Ralph Senensky. Guest stars Corbett and Donahue  are a bit monotonous in their performances, a little under par for a guest shot  on the series. But Coon's story compensates with another fascinating application  of one of his pet themes: empathy shared between different species. Kirk and  Spock's knowing looks, as they begin to understand the Companion's true feelings  for her captive man, alone make this episode worth watching. (Trivia note: An  earlier incarnation of Corbett's character, warp-drive inventor Zefram Cochrane,  was played by James Cromwell in Star Trek: First Contact.) --Tom  Keogh  "Friday's Child"  Our favorite Starfleet trio, Captain Kirk (William Shatner), Mr. Spock (Leonard  Nimoy), and Dr. McCoy (DeForest Kelley) beam down to Capella IV to convince the  resident warrior race to sign up with the Federation. Unfortunately, a Klingon  agent named Kras (Tige Andrews) has preceded them and set enough doubt into play  that the take-no-prisoners Capellans decide to give Kirk and company a hostile  reception. Written by story editor D.C. (Dorothy) Fontana, "Friday's Child" has  the broad outlines of a Western, with the good guys getting rebuffed by hostile  Indians and a final showdown with crude weapons set up in the barren hills.  Julie Newmar's guest role as Eleen, wife of a former ruler and a pawn in the  barbed politics between Kirk, Kras, and the Capellans, even has something of the  frightened native princess about it. Viewers hoping to catch Newmar in a  Capellan catsuit, however (an extension of her iconic, sleek presence as  Catwoman in the old Batman television series), will be sorely  disappointed: Eleen is quite pregnant, fit to burst, and placed in McCoy's  capable hands. Trek stalwart Joseph Pevney directed this action-adventure  piece, which contains one of the good doctor's most memorable utterances, spoken  when Eleen expects McCoy to carry her up a steep hill: "I'm a doctor, not an  escalator!" --Tom Keogh
  |