Synopsis

Remember back in “The Naked Time,” the Enterprise was thrown back in time a bit by excessive warp speed. This was used (by my count) three more times: “Tomorrow Is Yesterday,” “Assignment: Earth” (TOS 2x26), and The Voyage Home.

On this occasion, time travel was unintentional, and the Enterprise is spotted on Air Force radar. A jet is scrambled to investigate, and the Enterprise accidentally destroys it with its tractor. They beam the pilot aboard, and get caught in a conundrum: do they send USAF Captain John Christopher back to Earth, knowing he knows the future? Worse, it turns out Christopher’s son will be an astronaut himself, so they can’t bring Christopher back to the future.

They decide they need to destroy all physical evidence of their presence, so Kirk and Sulu snoop around an Air Force base looking for computer tapes and film negatives. They get caught by an MP, who also gets accidentally beamed up to the Enterprise. Then Kirk is captured by the base commander. That one’s quickly resolved, as Christopher, Spock, and Sulu beam down and rescue him.

At this point the episode’s logic gets a bit fuzzy. Spock decides they can use the high-warp slingshot business to go forward in time too, and while time traveling, they use the transporter to swap Christopher and the MP for their past selves. Maybe this is its own little time loop, but I can’t quite figure how. Regardless, the Enterprise makes it back to their present and Starfleet still exists, so whatever.

Commentary

I’m actually glad Star Trek opened the time travel box by appreciating its absurdity. This episode doesn’t hold a candle to “Time’s Arrow” (TNG 5x26/6x01) or “Trials and Tribble-ations” (DS9 5x06)—or The Voyage Home for that matter—but I still liked it.

Time travel is a strange narrative conceit. We’ll get to look at a lot of different angles on it, from the deadly serious (“The City on the Edge of Forever,” TOS 1x28), to pointed social commentary (“Past Tense,” DS9 3x11/3x12), to the fascinating (“Year of Hell,” VOY 4x08/4x09), to the heart-wrenching (“The Visitor,” DS9 4x03), to just taking a long look at the road before and the road beyond (“All Good Things,” TNG 7x25/7x26).

But right now we’re having fun. So sit back and revel in it.

I will pose one question for you, though: Would the average zoomer recognize cellulose tape as computer memory or photographic film? What about people two hundred years in the future?

    • fiasco@possumpat.ioOP
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      1 year ago

      It’s like how current “history buffs” only know about the Roman Empire or World War II. Kirk was fascinated solely with the history of the United States, circa 1969.

  • japps13@lemmy.physfluids.fr
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    1 year ago

    I think they would have figured it out while scanning and investigating the base. Or the pilot could have explained it to them. It’s obviously not necessarily to show that on-screen as viewers didn’t need to.

    • fiasco@possumpat.ioOP
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      1 year ago

      It isn’t necessary, sure, but fish out of water is part of what makes time travel fun. Like Sisko constantly forgetting that communicators were little flip phones in “Trials and Tribble-ations.”

      • fiasco@possumpat.ioOP
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        1 year ago

        Actually, I’d like to expand on this a bit. Setting aside the question of whether storytelling itself is necessary, though I believe it is, I think part of why so much modern writing is so soulless is the focus on getting from point A to point B. “Story beats,” they call them. Or we might call this the Pixar Algorithm.

        The software tooling around computer graphics is such that any major studio will produce stunning visuals. Whether they nail visual design or cinematography is still a question, but the fidelity of the graphics will be great. Do something tried and tested, and you’ll get a Marvel movie.

        Writing is something else, though, because writing well requires having something to say. It seems like nobody in Hollywood has anything to say anymore, so they try and paper over that fact with “cleverness.” But they aren’t very clever either.

        This is a round about way of saying, I think the “unnecessary” stuff, the stuff that doesn’t drive the story to the next beat, is where most of the soul of a story resides. The reason it’s so important to have something to say is, that gives you some direction on how to add relevance to the unnecessary parts. So all this stuff is tied pretty tightly together.

        This is also why my commentary on “Tomorrow Is Yesterday” was mostly talking about other, better episodes.