Although I talked a bit about "The Man Trap" in my posting about the 45th anniversary of Star Trek last week, I decided to start writing about each episode along with the anniversary of its original airdate. Also, for my sanity, it seems wise to talk about something as culturally important and exciting as Star Trek instead of just the horrible state of affairs in America and around the world. Spoilers will follow, so if you haven't seen this yet in 45 years and don't want to be spoiled, read at your own risk!
Directed by Marc Daniels
Guest Starring: Jeanne Bal as Nancy Crater
Alfred Ryder as Professor Robert Crater
Grace Lee Whitney as Yeoman Janice Rand
Photos from the amazing Trekcore.com
"Captain's Log: Stardate 1513.1 Our Position: Orbiting Planet M113. Onboard the Enterprise, Mr. Spock, temporarily in command. On the planet, the ruins of an ancient and long dead civilization. Ship's surgeon McCoy and myself are now beaming down to the planet's surface.
Our Mission: routine medical examination of archaeologist Robert Crater and his wife Nancy. Routine, but for the fact that Nancy Crater is that one woman in Doctor McCoy's past."
-Kirk, through voice-over, delivering the opening lines of the series.
And so it begins!
While on a routine mission, the Enterprise comes under attack from a murderous creature that can assume the form of anyone, real or imagined in order to drain the hypnotized victims of their salt!
We're introduced to McCoy and Kirk on the planet surface along with Darnell--a science officer, who ends up the first dead crewman of the series (and not a red shirt!)
Crewman Darnell: He died how he lived....on Planet M113 |
To hell with "Let's Move", We Need Salt! |
One of the first clues for Kirk and McCoy--or Plum, as Nancy calls him--is the repeated request for more salt from both of the Craters. Of course, by the time they figure out something is wrong, a third crewman is pushing up straw-like alien daisies on M113, but they only know of two deaths because Green was replaced by "Nancy", the Salt Creature before beaming back up to the Enterprise in order to engage is some salty rendezvous, no doubt.
Meanwhile, back on the ship, we start to learn about the other officers that populate the world of the Enterprise. Spock and Uhura's conversations on the bridge show us how different Vulcans are, from showing no emotion even when your friend might be dead, to having no sense of humor. For some reason, and I've never figured this out, Yeoman Rand delivers lunch to Lt. Sulu in a science lab filled with interesting flowers (made from tissue paper covered hands!) Sulu thanks her by saying, "May the great bird of the galaxy bless your planet." Eventually, fans began referring to Gene Roddenberry, the creator, as the 'great bird of the galaxy'.
Hailing frequencies...hypnotized! |
Green pops in to see Sulu and Rand, and is not drunk on Saurian brandy, but in fact a murderous salt monster. Thankfully the flowers scare him off. Uhura has a close encounter with the beast as well as it reads her thoughts and appears to be a man from her home in Africa--even speaking Swahili. Luckily, the door opens and Rand and Sulu inadvertantly save her life.
Meanwhile, on the planet Professor Crater is proving particularly prickly as he tries unsucessfully to fight off Kirk and Spock. It is then they learn Nancy is no more--rather the last of its species, the salt creature, had killed her and assumed her identity. As they warn the ship, the creature has already drugged McCoy instead of killing him, and assumed his appearance.
The Wonders of the 23rd Century, plus that's not McCoy... |
This is an interesting development for the creature. Although Crater likens the murderous beast to a Buffalo, having seen its numbers drop radically and face extinction, it chooses to kill people instead of ask for help. It is obviously intelligent enough to do so since it cares at least a little for McCoy. Crater says the memories McCoy feels for Nancy are so strong, it in essence has created a special bond between the two. That certainly doesn't say much for Nancy's husband's...abilities or overall relationship with his wife, but the stronger the memories and emotional bond, the more the creature can connect with a person.
I guess he has a red gash and green blood because he's half Vulcan and half human? Or? |
Starving for salt, the creature kills Professor Crater and attempts to kill Spock, but we get a glimpse of his "vulcan heritage" in the form of green blood!
The creature as Nancy attempts to get a groggy McCoy to protect it/her from the others, but Kirk shows up and things get ugly fast---for Kirk.
Give Mama your salt! This is for calling me a HANDSOME WOMAN! |
The episode ends on the bridge with a pensive Kirk saying, "I was thinking about the Buffalo, Mr. Spock."
The buffalo didn't try to murder/impersonate people, though. I'm glad no one from Sci fi (erg, syfy) reads this or that would end up being a saturday night movie.
The remastered images looked nice. They expanded the landing site & Craters' home beyond the close-up of the structure we got in the original.
Overall, this episode introduced us to most of the core characters, save Scotty and Nurse Chapel and gave us a sense of the unknown the crew of the Starship Enterprise will face each week. "The Man Trap" works surprisingly well as a premiere outing, considering it was the sixth episode produced.
One last question I'd like to pose is, "Was it the writer's and costumer's decision to put something on the dead salt creature, or was that what NBC censors thought every respectable and fashionable salt creature should wear?"
Nancy sporting a special modesty shroud. |
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