“The Way To Eden” ****
The Enterprise takes aboard a group passionately disenchanted with contemporary society.
I'm a little conflicted about this one, but ultimately I have to vote with my level of enjoyment. This episode has often been ridiculed over the years because of its overt representation of the '60's era hippy culture and I, too, wasn't all that crazy about the episode all those many years ago. But I think as a science fiction story the increasing passage of time is kinder to the episode and its story primarily because we are distanced from the immediate familiarity with the era. The idea of people being disenchanted with their contemporary society is an old one yet also a perfectly valid one for science fiction.
The overall execution does give the episode something of its own ambience. The musical accompaniment beyond the traditional soundtrack seems rather more contemporary than of the era when the episode was made. It's also shown off better than some previous third season episodes.
If I have any real criticism it's in regard to Chekov's and Irina's overly thick accents---it's just too overdone---and their exchanges come across as just a little too conventional. Also I find it amusing that Shatner's hair has gotten so much attention over the years because Walter Koenig's hair looks almost like an alien lifeform in itself.

The other small disappointment was seeing a moderately modified reuse of the Tholian webspinner as the stolen space cruiser
Aurora.
The ending could be interpreted as somewhat contrived, what with Adam poisoned by the very Eden he sought, but then I'm challenged to imagine how else the story could have ended and still be dramatic.
I was near convinced that this would be at best just an okay 3 star episode except that I found myself enjoying it more than expected. It also didn't falter in any significant way as I had half expected it to do.