The Empath
Kirk, Spock and McCoy beam down to a science outpost in the Minarvan system to evacuate the staff. The main star is about to go nova, and time is running out. As it is, the star emits a flare so powerful that Kirk orders the ship to safety while the landing party weathers out the storm in the relative safety of the planet. As soon as the ship is out of range, the trio walk into trouble. They find the outpost deserted, dusty and abandoned. Looking at the scientists’ records, they watch as an eerie sound heralds the disappearance of the two men on screen. Just then, the same thing happens to the landing party. They wake up elsewhere, in a seemingly endless cavern under the planet’s surface. Detecting an alien presence, they explore to find a mute female. For ease of conversation, McCoy dubs her Gem, but before they can get acquainted, two further aliens appear, Vians, who appear to have engineered the situation. They disarm the landing party, and inform them that they are to take part in an experiment, then vanish again. Kirk doesn’t react well to this, and he’s thrown back. When Gem heals Kirk’s gashed forehead, McCoy declares that she must be an empath. Exploring further, they find the corpses of the two scientists, frozen in a grotesque pose of agony. It becomes clear what sort of experiment the Vian’s have in store for the landing party. What isn’t clear is why.
There are three things that I have been raised to hate in this world. It’s an irrational hatred, verging on the violent. It’s a prejudice so deep seated and offensive that in other circumstances it would be considered criminal. My hatred for Morris Dancers, Clowns, and yes, Mimes knows no bounds. The Animaniacs had the right idea about mimes, drop an anvil on their heads, run a herd of cattle over them, hurt and maim them, that’s the only way they provide entertainment value. You can guess how thrilled I am when this episode turns up again.
The Empath is an acquired taste that I have yet to acquire even after all these years. Mime as a pure art form is just painful to me, despite the fact that it underpins so many of the actor’s disciplines. So Gem’s exaggerated emoting has me reaching for the fast forward button. It’s worse because it highlights the pretence of the other actors, especially when they are doing the traditional “trapped in an invisible box” thing with the Vian forcefield. Add to that the theatrical aspects to the show, the blackened sets and Spartan decoration make this episode more experimental theatre than prime time television sci-fi.
I also find it disappointing in that it’s one of those rare episodes that render the main cast wholly pointless. They are there as guinea pigs, rats in the Vians’ maze, but wholly irrelevant to the outcome of the story. They are simply there as part of the test being run on Gem, and while they observe proceedings, little that they do has any outcome (other than Kirk pointing the irony of the Vian’s own lack of compassion when testing Gem for hers).
The set up is a familiar one to sci-fi, that of lowly humans being tested by ‘superior’ aliens, and the testicle headed Vians are a little too reminiscent of Talosians for my liking. The theatrical tone of the show also renders the torture scenes tame, there is little or no drama to what happens, and the make-up applied to the injured men is rather poor. It’s telling that despite the desperate straits the three find themselves in, all that really sticks with me is that Kirk is hung up sans shirt, while McCoy manages to keep his on in order to get shredded. (I also wish that Kirk would have said, “There are four lights!”)
As mentioned before, this episode makes little sense, with the Vians testing for compassion by exhibiting extreme cruelty, just to see if a race is worthy of rescue from an impending nova. There’s no mention of just how such a rescue will take place with the nova imminent, and why, if they have the power to effect such a rescue, they are limited to only rescuing one race. It does however indicate the Prime Directive is in effect, for if the Federation is invested in setting up an observation post to monitor the dying star, they must be aware of any intelligent species resident in the system, but there is no mention of any starships racing to save any of them.
Anyway, the only rationalisation I have for the Vian actions, other than the fact that they are alien, is that some 300 light years from here, a Vian intercepts a transmission from Earth, and takes a note of it in order to advance their knowledge of humans and how to interact with them. That transmission is of the movie Saw.
Torture porn aside, the only thing that I find The Empath good for is to reaffirm the strong bond between Kirk, Spock and McCoy, with all three falling over each other in their need for self-sacrifice, and McCoy winning in the ‘take me, spare the others’ stakes.
Kirk, Spock and McCoy beam down to a science outpost in the Minarvan system to evacuate the staff. The main star is about to go nova, and time is running out. As it is, the star emits a flare so powerful that Kirk orders the ship to safety while the landing party weathers out the storm in the relative safety of the planet. As soon as the ship is out of range, the trio walk into trouble. They find the outpost deserted, dusty and abandoned. Looking at the scientists’ records, they watch as an eerie sound heralds the disappearance of the two men on screen. Just then, the same thing happens to the landing party. They wake up elsewhere, in a seemingly endless cavern under the planet’s surface. Detecting an alien presence, they explore to find a mute female. For ease of conversation, McCoy dubs her Gem, but before they can get acquainted, two further aliens appear, Vians, who appear to have engineered the situation. They disarm the landing party, and inform them that they are to take part in an experiment, then vanish again. Kirk doesn’t react well to this, and he’s thrown back. When Gem heals Kirk’s gashed forehead, McCoy declares that she must be an empath. Exploring further, they find the corpses of the two scientists, frozen in a grotesque pose of agony. It becomes clear what sort of experiment the Vian’s have in store for the landing party. What isn’t clear is why.
There are three things that I have been raised to hate in this world. It’s an irrational hatred, verging on the violent. It’s a prejudice so deep seated and offensive that in other circumstances it would be considered criminal. My hatred for Morris Dancers, Clowns, and yes, Mimes knows no bounds. The Animaniacs had the right idea about mimes, drop an anvil on their heads, run a herd of cattle over them, hurt and maim them, that’s the only way they provide entertainment value. You can guess how thrilled I am when this episode turns up again.
The Empath is an acquired taste that I have yet to acquire even after all these years. Mime as a pure art form is just painful to me, despite the fact that it underpins so many of the actor’s disciplines. So Gem’s exaggerated emoting has me reaching for the fast forward button. It’s worse because it highlights the pretence of the other actors, especially when they are doing the traditional “trapped in an invisible box” thing with the Vian forcefield. Add to that the theatrical aspects to the show, the blackened sets and Spartan decoration make this episode more experimental theatre than prime time television sci-fi.
I also find it disappointing in that it’s one of those rare episodes that render the main cast wholly pointless. They are there as guinea pigs, rats in the Vians’ maze, but wholly irrelevant to the outcome of the story. They are simply there as part of the test being run on Gem, and while they observe proceedings, little that they do has any outcome (other than Kirk pointing the irony of the Vian’s own lack of compassion when testing Gem for hers).
The set up is a familiar one to sci-fi, that of lowly humans being tested by ‘superior’ aliens, and the testicle headed Vians are a little too reminiscent of Talosians for my liking. The theatrical tone of the show also renders the torture scenes tame, there is little or no drama to what happens, and the make-up applied to the injured men is rather poor. It’s telling that despite the desperate straits the three find themselves in, all that really sticks with me is that Kirk is hung up sans shirt, while McCoy manages to keep his on in order to get shredded. (I also wish that Kirk would have said, “There are four lights!”)
As mentioned before, this episode makes little sense, with the Vians testing for compassion by exhibiting extreme cruelty, just to see if a race is worthy of rescue from an impending nova. There’s no mention of just how such a rescue will take place with the nova imminent, and why, if they have the power to effect such a rescue, they are limited to only rescuing one race. It does however indicate the Prime Directive is in effect, for if the Federation is invested in setting up an observation post to monitor the dying star, they must be aware of any intelligent species resident in the system, but there is no mention of any starships racing to save any of them.
Anyway, the only rationalisation I have for the Vian actions, other than the fact that they are alien, is that some 300 light years from here, a Vian intercepts a transmission from Earth, and takes a note of it in order to advance their knowledge of humans and how to interact with them. That transmission is of the movie Saw.
Torture porn aside, the only thing that I find The Empath good for is to reaffirm the strong bond between Kirk, Spock and McCoy, with all three falling over each other in their need for self-sacrifice, and McCoy winning in the ‘take me, spare the others’ stakes.