And I’m watching it in production order, just for the record.
I certainly regret the fact that it took the passing of James Doohan earlier this week to make me want to revisit the first Trek series. But reading the fond tributes and recollections of the man and the iconic character he created, I felt I needed a Scotty fix. So for the first time in well over five years, I sat down to watch the adventures of the USS Enterprise, “no bloody A, B, C or D”.
It’s ironic then, that the first episode I watched had no Scotty. Instead I jumped back 41 years to the first pilot, The Cage. Instantly, I had to alter my mindset. The more time passes, the more society changes, and social mores and standards change to an increasing degree. Without the rose tinted spectacles of nostalgia, the gender politics that have Pike complaining at seeing a female on the bridge, the idea of a Doctor serving as personal bartender to the Captain all seem unacceptable. It doesn’t take long to slip into the nostalgic mindset that I don for all entertainment of yesteryear though.
There is much to appreciate about The Cage. Of 41 years of Star Trek, 5 live action series, one animated series and 10 movies, The Cage has perhaps the strongest grounding in science fiction. The Enterprise is returning to base after a difficult mission, when they pick up a distress call. The SS Columbia, lost for 18 years is reported as crashed in the Talos system. When Pike beam down with a landing party to rescue the survivors, all is revealed as an illusion created by mysterious telepathic beings, and Pike is captured and placed into a menagerie, to serve as subject to a series of telepathic experiments. It’s the Talosians who serve as the sci-fi element. Theirs is a post-apocalyptic society, alluding to the Cold War world and nuclear brinkmanship that existed in the sixties. They have abandoned all technology to develop the mind, and have lapsed into a degenerative society addicted to telepathic pleasures. They seek a slave race to serve them, a docile and malleable species to control and dominate, which is where humans come in. In this one episode, I could see presages of future films like Planet Of The Apes or The Matrix. The story is exceptionally strong, and wasted on a pilot.
For that is the main problem, this is a pilot and the problems yet to be ironed out are too numerous to gather in one post. The biggest problem is that this is the Captain Pike show. The focus is on the one character, with the supporting players doing just that, supporting. The interactions and ensemble feel of Kirk’s Enterprise is wholly absent, despite a momentary heart to heart between Pike and Boyce. The supporting players serve to deliver exposition to an excessive degree, something that kills the pacing of the story. The Cage could certainly have done with a rewrite or two. The Cage also has perhaps the most of the Western feel about it, perhaps down to the casting of Jeffrey Hunter as Christopher Pike. His portrayal of the Captain as weary, battered and thinking about retirement is ill judged for the start of the series. It makes sense in terms of the story, and justifies the illusions that the Talosians inflict, but fail to establish a character that can carry a series. There is action aplenty in a show that I’ve read has been judged as ‘too cerebral’, but I can see how the ending can be judged as unsatisfactory by a network. Pike doesn’t actually prevail in this show, the humans do not succeed through their ingenuity and courage, instead the Talosians offer an ‘Oops, we made a mistake, sorry, see ya’. For someone looking for a heroic character and exciting show, this is certainly anticlimactic.
Of course the effects and sets are still being ironed out at such an early stage. The Enterprise bridge looks astoundingly barren, shorn of the primary colours and plush furnishings. The escapees from the War Of The Worlds perched on top of every console look horribly out of place. Yet two points in this episode always grab my attention. One is the absolutely stunning matte painting used on the Rigel set. The giant moon looming over the castle is perhaps the iconic image that still exemplifies Star Trek in my mind; it was certainly never bettered in the series. The other notable effect is another matte painting, that of the future Mojave. When I think about it, in post TOS the future Earth always made to emphasise the preservation of the past. This is perhaps the only time we actually see the people on Earth actually living in the future, in a futuristic paradise uncluttered by centuries old buildings.
The Cage is an amazing story, but the execution leaves much to be desired, with the characters poorly developed at such an early stage. It would have been much better received in the middle of the show’s run. And guess what…
I certainly regret the fact that it took the passing of James Doohan earlier this week to make me want to revisit the first Trek series. But reading the fond tributes and recollections of the man and the iconic character he created, I felt I needed a Scotty fix. So for the first time in well over five years, I sat down to watch the adventures of the USS Enterprise, “no bloody A, B, C or D”.
It’s ironic then, that the first episode I watched had no Scotty. Instead I jumped back 41 years to the first pilot, The Cage. Instantly, I had to alter my mindset. The more time passes, the more society changes, and social mores and standards change to an increasing degree. Without the rose tinted spectacles of nostalgia, the gender politics that have Pike complaining at seeing a female on the bridge, the idea of a Doctor serving as personal bartender to the Captain all seem unacceptable. It doesn’t take long to slip into the nostalgic mindset that I don for all entertainment of yesteryear though.
There is much to appreciate about The Cage. Of 41 years of Star Trek, 5 live action series, one animated series and 10 movies, The Cage has perhaps the strongest grounding in science fiction. The Enterprise is returning to base after a difficult mission, when they pick up a distress call. The SS Columbia, lost for 18 years is reported as crashed in the Talos system. When Pike beam down with a landing party to rescue the survivors, all is revealed as an illusion created by mysterious telepathic beings, and Pike is captured and placed into a menagerie, to serve as subject to a series of telepathic experiments. It’s the Talosians who serve as the sci-fi element. Theirs is a post-apocalyptic society, alluding to the Cold War world and nuclear brinkmanship that existed in the sixties. They have abandoned all technology to develop the mind, and have lapsed into a degenerative society addicted to telepathic pleasures. They seek a slave race to serve them, a docile and malleable species to control and dominate, which is where humans come in. In this one episode, I could see presages of future films like Planet Of The Apes or The Matrix. The story is exceptionally strong, and wasted on a pilot.
For that is the main problem, this is a pilot and the problems yet to be ironed out are too numerous to gather in one post. The biggest problem is that this is the Captain Pike show. The focus is on the one character, with the supporting players doing just that, supporting. The interactions and ensemble feel of Kirk’s Enterprise is wholly absent, despite a momentary heart to heart between Pike and Boyce. The supporting players serve to deliver exposition to an excessive degree, something that kills the pacing of the story. The Cage could certainly have done with a rewrite or two. The Cage also has perhaps the most of the Western feel about it, perhaps down to the casting of Jeffrey Hunter as Christopher Pike. His portrayal of the Captain as weary, battered and thinking about retirement is ill judged for the start of the series. It makes sense in terms of the story, and justifies the illusions that the Talosians inflict, but fail to establish a character that can carry a series. There is action aplenty in a show that I’ve read has been judged as ‘too cerebral’, but I can see how the ending can be judged as unsatisfactory by a network. Pike doesn’t actually prevail in this show, the humans do not succeed through their ingenuity and courage, instead the Talosians offer an ‘Oops, we made a mistake, sorry, see ya’. For someone looking for a heroic character and exciting show, this is certainly anticlimactic.
Of course the effects and sets are still being ironed out at such an early stage. The Enterprise bridge looks astoundingly barren, shorn of the primary colours and plush furnishings. The escapees from the War Of The Worlds perched on top of every console look horribly out of place. Yet two points in this episode always grab my attention. One is the absolutely stunning matte painting used on the Rigel set. The giant moon looming over the castle is perhaps the iconic image that still exemplifies Star Trek in my mind; it was certainly never bettered in the series. The other notable effect is another matte painting, that of the future Mojave. When I think about it, in post TOS the future Earth always made to emphasise the preservation of the past. This is perhaps the only time we actually see the people on Earth actually living in the future, in a futuristic paradise uncluttered by centuries old buildings.
The Cage is an amazing story, but the execution leaves much to be desired, with the characters poorly developed at such an early stage. It would have been much better received in the middle of the show’s run. And guess what…