“The Apple” **
A seemingly idyllic planet attacks the landing party and tries to destroy the ship.
Up until now
Star Trek has been doing pretty well, but here they finally stumble. On the face of it this episode isn't badly done. The performances are mostly there. Scotty is back in character and his previous professional self. And we get a treat in seeing Yeoman Martha Landon kick some native ass in hand-to-hand.
But this episode has quite a few elements that will serve as cliches to caricature TOS: the ship threatened by a planetary machine, Scotty trying to fix it, a native population that Kirk has to destabilize by destroying the machine to save his ship. Additionally the story is set on a soundstage that made me think they borrowed the set from
Gilligan's Island. Too bad they couldn't have shot on-location to lend the story more visual appeal. It's very much a paint-by-number type story with a few decent moments thrown in, but nothing special.
For me there's a big unaddressed question here: who orchestrated this whole scenario? Obviously the natives didn't do it. But this is totally overlooked in the episode. Watching this so recently I'm reminded of the first season
Stargate: SG-1 episode "Brief Candle" where they find a primitive culture who cannot leave the environs of their village and live only 100 days. SG-1 learns that the natives are swarming with nanotech in their system and that they're likely the descendants of an experiment orchestrated by some ancient Ga'ould posing as yet another god. All this becomes evident when Jack O'Neill becomes infected by the local nanotech and the others search for a cure. In the end SG-1 effectively destroys the natives stone "god" so O'Neill and all the natives can be free to live normally. No Prime Directive here, but it's essentially the same as TOS' "The Apple." But what it does illustrate is that a little thoughtful rewriting can go a long way.
While
Stargate's "Brief Candle" is nothing awesome I do think it's better than TOS' "The Apple."