We discussed on here a while back my theory that the three second pilot episode scripts commissioned after ''The Cage'' was turned down -- ''Where No Man Has Gone Before'', ''Mudd's Women'', and ''The Omega Factor'' -- all seem to be going for a more 'Western' feel, apparently to satiate network concerns that they thought they'd ordered a 'Space Western' series, but that ''The Cage'' hadn't delivered on that. To summerise: all three of those stories, in different ways, play to tropes typical to Westerns: ''Where No Man...'' to the pioneering spirit, ''Mudd's Women'' to the not uncommon trope of lonely farmers on the frontier being matched up with brides, and most overtly ''The Omega Glory'' is just about as Western as it gets after Kirk and crew beam down to the planet.
But what of the sales pitch? ''Wagon Train To The Stars'', Gene Roddenberry called it, which was a punchy way to convince studio heads to take his idea, but how accurate is it in reality? Star Trek isn't an Oregon Trail In Space, it's most commonly associated with Horatio Hornblower adventure fiction, if anything. Sure, the Enterprise encounters 'frontiersmen' battling it out in desperate conditions, but seldom does the series actively show the Enterprise blazing a trail into the unknown. Many of her missions are routine work -- ferrying supplies from colony to colony, looking after alien dignitaries, protecting the space lanes, keeping up 'our' side in a cold war with hostile species -- a far cry from the premise at the heart of Wagon Train.
But, what if? Of the three proposed pilots, the one ultimately chosen, ''Where No Man Has Gone Before'', is the most Wagon Train-ish of the lot. The Enterprise is forging ahead out of our solar system, on what is (apparently) intended to be a long range mission into the unknown, leaving behind everything that is familiar. This is much more like Wagon Train than almost anything we get in the following TV episodes and movies. And yet, they largely dropped it once the network agreed to green-light the series. Episodes like ''The Corbomite Maneuver'' pay lip service to Enterprise mapping unknown areas of space, but it's hardly the bundle-everybody-up-in-a-stagecoach-and-forge-through-the-desert adventure that Wagon Train proposes. It isn't too long before Enterprise's mission is redefined as something much more..... 'ordinary'.
But yet, again, when The Next Generation came along, they returned to this premise..... for five minutes.
''Encounter At Farpoint'' works on the assumption that the new Enterprise is starting at the edge of known space and heading outwards on a decades-long journey into the unknown. Heck, this time they've embraced the Wagon Train philosophy even more by bringing families along with them, assuming that the ship won't make contact with Earth again in a looooong time. This was all sewn into the DNA of the 'new' Star Trek, but again it wasn't too long before they were doing routine work in familiar space lanes, and even returning to Earth on occasion. The 'space politics' plotlines for which TNG is remembered would have been an anathema to the original idea that 1701-D was heading away from all of that.
So where does this leave the remaining spin-offs? DS9 is the Star Trek which most overtly feels like a Western, a frontiers-town on the edge of space, but it isn't exactly Wagon Train. VOY has something closer to it in reverse: the crew in unfamiliar territory, but instead of forging forward to a new life, they crave to return home to the life they knew. So it doesn't exactly fit. ENT mired itself in 'local politics' again with all the Earth/Vulcan stuff.
Do any of us think that a Star Trek series that truly does Wagon Train in space would be an interesting idea?
But what of the sales pitch? ''Wagon Train To The Stars'', Gene Roddenberry called it, which was a punchy way to convince studio heads to take his idea, but how accurate is it in reality? Star Trek isn't an Oregon Trail In Space, it's most commonly associated with Horatio Hornblower adventure fiction, if anything. Sure, the Enterprise encounters 'frontiersmen' battling it out in desperate conditions, but seldom does the series actively show the Enterprise blazing a trail into the unknown. Many of her missions are routine work -- ferrying supplies from colony to colony, looking after alien dignitaries, protecting the space lanes, keeping up 'our' side in a cold war with hostile species -- a far cry from the premise at the heart of Wagon Train.
But, what if? Of the three proposed pilots, the one ultimately chosen, ''Where No Man Has Gone Before'', is the most Wagon Train-ish of the lot. The Enterprise is forging ahead out of our solar system, on what is (apparently) intended to be a long range mission into the unknown, leaving behind everything that is familiar. This is much more like Wagon Train than almost anything we get in the following TV episodes and movies. And yet, they largely dropped it once the network agreed to green-light the series. Episodes like ''The Corbomite Maneuver'' pay lip service to Enterprise mapping unknown areas of space, but it's hardly the bundle-everybody-up-in-a-stagecoach-and-forge-through-the-desert adventure that Wagon Train proposes. It isn't too long before Enterprise's mission is redefined as something much more..... 'ordinary'.
But yet, again, when The Next Generation came along, they returned to this premise..... for five minutes.

So where does this leave the remaining spin-offs? DS9 is the Star Trek which most overtly feels like a Western, a frontiers-town on the edge of space, but it isn't exactly Wagon Train. VOY has something closer to it in reverse: the crew in unfamiliar territory, but instead of forging forward to a new life, they crave to return home to the life they knew. So it doesn't exactly fit. ENT mired itself in 'local politics' again with all the Earth/Vulcan stuff.
Do any of us think that a Star Trek series that truly does Wagon Train in space would be an interesting idea?
