I just watched "The Devil in the Dark". This is the first time I've seen it in quite a while.
At first, when I started watching TOS in the '70's when I was a kid, I had mixed feelings about this episode. I found the Horta cheesy, especially during Spock's mind-melds. My feelings have evolved.
My attention refocused on the attitudes of the pergium miners and regarding the Horta as a character. The boys have to make a living, but they were not a good commentary on human nature. Too often people will turn a blind eye to negative personal and environmental impacts in pursuit of profit, and too often things can get reckless. The aging and dangerous pergium reactor scenario rings true. Sometimes to save on expenditures, natural resources extraction operators will keep using aging equipment past its viability, even when it is obvious that the old junk is no longer serviceable or safe. Whether this little bit of commentary was intentional on the part of TOS' makers is not clear to me, but it rings true and I am impressed with it.
The following little quote comes from Memory Alpha's article on this episode:
TNG tried, and, in my opinion, failed to do something (annoyingly) similar in its first-year ep "Home Soil". It was very disappointing to see the Enterprise-D's officers stumble onto what was clearly another silicon-based life form when it was obvious the idea was already part of a memorable TOS story almost exactly 20 year before. (This observation applies both in terms of the well-worn anti-TNG criticism about "retreads" and in-universe as well.) And since Starfleet already knew about the Crystalline Entity, the Enterprise-D's crew's surprise was all the more ridiculous.
Was "The Devil in the Dark" ahead of its time? Was it, at its heart, an environmental story? Was it not just about human diplomacy, but also about the notion that we as humans do not always command and control nature and dominate the landscape as competently as we wish to believe?
And wasn't the Horta, as both a character and a prop, an excellent example of how Star Trek could come up with a truly alien lifeform that is intelligent and ready to defend its own society's interests, without it appearing too "human"?
At first, when I started watching TOS in the '70's when I was a kid, I had mixed feelings about this episode. I found the Horta cheesy, especially during Spock's mind-melds. My feelings have evolved.
My attention refocused on the attitudes of the pergium miners and regarding the Horta as a character. The boys have to make a living, but they were not a good commentary on human nature. Too often people will turn a blind eye to negative personal and environmental impacts in pursuit of profit, and too often things can get reckless. The aging and dangerous pergium reactor scenario rings true. Sometimes to save on expenditures, natural resources extraction operators will keep using aging equipment past its viability, even when it is obvious that the old junk is no longer serviceable or safe. Whether this little bit of commentary was intentional on the part of TOS' makers is not clear to me, but it rings true and I am impressed with it.
The following little quote comes from Memory Alpha's article on this episode:
- Gene Roddenberry was impressed with the way this episode explains the behavior of a Star Trek "monster," citing the installment as "a classic example of doing this right" as well as "one of our most popular episodes." He went on to say, "The Horta suddenly became understandable [....] It wasn't just a monster–it was someone. And the audience could put themselves in the place of the Horta... identify... feel! That's what drama is all about. And that's it's importance, too... if you can learn to feel for a Horta, you may also be learning to understand and feel for other Humans of different colors, ways, and beliefs." (The Making of Star Trek, pp. 35 & 36)
TNG tried, and, in my opinion, failed to do something (annoyingly) similar in its first-year ep "Home Soil". It was very disappointing to see the Enterprise-D's officers stumble onto what was clearly another silicon-based life form when it was obvious the idea was already part of a memorable TOS story almost exactly 20 year before. (This observation applies both in terms of the well-worn anti-TNG criticism about "retreads" and in-universe as well.) And since Starfleet already knew about the Crystalline Entity, the Enterprise-D's crew's surprise was all the more ridiculous.
Was "The Devil in the Dark" ahead of its time? Was it, at its heart, an environmental story? Was it not just about human diplomacy, but also about the notion that we as humans do not always command and control nature and dominate the landscape as competently as we wish to believe?
And wasn't the Horta, as both a character and a prop, an excellent example of how Star Trek could come up with a truly alien lifeform that is intelligent and ready to defend its own society's interests, without it appearing too "human"?