This episode was so good, they made it twice.
Well, this was said of
Star Trek: The Motion Picture - aka -
Star Trek: Where Nomad Has Gone Before.
Unfortunately, you have to overlook some inconsistent and meaningless numbers that are tossed around in the beginning since they don't hold up well with other Trek lore and are, quite frankly, unbelievable. For example, the fact Nomad is a scant 90,000 kilometers away, yet is firing energy bolts at warp 15 that take quite a long while to travel that insignificantly small distance. (Are there some weird relativistic time dilation effects going on here?) Or just the fact they have warp 15 and later warp 10 - speeds which are theoretically impossible on the warp scale in "normal" space, though their subspace tech obviously already operates at ultra warp speeds - this is not that.
Then there's the huge item of each energy bolt being the equivalent of 90 photon torpedoes, yet the Enterprise could take 3 more of those - that's 360 total torpedoes! No way. To make it worse, they shoot Nomad once - just once - and when it absorbs the energy of a single torpedo, they think that's incredible and simply unbelievable. What in the universe could do that - despite having done 90 times better themselves already. They wanted impressive numbers, though, and didn't seem to care if they made sense or not elsewhere. Also, while the first bolt rocked the ship to and fro (for a jolly good teaser) subsequent bolts didn't seem to do nearly as much. I guess they adjusted their shields or their inertial dampeners a bit, or Scotty's diversion of warp engine power to the shields did a lot more good than Spock's estimate (unless Spock already assumed Scotty would do that long before he did it). And again, with so much time in 3D space, they should have been able to sidestep those bolts. Or is that another relativistic effect, and it just seems longer on that axis, but step left or right or on a different axis and time dilation is no longer your friend, so what seems like half a minute is but a fraction of a real second? I wonder if I tried to work that out if it would hold up, or I'm just confused? No matter.
As a retcon, I assume Spock misspoke and their shields didn't "absorb" the energy of 90 photon torpedoes from each bolt, but did its job, which is absorbed what they couldn't redirect around the ship. After all, most of that would pass the ship and not just collapse in on it, so Spock meant to say those bolts had that much energy, but the shields only had to absorb a small fraction of that while the rest was pushed to the sides and around the ship. It still lowered the shield strength by 20% each hit, so that's a lot. However, Nomad did apparently absorb the FULL power of the photon torpedo, apart from the flash of light, and that is quite frankly incredible (perhaps partially due to the size to energy ratio).
Then, naturally, there's the problem of how an Earth probe could get that far out into space. Again, the vast distances of interstellar space are either ignored or underestimated. For something launched in 2002 and that was supposed to be an interstellar probe, it might have been assumed to have warp drive - but later, they adopt the notion human civilization didn't obtain warp capability until 2063 - about 61 years after the launch of the Nomad probe. Thus, the Nomad probe would have been technologically incapable of carrying out its stated interstellar mission, to seek out life in other stellar systems. One would also hope the other, the alien probe, Tan Ru - was from a nearby civilization, but I guess that's not a necessity - we sure never encounter a nearby civilization so powerful that their mere probes command that kind of energy (but hey, maybe it was also sent back in time and not just space, and Nomad first went to Tan Ru's point of origin and sterilized that, so when and if the Federation ever comes across it, it's just a dead civilization. Too bad. Tan Ru sure was incredibly powerful - too powerful, which seems weird due to the nature of its mission - collecting and sterilizing soil samples. How powerful do you have to be to do that? At least for
Star Trek: The Motion Picture they corrected these flaws and made the story and V'Ger's goals more believable, but even then you have to accept a black hole did something that would require a worm hole to do, so we again should probably assume Decker was wrong and meant Voyager encountered a worm hole, and maybe Nomad did, too, after it was presumed destroyed by a "meteor" collision. OTOH, I think I read what we, today, call a black hole, isn't what they call a black hole 300 years from now, since that term will later cover a larger range of stellar conditions and phenomena than just a singularity. But then they don't know the difference between a meteor or a meteoroid, either, so what can you expect?
Then there's Uhura - singing "Beyond Antares," who gets her mind wiped clean by Nomad. This must have been another incorrect assessment of the damage done - otherwise there's no real coming back from that. So, we'll assume Nomad didn't wipe out her memories but temporarily interrupted Uhura's ability to access them. Otherwise, her childhood memories and identity and even her native language would be forever gone, and it would take a hell of a lot longer than a few days to reeducate her for StarFleet service. Sure, I suppose future teaching and learning techniques may be extraordinary, and sometimes I think they must be, but this is inconsistent with the years of training necessary at the academy and other things - and also the old school method Nurse Chapel was using to teach Uhura how to read English - and that was after she had already taught Uhura her native Swahili, we assume. Weird stuff going on there, unless they were just reconnecting the neural pathways to the still existing memories, so we'll go with that. Or maybe since the transporter beams your memories with you (it's a good bit a tech) they could reconfigure Uhura's memories to the last time she transported so she'd only lose a little bit of time (but let's not go there – we really, really, should not go there). Obviously, I don't fully understand transporter technology, either.
Standard issue sexist joke about women is given - they are a mass of conflicting impulses. Ha ha ha, the 60's were a hoot.
It's interesting that Spock can mind-meld with a machine - I guess it just takes a sufficiently complex level of sophistication to qualify for a "mind," or "living," or a "soul," or however you might wish to describe it - and I don't fully understand Vulcan mysticism, either.
So, Nomad wiped out 4 billion lives that we know of (in one stellar system that had 4 inhabited planets, even the latter part of that statement seems unlikely, but I guess it could happen), and probably many more civilizations before they encountered it. Nomad killed 4 red shirts (at least two of which were lieutenants, maybe more, but I didn't take note). This is mostly Kirk's fault, IMO, since he should have better informed the security teams phasers were useless and just trying them would just get them killed. And despite that, it doesn't seem to bother him as much as some other deaths. Maybe saving the Earth makes it seem all worth it. Probably when he sits down and has time to and has to write up the reports and the letters to their families, it'll hit him harder. Let's hope.
Scotty is killed and Doctor McCoy proclaims,
"He's dead, Jim," after one of the best stunt flips on the bridge that I can recall, as Scott's body-double sails over the railing after Nomad zaps him - it was pretty cool. Alas, why Scotty deserves the "non-disintegration" form of death ray but other redshirts get the full treatment, I can't say for sure. Maybe because Scotty was actually touching Nomad's screens, so less force was used to prevent blowback on Nomad, which was still more than sufficient for the job.
The new effects are there, as always - new ship shots, new Nomad bolts and its final destruction, but nothing extraordinary. Better, yes, maybe even a lot better, but nothing to improve the overall story.
Kirk uses logic to best a machine again - he does this 4 or 5 times in TOS, but I always appreciate it, and here, though Spock compliments him, he also insults him by saying he didn't think the captain had it in him, which is a pretty funny delivery.
Of course one might wonder WHY, once Nomad allowed them to beam it aboard, they didn't just fail to rematerialize it and just scatter its energy around. Problem solved. Maybe Nomad had a way to prevent that - like its own systems to complete transport. I don't fully understand transporter technology, either. It might be the case events are more simultaneous than often depicted.
Vic Perrin supplies the voice for Nomad, but we've already heard him as a Metron, and we’ll later see him the next episode,
Mirror, Mirror as Tharn and Tharn's evil twin, though they don't really seem to be opposites for some reason.
He was also the voice of the evil Dr. Zin in the 1960s cartoon,
Jonny Quest, but I don't really see the resemblance.
On second thought . . .
I had given this episode an 8 out of 10 before for sheer excitement, but it's filled with so many silly numbers and mistakes and improbable circumstances to stupid actions, so I dropped it to 7 out of 10. Still, with improved effects and the fact most people won't know or care how bad those numbers are, for most viewers it would still be an 8 out of 10 since it's exciting and gripping, thought provoking, and we humans beat the machine again, so that's always nice. Too bad it was mostly due to dumb luck and the coincidence of Kirk's name sounding similar to Nomad's creator's name that even gave them a chance. If any other StarShip encountered Nomad, they'd have been dead before they could even figure out who or what killed them, and Earth would be gone. So just know, even though Kirk is one in a million, and perhaps more, and the youngest guy to make captain of a starship at that time, IIRC, it's not just his skill, but a lot of dumb luck. Is it any wonder so many other starships just get destroyed or lose their whole crews in the first three years of this mission?