Yep, that's the longest title of any
TOS episode, in case you weren't sure. Look at them all half-assing it on only one knee in the above picture.
This is an episode with remarkable parallels to
The Paradise Syndrome, but it's not done nearly as well, IMO, and unfortunately, it reuses many of the same sets, props, and ship shots, making it a bit of a disappointment for those looking for something new. Luckily, the re-mastered version at least gives us new images.
Yet this story has some pretty good elements (particularly of the heating variety, ha ha,) but it's just not as good as Syndrome. Worth watching, yes, and some different ideas, and different characters in different roles (McCoy, instead of Kirk, falling for the beautiful high priestess). The best thing about this episode is probably the speculation as to how this situation arose, and what might occur on a multigenerational ship. And we get to see a third marriage ceremony - now with one for each of the three major characters, Kirk, Spock, and McCoy.
We open with the bridge on red alert, tension is high, though the danger is actually pretty low. Who is shooting at us? The weapons are a joke, but still - so while Kirk could easily sidestep sublight missiles, he decides it's best to destroy them, and rightly so. Sadly, while the re-worked 6 independently moving missiles are nicer than the older static 6 that were in lockstep with one another, their destruction isn't as impressive. The old effect was just a blast with a blinding white screen, while the new effect is a weaker, less impressive set of simultaneous explosions. And who or why they fired is never really explained, so . . .
But the asteroid and ship shots are sooooooooooooo much better.
Side-By-Side Comparison
Kirk orders the ship to travel at warp 3 to the missiles' point of origin. Weird. Sublight missiles shouldn't have been that far away from their origin, and yet at warp 3, the time it took Kirk to learn of McCoy's illness would have been way too much. Suffice it to say, it doesn't exactly add up. No way could Yonada (the asteroid ship) have seen the Enterprise that far out with its far more primitive tech, so there's a slight disconnect there.
Yonada is, apparently, a nuclear powered hollowed out natural asteroid 200 miles in diameter. I imagine, to leave hard radiation and move something that size, a series of fission explosions are used - perhaps similar to the Orion Project concept.
FYI, it'd take a rocky mass about 350 miles wide or larger to collapse into a sphere under its own gravity, and this asteroid is < 200 miles D, so we're good here (unlike in Syndrome where the decidedly non-spherical so-called asteroid was the size of our moon). FYI, the Death Star from
Star Wars was 100 miles in diameter, so about half the size of Yonada, while our moon is over 2,000 miles in diameter.
Yonada has a hollow shell that surrounds the inner world, which is also at least partially hollow - we've no idea how large the population is or how far down they go, so no clue how many people are there - unlike Daran V whose population of almost 4 billion is in danger thanks to Yonada being off course. I inferred the Federation was willing to blow up Yonada to save Daran V, but thankfully, though he might have been disobeying orders, Kirk found a much better solution, and it's hard to argue with success (and that lovely database they picked up, too), free for the taking.
Perhaps a few "mountains" connect the inner core to the outer shell to stabilize it - this would make it literally possible for a man to climb the mountains and touch the sky. But this outer shell is mostly used to contain an atmosphere for the inner surface and it would seem it also acts as a screen upon which to project a reddish sky (and a sun, I think) during the day and stars at night (Natira has even seen the sun and the stars, she says). We don't get to see that fake projection, but we can infer it must be there.
Yonada has been traveling along at (I assume) sublight speeds for 10,000 years. Honestly, that's a long-ass time, and despite that, you probably wouldn't get very far in just 10K years at the sublight speeds you could likely generated for a ship that size. Compare 10K years to 2K years here since Christ, or 5K years since ancient Egypt, or older 12K years since the glaciers melted and some of us moved into North America, and things really began to hop along for us. We hardly know squat from so far back. Now just ponder a civilization that's been trucking along for 10K years and marvel at it. Do they know much, have they changed much, or what?
One may speculate as to why the creators would wish to fool its people into believing they were on a planet and not a ship, but that assumes a few things not in evidence. Given the oppressive and harsh religious nature of the oracle, one might be closer to the truth to assume "subcultures" have come and gone, civil wars have occurred, and religious cleansing became the norm, the winning religious fanatical faction having taken power and then reprogramming the oracle to be more pious and faithful, and harsher to infidels and blasphemers (pain, or even death awaiting those who even questioned its authority, or the true word of the creators, whatever that might be). Perhaps all that was done to insure the greater mission, or just enforce their current beliefs as of the last war, and after 10K years, it's not surprising dogma might eclipse science, sort of like the dark ages did here. Such a limited society might have a better chance of surviving a long journey than one where freedom or anarchy or choice reigned. Harsh? Yes, but perhaps practical, given the circumstances.
In any event, it might be foolish to assume the way that society is now is the way it's always been for the last 10K years. It could be wildly different than how it started out, where they might have known the mission and everything. But they just lost that knowledge.
I'm impressed with the "mind reading" technology, but maybe the implanted chip of obedience just registered normal biometrics and it was the external and ubiquitous cameras and microphones that allowed the oracle to know who was saying what and when they were breaking the faith. This seems more likely than tech that can actually read minds. But if so, the oracle obviously doesn't bother looking at everything all the time. Otherwise, Kirk and Spock couldn't have gone unnoticed for so long. Then again, it might just be in the habit of tracking and looking at and listening to chipped inhabitants, so only when Natira arrived did it notice Kirk and Spock. Yeah, that's the ticket.
I scoff at the apparent ease and availability of knowledge about the Fabrini race, stellar system, and language that Spock happens to have. If that system went supernova 10K years ago, I'm surprised anything of the system remained to be examined, like an archeological record or ruins. Maybe if they were a more advanced, spacefaring race on multiple planets in multiple stellar systems, O.K., but the whole idea here is they were more primitive than the Federation and what they could save was represented on their asteroid ship, everything else having been lost. So how does Spock know Fabrini, how do they know the stellar system had 8 planets, etc.? I feel they knew too much for realism's sake. Or maybe the Federation picked up a galactic database that was older than 10K years, so it would still have that kind of information in it. Spock is truly a marvel to know all that stuff. Then again, maybe he's just the type to cram and review everything about the area of space they are scheduled to go into. He is a good scout, that Vulcan.
And how convenient that McCoy suddenly has a fatal illness that has no cure only to find the cure that very week? That was weak all right. Sure, it gave him a more compelling reason to end his days shacked up with the priestess, but he seems to have blown her off quickly enough. Still, their romance seemed more honest and genuine than Spock's and the Romulan commander's, or Spock's and Leila Kolami's, though less romantic than Kirok's and Miramanee's, except Kirk lost his mind so that doesn't count for Kirk. Well, you know what they say. Ironically, love isn't in the stars for these boys.
And, of course, we scoff again at Spock and his tricorder, not only downloading a civilization's amassed information in seconds, but also picking the very thing out of the bunch they needed. Lucky, that.
I wonder why Yonada needs armed guards, given how effective the oracle is at discipline. I also wonder why it would restrain itself from using its obviously more effective weaponry to stop Kirk and Spock, and instead used heating elements and wind - a slow, sloppy, very uncertain means of stopping anyone. I'd like to think it was programmed to put one last scare into anyone attempting to retake control, since maybe the plan was for somebody to do just that, but they wanted to make sure whoever was doing it had the will to do so and didn't cower at the angry computer.
While Kirk bested the computer again, this time he didn't out talk it or out think it - he just sidestepped it. Perhaps, as I suggested, it allowed him to do that.
For what it's worth, I also strongly suspect the people of Fabrini are humans transplanted by the preservers - and therefore with the same DNA as humans 10K to 12K years or even much longer ago when they picked a bunch up off Earth (or where ever). How else could the same diseases plague both species and the cures easily work on both, too? Lots of humans in the galaxy due to those preserver guys, and they were at work about 12K+ years or more ago, so they could have populated the Fabrini system, and later even helped build their asteroid ship, Yonada, as a second transplant to save most the that garden. You just can never tell with those guys. But maybe after 2K+ years the people themselves discovered the sun where they were transplanted was going to go, and so had to escape on their own. Otherwise, the remarkable similarities between humanoid species are just too great.
I have to wonder that since Yonada was on a collision course with Daran V in 396 days, and by the end of the episode, they were scheduled to reach their destination in 390 days, whether Daran V wasn't indeed their intended destination (or at least another suitable planet in that same stellar system). At that speed, in that time, they could hardly make it to another stellar system. And one also has to wonder how the creators knew where a new suitable planet would be (though the preservers may have known). Far more likely such a multigenerational ship shot would be hit or miss - go to another stellar system and then see if something there is suitable - and if not, push on to the next closet stellar system (perhaps after harvesting some raw materials from the current stellar system to restock yourselves for the long journey of another few dozen generations). Well, maybe the nearly 4 billion people of Daran V can make room for the people of Yonada, now that they are no longer going to collide with them but simply settle into a nearby orbit (I would assume). Maybe they've written some follow up novels to this story, but if so, I don't know them.
Quite frankly, I'd be quite willing to welcome them if the people of Daran V got to keep and use such a massive self-sustaining ship – it would be highly useful. And the medical records and other knowledge? Forget about it (I mean, happily take and use it).
One of my favorite parts in the episode was where Spock helped the weakened McCoy (after the first oracle zapping, Spock seemed more concerned for McCoy than normal) revealing instantly to McCoy that Kirk must have told Spock about the doctor's illness, and that Spock cared for the doctor as a friend. And McCoy also understood Kirk's position and didn't hold the violation of trust against him. These are 3 good friends, and quite a bit of that interrelationship between the trio can be discerned in that simple scene. Loved it.
Our beauty of the day is Katherine Woodville playing the high priestess, Natira. She was enough to turn the doctor's head. I tend to hate the 60's hairstyles, but otherwise . . . and I actually liked her dress. It was provocative and it seemed almost practical - not like it needed to be glued on or held together with impractical pins or tape.
Jon Lormer has his third and last of three appearances - first as an old scientist in
The Cage, then as Tamar in
The Return Of The Archons, and finally here as the old man in
For The World Is Hollow And I Have Touched The Sky. The music used for him was identical in
The Cage and this episode.
Once again, let's hear it for Jimmy Doohan's voice talent as the Oracle. If you didn't know it, it's hard to believe that voice is from the same guy as our beloved engineer.
Well, I felt the episode lacked a few things, or tripped up too much, or was too repetitive, or just slow. It left stuff to be desired, and a similar, better episode was already out there. So I gave it a 4 out of 10 before. But with new re-mastered footage, I raised that to a 5 out of 10.