1.13 “The Conscience of the King”
A dagger, a stabbing. Is this Star Trek? Did we click on the wrong link? Ah, Kirk and some guy we’ve never seen before are watching MacBeth. So begins Star Trek’s star-crossed love affair with Shakespeare.
Who is Kodos?
Kirk is in trouble because this Guy we’ve never seen before lied to him? Shades of the Menagerie, when they tried to shame Spock for getting Kirk in trouble. And, like Pike, we have a guy who can’t be helped by 23rd century plastic surgery.
So, if this is Star Trek’s first foray into Shakespeare, who is who? If Kodos is a Claudius/MacBeth mashup, then Plastic surgery guy is the ghost, which means… uh, oh, Kirk is Hamlet (Shatner Does Hamlet).
Kodos was deposed 20 years ago? How is Kirk old enough to have seen him? Didn’t he grow up on Earth? Yep, Kirk is definitely Hamlet. Ah, and Kodos has a 19-year-old space vixen daughter. Time for Kirk to break out the suave act! Out for a walk… space vixen’s outfit is terrible. Tom is found dead. Interesting mystery here; nice maneuvering by Kirk to get the troupe on board, but why would Kirk not confide in Spock to help catch “the conscience of the king”?
Hey, Lt. Riley again! Sadly (looking at the IMDB) this is the last time we see him. Also the last time we see Yeoman Rand until Star Trek: the Movie. I missed her. Where did she show up?
Oh, McCoy and Spock banter as they figure out what Kirk is up to. This scene is an absolute pleasure, and getting to see it makes Kirk’s stupidity at not bringing Spock into his confidence worthwhile.
ANOTHER crazy outfit for the space vixen actress! “Surging, throbbing, yet under control?” Space vixen has quite the moves; she’s playing Kirk somehow.
Aw, man. Kirk sent Riley down to engineering and didn’t tell security to keep an eye on him? And now he’s gonna die by spray bottle? Milk! It… does a body good. (gaahgrahagh)
McCoy and Spock confront Kirk, who claims “captain’s personal business”. Risking a crewmember’s life and screwing with the starship’s schedule is a captain’s “personal business”? They’re trying hard in this scene, but while deduction isn’t enough to convict a man, “feeling” is even less sufficient.
Interesting that Kirk confronts Kodos directly. This is a reversal of Hamlet, who isn’t sure until he’s as good as dead that Claudius is his father’s murderer. What are we going to do for the last 20 minutes? Well, we could examine the differences between Hamlet’s situation and Kirk’s… but, we won’t.
This is really weird that Kodos accuses Kirk of being mechanized and unmerciful, when Kodos is the one guilty of murdering half the population of a colony without mercy, and Kirk has shown great circumspection (for Kirk) in his investigations. Not impressed with the overall writing on this one.
Twist ending! I don’t want to spoil it.
I really enjoyed watching Barbara Anderson in this episode, but a little too much Shakespeare quoting right at the end here.
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