3.15 — “Let That Be Your Last Battlefield”

3.15 — “Let That Be Your Last Battlefield”

Plot: The Enterprise takes aboard a fugitive, Lokai, with strange coloring, his face half black, half white along the vertical axis. He has stolen a shuttlecraft, and he is being pursued by another being of the same race, Bele, who also boards the Enterprise. They are from the planet Cheron, and the pursuit has lasted for 50,000 years. Lokai explains that his crime was to resist oppression visited on his people after the end of their slavery, while Bele claims that uprisings fomented by Lokai are responsible for thousands of deaths. Absent an extradition treaty, and not knowing who is in the right, Kirk resists Bele’s request that he surrender Lokai to justice. Eventually, the ship reaches Cheron to discover it has changed. Bele and Lokai must determine whether to move past their prejudice, or remain defined by their hate.

Thoughts: Hang it. This episode lacks a certain subtlety, and contains some bad dialogue that sounds uncharacteristic of the crew. But I still find this to be a dignified and memorable episode.

Frank Gorshin, a.k.a. The Riddler on Batman (1966-1968), is playing Two-Face here. He’s a terrific actor; you can’t take your eyes off him. The makeup on the aliens may look like greasepaint, I grant you, but it is striking nevertheless. 

Good scene involving the self destruct sequence, which was copied almost exactly using slightly different characters in Star Trek III. Great reactions from the supporting cast during this scene.

Pursuit for 50,000 years, though? Surely there is a statute of limitations. This epic pursuit unfortunately brings back memories of “The Alternative Factor.”

The downer ending distinguishes this episode from all but a few of its predecessors–”The City on the Edge of Forever” and “A Private Little War” make for good company. It’s too bad the episode couldn’t figure out how to make better use of Spock.

If you’re counting down to the end of the series, this is #10.

3 out of 5 stolen shuttlecraft.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Let_That_Be_Your_Last_Battlefield


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3 responses to “3.15 — “Let That Be Your Last Battlefield””

  1. Randi Cohen Avatar

    The ending where the two of them look like mime marionettes running against pics of burning houses was memorable.  I could not decide if it was ridiculous or tragic.

    Agreed, nice self-destruct sequence and bravado by Captain Kirk.  Also nice conserving on the special effects budget in this episode by having the aliens use an invisible ship!

    I liked the overall point that was made, so sweet that supposedly in Starfleet oppression is unknown, and the randomness of racism is made so clear by the face paint choice… overall I very much liked the episode and the actors.  It was kind of a one-trick-pony so I wanted more action at times, but fun nonetheless.

    Also very interesting that the rabble-rousing character was named Loki.  I can’t think of what the symbolism is in the name Commisioner Beal though.

    Overall: 3.5 out of 5 monotone people, who are apparently all alike.

  2. R. Alex Reutter Avatar

    I love Frank Gorshin; he’s great in anything.

    This is a great concept episode, but they really stretch the plot thin with heading to a planet, nearly being foiled in going to that planet, going to Starfleet, being foiled in going to Starfleet, and finally going to the planet of the star-bellied half-mime, half-blackface Sneetches (which published eight years prior to the airing of this episode and tells essentially the same story far more succinctly).

  3. Randi Cohen Avatar

    Hahaha, have to get that book for julia!

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