The COVID-19 pandemic has forced most of us to hunker down at home. Some particularly stir-crazy people have coped with this by watching a lot more TV. I am one such person. One program I’ve been returning to, on one of those old-timey stations, is Star Trek: The Original Series (TOS). Being 57 years old, I became enamored of Star Trek back in the early 1970s, when it went into syndication after completing its three-year run on NBC in 1969. Off and on for the last half-century, I’ve watched this show wherever I’ve been and have seen each episode numerous times. The one episode that stands out above all others is The Doomsday Machine that originally aired on TV in 1967 during the program’s second season. Many TOS fans agree that the 1967-68 season produced some of the best episodes of the series. Contrary to the opinion of most dedicated TOS fans, however, I believe The Doomsday Machine is the best of them all.
How can I possibly justify such a viewpoint? First, a brief description of Doomsday Machine. As this story opens, the starship Enterprise encounters a solar system devoid of most of its planets, as well as another Starfleet starship, Constellation. This vessel is wrecked, drifting in space, carrying only one survivor of the crew complement: Commodore Matt Decker. Several Enterprise crew members, including Captain James T. Kirk and chief engineer Montgomery “Scotty” Scott, beam aboard the derelict Constellation to search for survivors and take the vessel in tow. Decker tells Kirk that a robot planet-killer of immense size, power, and unknown origin attacked his ship, killed his crew (he had transported them to a planet that the planet-killer destroyed), and left him stranded in space. Decker, still in a state of shock, is transported back to the Enterprise, where he seizes command of Enterprise from first officer Spock. He orders the ship to attack this killing machine from “straight out of hell”—and fails as he had with Constellation. Meanwhile, Kirk and Scott manage to get Decker’s vessel moving and save Enterprise from imminent destruction. Subsequently, Decker is relieved from duty, steals a shuttlecraft, and pilots it directly into the maw of the planet-killer. With slight damage from Decker’s actions detected by Spock, Kirk takes the “calculated risk” of steering the battered hulk of Constellation directly inside this doomsday machine and detonating the vessel’s impulse engines. Kirk’s gamble pays off with the usual last-minute Trekian dramatics, destroying the galactic menace once and for all.
My reasons for Doomsday Machine as TOS’s best episode (in no particular order):
With all of this in mind, I find The Doomsday Machine to be the best TOS episode, and my personal favorite. Now I’ll have to muse upon what I believe to be the worst Star Trek episode—but that will have to be another blog post!
What do you think? Which episode of Star Trek: The Original Series is the best?
Disclaimer: the opinion expressed is that of the writer. It does not represent an endorsement by the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum.
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