Title :
That Which Survives
Series :
Rating :
Overall Ep :
70
First Aired :
24 Jan 1969
Stardate :
Unknown
Director :
Year :
Writers :
Season Ep :
YATI :
Before Losira kills the Engineer on the Enterprise, she describes one or two of the ship's functions to him. He calls out to Scotty that a strange woman knows every detail of the ship's systems. I know he was caught by surprise here, but this seems like a rather sweeping exaggeration.
Spock claims that the planet has a size about equal to Earth's moon, and yet a mass about equal to the Earth itself. This allows one to calculate the surface gravity of the planet, and it comes out to 13.5 times Earth's own gravity. That would make the men on the surface weigh something like a ton each! To be fair, Kirk does respond to the size and mass figures by saying "that would be difficult to explain", so it may just be that this isn't so much a mistake as an example of just how weird and inexplicable this planet is.
When Kirk tries to bury D'Amato he phasers the ground and discovers a red rock that the phaser won't cut through. He then phasers another spot about ten feet away and they see the same red rock. McCoy then comments that the whole planet must be made of this stuff. Really, Doctor? From sampling two spots on the ground, both in close proximity, you generalise to the entire planet?! Hell, we SEE rocks sticking up out of the ground that aren't red like this stuff!
Great Moment :
It's somewhat surreal to see Kirk trying to avoid touching a beautiful woman.
Body Count :
Two or Three?
Factoid :
This episode features the Enterprise travelling at Warp Factor 14.1, a record for the ship.
Plotline
The Enterprise investigates a planet whose composition seem to violate every known type. As a landing party beams down a mysterious woman appears in the transporter room and touches the technician, killing him instantly. As the officers frantically call the ship it is hurled a thousand light years through space, stranding them there. As the Enterprise returns at full speed Kirk and his officers try to survive. The same woman reappears on both the ship and planet periodically, always attempting to kill a crewmember by touching them.
The landing party investigates the planet further, eventually locaing an underground control centre. The planet is artificial, created by an ancient and powerful race as a colony world. However the race, named the Kalandans, were destroyed in a vicious plague. The woman who has been appearing is an image of the leader of a team who served on the planet; an automated defence system has been projecting the image in an attempt to keep outsiders away from the base. With the system deactivated and the mystery solved, Kirk beams back to the Enterprise and proceeds on course to his next mission. On a peculiar planet, the Enterprise must face a woman who can kill with a single touch.
Analysis
A rather silly episode in some ways. The use of a person's image as part of an automated defence system seems like a bizarre choice for a weapon - engaging enemies a handful at a time when surely something like a phaser cannon used against the ship would have been rather more effective. And if the machine has the power to throw a Starship a thousand light years away, surely it must have the power to destroy it easily?
The idea of an artificial planet is an interesting one. The size of Earth's moon - 3,475 kilometres give or take, and massing as much as the Earth - 6 billion trillion tons or so, this is a seriously impressive project to take on. In volume terms alone it would be like building tens of trillions of ships like the Enterprise. As a minor nit, though, a planet with that size and mass would have a surface gravity more than thirteen times that of Earth. There's no way a Human being would be able to walk around in such a place, let alone do so with the ease that Kirk and company do. One might assume that the Kalandans have some sort of artificial gravity technology going on, which would again be a massively impressive feat of technology on something planetoid sized; it might be slightly more reasonable to assume that the Enterprise folk have some handy little doodad on the back of their belts that compensates for high gee worlds.