Charlie X (episode)
A powerful teenage boy wreaks havoc aboard the Enterprise .
- 1.2 Act One
- 1.3 Act Two
- 1.4 Act Three
- 1.5 Act Four
- 2 Log entries
- 3 Memorable quotes
- 4.1 Production timeline
- 4.2 Story and production
- 4.3 Performers
- 4.5 Props and special effects
- 4.6 Costumes
- 4.7 Continuity
- 4.8 Script vs. screen
- 4.9 Preview
- 4.10 Reception
- 4.11 Syndication cuts
- 4.12 Apocrypha
- 4.13 Remastered information
- 4.14 Video and DVD releases
- 5.1 Starring
- 5.2 Also starring
- 5.3 Guest star
- 5.4 Featuring
- 5.5 Uncredited co-stars
- 5.6 Stunt double
- 5.7 Stand-ins
- 5.8 References
- 5.9 Unreferenced material
- 6 External links
Summary [ ]
The USS Enterprise makes a rendezvous with the Antares , a small cargo ship . While investigating the planet Thasus , the Antares discovered an adolescent boy named Charles Evans , the sole survivor of a ship crash who has lived on his own since age three. Evans transfers to the Enterprise , which is on its way to Colony Alpha 5 , where Evans' only relatives live.
Captain Ramart and his navigator and first officer , Tom Nellis , are eager to be on their way after beaming aboard the Enterprise , even refusing Captain Kirk 's offer of Saurian brandy , as well as entertainment tapes . But they are also effusive in their praise of Charlie. Charlie interrupts Ramart and Nellis a couple of times, which prompts Kirk to say to him, " You keep interrupting, Mr. Evans. That's considered wrong. " Yeoman Janice Rand enters the transporter room and Kirk asks her to show Charlie to his quarters and to drop off his medical records at sickbay . Innocently, Charlie asks Captain Kirk if Yeoman Rand is a girl. " That's a girl, " the captain replies. Rand escorts Charlie out, much to Kirk's amusement.
Act One [ ]
Charlie's first crush – Yeoman Janice Rand
After a routine check-up by Dr. McCoy , Charlie attempts to learn and integrate, demonstrating the effect of his years away from all Human contact. At the same time, strange incidents occur in his vicinity. Charlie is also struggling mightily with adolescence and with his first crush – the Captain's beautiful yeoman – Janice Rand. After observing Crewman Wilson and a sciences division crewman slapping each other casually, Charlie does the same to Yeoman Rand's behind in a corridor , shocking her. Afterward, Rand advises Charlie to tell Captain Kirk or Dr. McCoy what he had just done and ask them for advice. Afterwards, in the Enterprise 's recreation room on deck three, Uhura is singing " Oh, On the Starship Enterprise " to a rapt Rand and other crew members. When Rand ignores Charlie's card tricks; he secretly uses his power to silence Uhura's voice, as well as the sounds coming from Spock 's Vulcan lute , so that he can have Rand's undivided attention. Charlie then proceeds with a few card tricks – such as turning cards face down, and then turning them over again to reveal color photographs of Rand on the playing side. This amuses Rand and others in the crew lounge, who applaud Charlie appreciatively.
Later, in a corridor, Kirk is advising a galley chef that on Earth today it is Thanksgiving , and if the crew of the Enterprise has to eat synthetic meat loaf , he wants it to look like turkey . Just then, Charlie arrives and tells Kirk of the trouble he had interacting with Rand earlier. Kirk awkwardly attempts to explain that men and women do things differently, but before he can elaborate further to Charlie, Kirk is asked to come up to the bridge by Uhura.
At extreme range, Captain Ramart attempts to contact the Enterprise and speak to Captain Kirk, but before he can say more than " I've got to warn… ", his ship is destroyed. Charlie advises Kirk that " It wasn't very well constructed, " a strange comment, since it comes before Spock actually confirms the Antares 's destruction.
Kirk is then hailed by the Enterprise 's chef , who tells the captain that he had put meatloaf in the ovens , but there are turkeys in them now – real turkeys. Charlie laughs at hearing this, then leaves the bridge abruptly, leaving Kirk feeling that Charlie is hiding something.
Act Two [ ]
" She's not the girl, Charlie "
Kirk and Spock are pondering the destruction of the Antares during a game of three-dimensional chess when Charlie walks in and asks to play. After defeating Spock in an "illogical approach" to the game, Kirk turns it over to Charlie, during which Spock easily beats him in two moves. When Charlie gets angry, Spock leaves and then Charlie uses his powers to melt the white chess pieces. Afterwards, Rand introduces Charlie to Yeoman Tina Lawton , who is near Charlie's age. Charlie ignores Lawton, hurting her feelings, after which Rand tells Charlie that he was rude to her. Charlie then makes his feelings known to Rand that he wants her and only her, which makes the yeoman feel very uneasy. Rand goes to the bridge and wants Kirk to have a talk with Charlie before she asks the young man to leave her alone, which will hurt his feelings. Calling Charlie to his quarters , Kirk takes pity on the young man and attempts to befriend him, taking him to the physical training room for some light sparring. Initially refusing to participate, Charlie falls awkwardly and prompts laughter from Sam , Kirk's sparring partner. Humiliated and angry, Charlie makes Sam disappear, revealing his powers.
Act Three [ ]
Kirk immediately calls for security to escort Charlie back to his quarters. But Charlie resists, knocking down the two security officers with his powers. One of them draws his phaser , but Charlie makes it disappear. However, he finally agrees to go to his quarters after Kirk tells the young man that he will personally pick him up and take him there himself if he does not. After Charlie and security leaves Kirk is informed by Uhura that all phasers on board the Enterprise have disappeared. Later, in the briefing room discussing Charlie to McCoy and Spock following the incident in the gymnasium, Kirk speculates that Charlie might be a Thasian , but McCoy doubts this based on his medical analysis results.
Uhura's communication console explodes
Charlie then enters and Kirk asks him outright if he was responsible for the Antares ' destruction. Confronted, Charlie admits to destroying the Antares by making a warped baffle plate in its energy pile "go away". He defends his action by claiming that the ship would have blown up anyway, and that the crew weren't nice to him and tried to get rid of him. He leaves and Spock tells Kirk and McCoy, " We're in the hands of an adolescent. "
Yeoman Lawton turned into an iguana
Charlie, his powers now common knowledge, takes over control of the Enterprise , starting with Charlie causing Uhura's communications console to explode, preventing Kirk from sending a distress signal and causing Uhura second-degree burns on her hands. He wants to go to Colony 5; Kirk knows that the mayhem he would create in that unstructured setting would be far worse than what he's done so far on the Enterprise . Charlie then begins his reign of terror. Passing Yeoman Lawton in the corridor, he turns her into an iguana . When he enters Rand's quarters with a pink rose - after he found out that pink was the yeoman's favorite color, Rand is in her nightdress and is shocked and angry that Charlie came in her room without knocking. When Rand asks Charlie what he wants, he says he only wants her. Rand is able to activate a communication device in her room. On the bridge, Kirk and Spock hear the conversation, and leave the bridge to rescue Yeoman Rand.
Act Four [ ]
Crew woman loses her face
Kirk and Spock rush to Rand's room and try to stop Charlie, but he throws them against the wall, and breaks Spock's legs in the process. A shocked and angry Rand slaps Charlie across the face, to which he responds by making her "go away." Charlie refuses to tell Kirk what he did to her. He then releases both Kirk and Spock after he realizes that he needs their help to run the Enterprise . Rigging a force field, the crew attempts to confine Charlie in his own quarters, but he makes the force field disappear. He then goes on a rampage, turning a young crewmember into an old lady, ordering a group of crew members to stop laughing by removing their faces. One of them - a woman - comes out into the corridor, groping the wall and still able to make vocal sounds and Charlie freezes another crewwoman as he walks past her.
A Thasian appearing on the bridge
Determined to stop Charlie before he can reach Colony 5, Kirk speculates that in taking over the ship, Charlie may have reached his limit. He therefore attempts, with the help of Spock and McCoy, to overload the boy's abilities by ordering all of the ship's systems to be activated.
In the midst of the struggle, a ship from Thasus appears. It is at this point that Charlie begs to stay with the Enterprise crew. The Thasians restore the Enterprise back to normal and return Yeoman Rand on the bridge, looking startled and confused. The Thasian explains to the bridge crew that they granted Charlie immense powers so he could live. The Thasian expresses regret at the loss of the Antares , but reassures Kirk that crew and ship have been fully restored to him. The Thasian also tells Kirk it would be impossible for Charlie to live a normal life with his own people, and despite Charlie's pleas to stay with the crew, the Thasians return him to their vessel and depart. Rand – with tears in her eyes – moves instinctively close to Kirk, seated in his captain's chair. As she leans on the chair, Kirk laments, " It's all right, Yeoman. It's all over now. " McCoy leads Rand from the bridge to her room as the Enterprise moves on in space.
Log entries [ ]
- Captain's log, USS Enterprise (NCC-1701), 2266
Memorable quotes [ ]
" You keep interrupting, Mr. Evans. That's considered wrong. "
" Is that a girl? " " That's a girl. "
" There's no right way to hit a woman. "
" If I had the whole universe, I'd give it to you. When I see you, I feel like I'm hungry all over. Hungry. Do you know how that feels? "
" Charlie, there are a million things in this universe you can have and there are a million things you can't have. It's no fun facing that, but that's the way things are. "
" Sir, I put meatloaf in the ovens. There's turkeys in there now. Real turkeys. "
" He's a boy in a man's body, trying to be an adult with the adolescence in him getting in the way. "
" There's a – Tyger, tyger, burning bright, in the forest of the night. "
" I'm trying to – Saturn rings around my head, don a robe that's Martian red. "
" Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary. " " Very nice, Mister Ears. "
" Growing up isn't so much. I'm not a man, and I can do anything! You can't. "
" Yeoman Rand? Is she dead, gone, destroyed?" " I won't tell you."
" I've waited long enough. I'm going to take him on! "
" I can make you all go away… anytime I want to! "
" Don't let them take me… I – I can't even TOUCH them! "
" I want to stay…stay…stay…stay… "
Background information [ ]
Production timeline [ ].
- Original story premise in Star Trek is... : 11 March 1964
- Story outline "Charlie Is God" by Gene Roddenberry : 23 April 1964
- Revised story outline: 28 August 1964
- Story outline "Charlie X" by Gene Roddenberry: 14 April 1966
- Story outline by Gene Roddenberry: 23 April 1966
- Story outline by D.C. Fontana : 27 April 1966
- Revised outline: 9 May 1966
- First draft teleplay by Fontana: 6 June 1966
- Second draft teleplay: 27 June 1966
- Staff rewrite: 30 June 1966
- Final draft teleplay by Gene Roddenberry : 5 July 1966
- Additional revisions: 11 July 1966 , 13 July 1966
- Day 1 – 11 July 1966 , Monday (Half Day) – Desilu Stage 9 : Int. Sickbay , Kirk's quarters
- Day 2 – 12 July 1966 , Tuesday – Desilu Stage 9 : Int. Corridors , Bridge
- Day 3 – 13 July 1966 , Wednesday – Desilu Stage 9 : Int. Bridge
- Day 4 – 14 July 1966 , Thursday – Desilu Stage 9 : Int. Recreation room (redress of Briefing room )
- Day 5 – 15 July 1966 , Friday – Desilu Stage 9 : Int. Transporter room , Janice Rand's quarters
- Day 6 – 18 July 1966 , Monday – Desilu Stage 9 : Int. Briefing room , Gymnasium (redress of Engineering )
- Day 7 – 19 July 1966 , Tuesday – Desilu Stage 9 : Int. Corridors (including Brig ), Tie-down vfx shot of Abraham Sofaer
- Score recording: 29 August 1966
- Original airdate: 15 September 1966
- Repeated: 1 June 1967
- First UK airdate (on BBC1 ): 13 September 1969
- First UK airdate (on ITV ): 13 September 1981
Story and production [ ]
- Gene Roddenberry had written a one-sentence synopsis of this episode on the first page of his original series outline for Star Trek under the title "The Day Charlie Became God." The page is reproduced in the Herbert F. Solow / Robert H. Justman volume Inside Star Trek: The Real Story , p. 125. Writer Dorothy Fontana also confirmed that the episode was based on that story idea. Fontana developed the story and wrote the teleplay, but Roddenberry received story credit. [1]
- This episode was originally scheduled to air further into the season, as all action took place aboard the Enterprise , and it was basically a teenage melodrama set in the space age, both of which elements NBC disliked. However, as it required no new outer space visual effects shots (actually all Enterprise shots are recycled from the two pilots), its post-production took less time than other episodes. It was chosen to be the second episode to air, out of necessity, as no other episodes were ready for the deadline. The Antares was originally to be shown on screen, but when the early airdate was commissioned, this was eliminated. ( These Are the Voyages: TOS Season One , p. 201)
- "Charlie X" was adapted for a novelization by James Blish . It was published in the first Bantam Books Star Trek novelization collection in 1967 under the name "Charlie's Law". (This name is a pun on Charles' Law , a law of physics dealing with how changes in temperature affect the volume of a gas. ( citation needed • edit ) )
- The opening credits of this episode are the same as those used in " The Man Trap ", which included a "Created by Gene Roddenberry" credit. The credits at the close of the episode only list Roddenberry as Producer. Also, the credits for William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy are missing the "starring" and "also starring" designations. This episode followed "The Man Trap" in airdate order. The main titles were standardized for syndication, however the DVD prints restore the titles to their original configuration.
- During the first-season episodes, cinematographer Jerry Finnerman was encouraged to maximize placement of colored background lighting to add exotic warmth to the gray walls of the Enterprise set. This was a major promotional point for NBC, as Star Trek was a selling point for color televisions. But as pressure to complete episodes grew, this touch gradually faded from the series. NBC was owned at the time by RCA, a major manufacturer of color television sets. ( Inside Star Trek , p. 113)
- This episode was directed by Lawrence Dobkin , who later guest-starred as Ambassador Kell in TNG : " The Mind's Eye ".
- DS9 writer/producer Ira Steven Behr says that this is the episode that "won him over." ( AOL chat , 1997 )
Performers [ ]
- James Doohan ( Scott ) and George Takei ( Sulu ) do not appear in this episode, although two words of Takei's dialogue from " The Man Trap " are dubbed in when Kirk calls the bridge from the gymnasium.
- The galley chef was voiced by Gene Roddenberry , in his first and only acting role in Star Trek . Despite having dialogue, Roddenberry remained uncredited on-screen.
- In her autobiography, Grace Lee Whitney mentions that Robert Walker , (a method actor), completely avoided the cast on the set, trying to stay alone and "in character". " He explained to us when he arrived to the set that he wanted to remain alien and apart from us – and it worked. You can see it in his performance, a subtle yet persistent air of estrangement from the Enterprise crew, and indeed from the rest of Humanity. His careful effort to stay in character added a convincing dimension to his performance. " Furthermore, she added, " It's impossible to imagine anyone else in the role – he captured the perfect balance, projecting vulnerability, innocence and horrifying menace all the same time. A lesser actor could not have handled the range and depth of the character. " ( The Longest Trek: My Tour of the Galaxy , pp. 98-99)
- Fontana also praised Walker's performance, " [He] was excellent as Charlie. And he was quite a young man, he was in his twenties, but playing a teenager, he looked young enough to pull it off." [2]
- Allan Asherman , in The Star Trek Compendium , also mentions that Walker " turns in a powerful and fascinating performance ". (p. 39)
- The role of Sam was to be initially played by Beau Vandenecker , but it was eventually recast to Robert Herron . ( Per casting sheet ) Herron was a stuntman, so it was cheaper to hire him as an actor/stuntman.
- Although it may not canonically represent the creative staff's intentions, the novelization by James Blish in Star Trek 1 identifies the unnamed crewman named Sam (whom Charlie "disposes" of) as Sam Ellis, an officer on McCoy's medical staff. The episode novelization made it clear that he, along with all of the officers who were disfigured of by Charlie, were "restored" along with Rand when the Thasians intervened. However, the USS Antares could not be saved because, as the Thasian explained, it was destroyed "in this frame" whereas the zapped Enterprise personnel were "kept intact in the next frame."
- This was one of only three episodes of the first season that didn't show Vina in the last closing still. The other two episodes were " What Are Little Girls Made Of? " and " Dagger of the Mind ".
- This is the first of six original series episodes that takes place entirely aboard the Enterprise . The others are " The Changeling ", " Journey to Babel " (Babel itself is never seen), " Elaan of Troyius ", " Is There in Truth No Beauty? ", and " Let That Be Your Last Battlefield ". " The Doomsday Machine ", " The Ultimate Computer ", " The Immunity Syndrome ", and " The Tholian Web " were also filmed using only the Enterprise sets, including that of the shuttlecraft interior, but some of the action in these episodes took place on other Constitution -class starships. By any reasonable definition, each of these entries qualifies as a bottle show .
- The grates in the floors of the corridors disappeared in later episodes. In one scene, Charlie takes great delight in watching a technician lower some tubing into one of these floor grates.
- During the scene in Rand's quarters, when Charlie flings Kirk and Spock against the wall, the wall clearly has a hole punched in it. On an earlier take, Leonard Nimoy had struck the wall too forcefully.
- When Kirk and Charlie have their final confrontation, the camera moves to a rare floor-level view of the bridge. This close-up shows that the set is carpeted. This was probably done as a noise-absorber, given the propensity of the set to pick up noises like plumbing and squeaking floors. The material itself is Ozite, a portion of which was sold at the Profiles in History Star Trek auction in June 2002.
- The ship's gymnasium makes its first and only appearance in the series. It was originally intended to be seen in more episodes, as some of the shots showing acrobatics and gymnastics there were filmed as intended stock footage for reuse later. The gymnasium was a redress of the engineering set. The room where the gymnasts are tumbling is the redecorated briefing room .
- The bench on which Sam was sitting when he was zapped turned up later in other episodes. In " Court Martial ", it held the wrench that Benjamin Finney snatched in his attempt to club Kirk. In " This Side of Paradise ", it was topped off by the metal tray that Spock grabs during his fight with Kirk in the transporter room.
Props and special effects [ ]
- This is the only episode shot after the pilots to have no exterior views of the Enterprise using the updated "series" model. All of the shots are footage from " The Cage " and " Where No Man Has Gone Before " (see: above).
- Publicity stills of Grace Lee Whitney were used on the playing cards Charlie modifies. ( The Star Trek Compendium , p. 39)
- After Charlie transforms Tina Lawton into an iguana, the noise the reptile makes was that of the sound made by Sylvia and Korob when they returned to their true forms at the end of " Catspaw ".
- Spock's scanners in this episode make the same sound the Metron transmission does in " Arena ".
- Like Trelane , Apollo , and the Gorgan , (other advanced beings whose powers threatened the crew) Charlie makes his exit with fading repetition of his final words.
- The music accompanying Charlie's disappearance at the end of this episode, highlighted by a mournful bassoon dirge, was re-used effectively in " Space Seed " as the landing party beams onto the Botany Bay ; in " Patterns of Force " for the death of John Gill; in " The Tholian Web " as Chekov witnesses the dead engineering crew on the Defiant ; as Kirk wanders the empty corridors of the faux- Enterprise early in " The Mark of Gideon "; and in " The Ultimate Computer " during Daystrom's final conversation with his M-5 computer.
Costumes [ ]
- Charlie comes on board the Enterprise wearing a patched cloak; he later leaves it on the floor beside a Jefferies tube.
- Charlie and the crew of the Antares are wearing old turtleneck uniforms left over from the two pilots. Also, when Charlie is causing panic on the corridors, crewmen can be seen wearing the new series shirts with old, pilot version trousers and boots. ( The Star Trek Compendium , p. 39)
- For most of the episode, Charlie wears a gold wraparound jacket, which appears to be an unused, early version of Kirk's green tunic made for " The Enemy Within ". It is apparently too big for him. ( The Star Trek Compendium , p. 39)
- After this episode William Shatner only wore tights once more, in " Errand of Mercy ". He later poked fun at his costume in this episode when clips of it were shown as part of the History Channel show, How William Shatner Changed the World .
Continuity [ ]
- According to Kirk's line " On Earth today it's Thanksgiving ", the beginning of this episode takes place on 22 November 2266 (assuming American Thanksgiving is meant). The reference to Thanksgiving was included in the script because originally the episode was supposed to air in late-November. ( These Are the Voyages: TOS Season One [ page number? • edit ] )
- Still not firmly set in his characterization in this early episode, Spock shows both irritation and amusement as Uhura makes fun of him. It seems that he has learned how to express irritation (" Ah yes, one of your Earth emotions ") fairly quickly since the events of " Where No Man Has Gone Before ".
- The United Earth Space Probe Agency is referenced for the first time in this episode, with the acronym "UESPA". It was mentioned again in episode " Tomorrow is Yesterday ". Years later, Star Trek: Enterprise referenced UESPA in several episodes, including " Demons ".
- The line " Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered weak and weary " spoken by Spock while under Charlie's influence is the first line of the poem " The Raven ", by Edgar Allan Poe . Spock is also forced to quote some lines from " The Tyger " by William Blake when he shouts that there is a " Tyger, Tyger burning bright, in the forests of the night ". [3] . In a later episode " Plato's Stepchildren " Spock is again forced to show emotion and sing " Maiden Wine " by powerful mind power aliens.
- The song that Uhura sings to Spock and then Charlie may have been taken from an old Scottish folk song penned by Robert Burns called "Charlie, He's My Darling". The chorus in that song is almost identical to what Uhura sings. [4]
- The crew compliment of the Enterprise is stated as 428.
Script vs. screen [ ]
- The first-draft script featured Uhura as a trained mimic, who amused crewmembers by parodying her fellow officers in the recreation room. It was later turned into her performing a song, to fit Nichelle Nichols ' musical talents. ( The Star Trek Compendium , p. 38)
- The second draft of this episode's script was completed on 27 June 1966 , with the final draft coming in on 5 July . The episode itself was filmed in mid- July .
- The final draft script called for the Antares to be seen, dwarfed by the Enterprise . [5]
- A strange bit of dialogue present in the teleplay was cut from the episode: when discussing the possible existence of Thasians , and Kirk's possible father-figure behavior to Charlie, Spock satirically asked McCoy, " Shall I schedule you to give him voodoo and superstition lessons, doctor? " McCoy replied, " You can if he provides his own chicken 's teeth and penguin feathers , " to which Spock told him, " I'll see to it, doctor. " [6]
- In the final draft script, a remnant of Uhura's mimicking of other crewmembers still remained; just before she sang, Rand suggested to her, " Do someone. Do the Captain, " but Uhura replied, " No, I've done him. Someone else… let's see… " It was then that Uhura started singing about Spock.
- In the final draft script, the card trick Charlie plays with Janice, which reveals her photograph on the cards, was not specified. The script simply stated that Charlie performed a variety of card tricks which amazed Janice and the onlookers. [7]
- Writer Dorothy Fontana recalled that the filmed episode was basically the same as her screenplay, " There were a few line changes, not much. The images of how Charlie affected people, you know, no face so a woman couldn't talk, things like that, those were all there […] I noticed there really wasn't that much that was changed, it was pretty much the way I wrote it. " [8]
Preview [ ]
- The preview contains an edited Captain's Log from the finished episode: " Captain's log, stardate 1533.7. We have taken aboard an unusual passenger… the sole survivor of a transport crash fourteen years ago. "
- An alternate take of Charlie throwing Spock and Kirk against the wall in Yeoman Rand's quarters is included. The hole in the wall is still visible (Nimoy apparently hitting it too hard on a prior take or rehearsal), but while the final episode shows the start of the throw from the side, the preview shows it from the front.
Reception [ ]
- Actress Grace Lee Whitney listed this episode as one of her three favorites. " 'Charlie X' brought out another side of me, the woman looking at a younger man. That was also wonderful because I felt an allegiance to Captain Kirk. " ( Starlog #105, April 1986 , p. 49)
Syndication cuts [ ]
During the syndication run of Star Trek , the following scenes were typically cut from broadcast. The remastered version of the episode contained all scenes from the original unsyndicated version.
- Extended scenes from Charlie's beam-in to the Enterprise .
- Scenes of crewmen working in the corridor, including a scene where Charlie observes two men saying "You've got a deal, friend". In the syndicated version, this was never explained where Charlie learned the expression or why he smacked Janice Rand on her rear when repeating.
- Spock smiling while Uhura talks to him just before the musical session in the crewmen's lounge.
- Kirk talking to Charlie in his cabin.
- Women exercising in leotards when Charlie and Kirk enter the ship's gym. At the end of the gym scene, several additional tense moments were cut of Kirk demanding Charlie go to his quarters.
- Extended briefing room discussion about Charlie and his abilities.
- Additional scenes of Charlie angrily moving through the ship's corridor where he freezes a female crewman and shoves past three men; he also turns a young female crewman into an old woman.
- Extended scenes on the bridge with Charlie pleading not to be returned to Thasia.
- Extended scenes in Kirk's cabin where Kirk askes Charlie about the melted Chess pieces.
Apocrypha [ ]
- A cat version of "Charlie X" was featured in Jenny Parks ' 2017 book Star Trek Cats .
Remastered information [ ]
The remastered version of "Charlie X" aired in many North American markets during the weekend of 14 July 2007 . The episode included new effects shots of the Thasian ship, replacing the blob-like object seen on-screen with a torpedo-shaped vessel. Most notably, the remastered episode opens with a shot featuring the Antares , a new design based upon the robot grain ships seen in the Star Trek: The Animated Series episode " More Tribbles, More Troubles ".
Video and DVD releases [ ]
- Original US Betamax/VHS release: 28 February 1985
- Original UK VHS release (two-episode tapes, CIC Video ): Volume 5 , catalog number VHR 2250, release date unknown
- US VHS release: 15 April 1994
- UK re-release (three-episode tapes, CIC Video): Volume 1.3, 8 July 1996
- Original US DVD release (single-disc): Volume 4, 19 October 1999
- As part of the TOS Season 1 DVD collection
- As part of the TOS Season 1 HD DVD collection
- As part of the TOS Season 1 Blu-ray collection
Links and references [ ]
Starring [ ].
- William Shatner as Capt. Kirk
Also starring [ ]
- Leonard Nimoy as Mr. Spock
Guest star [ ]
- Robert Walker as Charles Evans
Featuring [ ]
- DeForest Kelley as Dr. McCoy
- Grace Lee Whitney as Yeoman Rand
- Nichelle Nichols as Uhura
- Charles J. Stewart as Captain Ramart
- Dallas Mitchell as Nellis
- Don Eitner as the Navigator
- Patricia McNulty as Tina Lawton
- John Bellah as Crewman I
- Garland Thompson as Crewman II
- Abraham Sofaer as " The Thasian "
Uncredited co-stars [ ]
- William Blackburn as Hadley
- Vinci (aka "Guard II")
- Bobby Herron as Sam
- John Lindesmith as the Helmsman
- Robert Metz as Sciences crewman 2
- Eddie Paskey as Leslie
- George Takei as Sulu (voice only; recycled audio)
- Ron Veto as Harrison (aka "Engineer")
- Laura Wood as a Command crew woman 1 (old)
- Command crewman 1
- Command crewman 2
- Command crewman 3
- Command lieutenant 1
- galley chef
- Sciences crewman 1
- Two crewmen in gymnasium
- Command crew woman 1
- Command crew woman 2 (young)
- Command crew woman 3
- Command crew woman 4
- Command crew woman 5
- Command lieutenant 2
- Command lieutenant 3
- Command officer (gymnast)
- Sciences crew woman 1
- Sciences crew woman 2
- Sciences crew woman 3
- Two gymnasts
Stunt double [ ]
- Loren Janes as the stunt double for William Shatner
Stand-ins [ ]
- William Blackburn as the stand-in for DeForest Kelley
- Frank da Vinci as the stand-in for Leonard Nimoy
- Jeannie Malone as the stand-in for Grace Lee Whitney
- Eddie Paskey as the stand-in for William Shatner
References [ ]
2249 ; 2252 ; 4-0 ; ability ; ace ; adolescence ; adult ; anger ; answer ; Antares ; Antares -type ; area ; astrogator ; astronaut ; atmospheric system ; authority ; baffle plate ; biology ; black ; body ; " Bones "; bow ; captain's chair ; card trick ; cargo vessel ; castaway ; Charlie's parents ; Charlie's relatives ; Charlie's transport ; century ; check ; checkmate ; chef ; chess master ; chess piece ; chief ; choice ; city ; Colony Alpha 5 ( Colony 5 , Earth Colony 5 ); Colony 5 governor ; computer statistics ; confined to quarters ; Constitution -class decks ; contact ; coordinates ; course ; D channel ; debris ; deflectors ; devil ; door ; dossier ; duty ; ear ; earring ; Earth ; Earth history ; Earthling ; eating ; effect ; electronic clipboard ; energy pile ; entertainment tapes ; evidence ; exercise mat ; exercise table ; eye ; falling ; father image ; female ; first officer ; fingers ; flattery ; floor ; food concentrate ; force field ; forest ; fracture ; fruit ; galley ; guide ; gymnasium ; gymnastics ; heart ; home ; Human ; hunger ; idea ; iguana ; immunity ; Jefferies tube ; judo ; knocking ; laser beacon ; laughter ; leg ; legend ; lesson ; limb ; logic ; love ; Martian ; mathematic ; meat loaf ; memory banks ; microtapes ; million ; mind ; minute ; mistake ; mister ; name ; navigator ; navigation console ; neck ; non-corporeal species ; object ; " Oh, On the Starship Enterprise "; one-way street ; oven ; passenger ; perfume ; phaser weapon ; pink ; playing card ; Poe, Edgar Allan ; poetry ; power ; present ; probability ; probe scanner ; puberty ; pugil stick ; quadrant ; quarters ; range ; " Raven, The "; record tapes ; recreation room ; risk ; road ; room ; rose ; rule ; Satan ; Saturn ; " Saturn Rings "; Saurian brandy ; schedule ; science-probe vessel ; section ; sensors ; ship's stores ; shoulder roll ; slap ; society ; solitaire ; " sound of wind and limb "; space ; starboard ; status report ; subspace frequency ; subspace frequency three ; subspace transmitter ; survey ship ; survivor ; synthetic food ; Thanksgiving ; Thasian ; Thasian ship ; Thasus ; thing ; three-dimensional checkers ; three-dimensional chess ; toes ; towel ; training program ; transmission ; transmutation ; transport ship ; transporter chief ; throw ; turkey ; " Tyger, The "; UESPA headquarters ( United Earth Space Probe Agency ); universe ; vegetable ; Vulcan lute ; wardroom ; white ; wind ; word ; year ; yeoman third class
Unreferenced material [ ]
Antarian metal chess pieces ; bluejay ; book ; detention cell ; chariot ; Charlie's law ; deck five ; feathers ; Ferndok ; ( gods ); hell ; helmet ; hybrid ; Jupiter ; lab ; librarian ; library ; meteoroids ; microscope ; pay ; penguin ; Phynburg Oscillating Framizam ; rattle ; Romulus and Remus ; subspace radio ; superstition ; teeth ; Tweedledum and Tweedledee ; voodoo ; Vulcan ; wolf ; " Wonderful One-Hoss Shay, The "; " Wynken, Blynken, and Nod "
External links [ ]
- " Charlie X " at Memory Beta , the wiki for licensed Star Trek works
- " Charlie X " at Wikipedia
- " Charlie X " at the Internet Movie Database
- " Charlie X " at MissionLogPodcast.com
- 1 USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-G)
- 3 Daniels (Crewman)
Galactic Journey
[September 20, 1966] In the hands of an adolescent ( Star Trek 's "Charlie X")
A New Tradition
It’s official, we now have a “Star Trek” night at our house each week, when we gather our friends and watch the latest episode. Though we’ve only watched two episodes so far, the show is off to an interesting start! This week we saw “Charlie X”, which had thematic similarities to both of the pilots we saw at Tricon.
The Enterprise has picked up a refugee, seventeen-year-old Charlie, who is the only survivor of a colony that died years ago. He was found by another ship, Antares, whose crew is only too happy to be rid of him.
There’s immediately something fishy about the boy. This is emphasized by strong musical cues, which are nicely integrated into the score. Since I watched “The Cage” (the first pilot) only a couple of weeks ago, I wondered at first whether the Antares crew were actually aliens in disguise, or an illusion.
The boy is extremely awkward in his interactions. He’s fascinated by Yeoman Janice Rand, the first ‘girl’ he’s ever met, and follows Captain Kirk around like a lost puppy. No one seems to know quite what to do with him, and I felt bad for the kid at first.
However, strange things start happening aboard the ship, initially benign, or at least not damaging long-term. Charlie produces a ‘gift’ for Yeoman Rand and won’t say how he obtained it, even though she notes that there shouldn’t have been any in the ship’s stores. All of the synthetic meatloaf in the ship’s ovens are turned into cooked real turkey. Uhura temporarily loses her voice.
It’s clear to the viewer from the beginning that Charlie is making these strange things happen, but it’s not until he begins to take far more sinister actions that the crew become suspicious. The Antares attempts to contact the Enterprise at extreme range, saying that they need to warn them, but they’re cut off when their ship explodes without warning. Finally, Charlie makes a crewman disappear directly in front of Captain Kirk.
The entire story shifts at this point, and Charlie goes from being sympathetic to terrifying. He’s immature and impulsive, greedy and lonely. He’s got the power of a god and the conscience of a small child. He goes after Janice Rand, coming into her quarters and offering her a flower. She firmly and repeatedly tells him, “No,” but he continues to press his attentions on her until the Captain and Mr. Spock show up to help. When he casually tosses them aside, Yeoman Rand slaps him – so he makes her disappear, too.
There are echoes of “Where No Man” in this plot: a human obtains absolute power, which corrupts absolutely. It’s also reminiscent of the Twilight Zone episode, " It's a good life ", which similarly features an omnipotent, frightening child. The ending to "Charlie", however, is unexpected. The aliens who gave Charlie the power in the first place, allowing him to survive in the lost colony, return to take him back. Charlie begs the humans to allow him to stay, saying he’ll be alone with aliens who cannot touch him and who cannot love.
This is an interesting turnabout; the audience is once again compelled to sympathize with Charlie. Despite all the terrible things he’s done, the viewer can’t help but feel sorry for the young man, trapped all alone with aliens. His situation is an interesting parallel to Vina’s in “The Cage”, but Vina stays behind by choice, and she is offered a rich fantasy life by the Talosians, whereas Charlie wants nothing more than to escape, and despite his powers, is apparently offered a sterile and empty life by his alien jailors. The nuanced story is far more sophisticated than typical television sci-fi fare.
However, there were a few elements that I felt rang false. Would Captain Kirk really be so awkward talking about ‘the birds and the bees’ with a teenager? Would Doctor McCoy really be so resistant to doing the same? This is the future, for heaven’s sake, and Doctor McCoy is a doctor . It felt like character and realism was sacrificed for cheap laughs.
On the other hand, I absolutely loved the way Charlie’s interactions with Yeoman Rand were handled. Charlie comes on strong and is increasingly pushy with Rand throughout the story. It’s a familiar kind of interaction in media. We often see a man persist in his attentions to a woman who resists at first but eventually gives in and falls in love with him. What made this story unusual was that his actions are never framed as being in any way romantic, or even acceptable. Rand is supported by the Captain himself, and never, ever told that she’s being hysterical or overreacting. When Charlie presses her, she stands firm, repeatedly telling him in no uncertain terms, “no!” and “get out of my room, I can’t make it any clearer than that!”
I appreciated how strong she was, and that Charlie’s actions were portrayed as creepy, unwanted, and wrong . It’s different from a lot of what I grew up with, and makes me wonder about the gender of the script writer, a mysterious “D.C. Fontana”.
Three stars.
A faltering step
Together with " The Man Trap ", we are starting to get the first real understanding of the characters who inhabit the Enterprise. Dr. McCoy is back, marking the first time the ship's doctor role has been the same character. Moreover, he interacts substantially not only with Kirk, with whom he has a friendly, if perhaps arms length, relationship, but also Mr. Spock. Their bickering on the bridge presages what could be a fun running bit, where the science officer approaches things logically in contrast to the more emotional doctor.
On the other hand, Spock displays genuine emotion, both in his bashful smiles and irritation when performing with Lt. Uhura in the lounge (a nice scene — Nichelle Nichols has a lovely voice!), and also when playing chess with Captain Kirk and Charlie. This is the second episode that we have seen Spock and Kirk matching wits over the 3D version of the game of kings. I expect this is a motif we'll see more of.
While I enjoyed this outing, I found its execution more pedestrian than that of "The Man Trap". As fellow traveler Ginevra noted in our after-watch kibbitz, the use of camera pans, cuts, and focus are less adroit. The differently colored corridors we saw in "The Man Trap" have been replaced with ones of uniform reddish hue. It leaves the impression of a cheaper, less interesting show. Not to the degree of the second pilot (which will be aired next week), but it's definitely noticeable.
If I had to pick a stand-out scene, it is when Charlie zaps a crewman into oblivion, particularly Kirk's reaction thereto. You can see the character fitting all the pieces together about Charlie in stunning realization. I also appreciated Kirk's shyness in talking about women, and the relation of men thereto. He was established in the second pilot as "a stack of books with legs", and I appreciate a leading man who is not a ladies' man.
Perhaps that role will be taken up by Mr. Spock. Lord knows a certain communications officer seems to fancy him…
What makes Charlie X so frightening?
With last year’s founding of The Autism Society, many people are reconsidering the roles that disabled people can access in our shared world. Science fiction is an excellent place to stretch our imaginations and explore new worlds and futures.
In this week’s Star Trek episode, "Charlie X" Robert Walker plays the titular 17-year-old, progressing from awkwardness to outright violence; viewers moved with him from discomfort to horror to pathos. What made us react so strongly to Charlie? Charlie speaks too quickly or too slowly; interrupts Captain Kirk; stands too close; touches people in unexpected ways; has exaggerated expressions or a flat affect; makes uneven eye-contact; has sudden and overwhelming emotions he struggles to express in ways the crew can grok.
In the show, this is attributed to Charlie’s lack of socialization and education. But Charlie isn’t an illiterate boy; he’s a fictional character on TV, a representation of the actor, writer, director, and viewers' ideas of a monster, drawn from the shared fears of our society. The trouble is, not all of us fear the same monsters. In the world I live in, Charlie’s mannerisms reminded me of my family members who are autistic, who face violence from people taught to be afraid of them. Until he started hurting people, Charlie’s behaviors didn’t disturb me, but I could tell the actor and writer wanted them to.
This disconnect is what made the end of the episode so satisfying to me. My heart began to race in the final scene when first Lieutenant Uhura, then Captain Kirk, then the re-materialized Yeoman Rand pushed back against the Thasian leader. Fought to protect Charlie. Captain Kirk’s line, “The boy belongs with his own kind,” felt profound.
As readers know, the 1964 Civil Rights Act did not include protections for disabled people. In the future, perhaps another law will. Watching shows like Star Trek requires us to flex the same science fictional muscles that activists use to imagine new ways for our real world to be. Perhaps, to viewers in the future, Charlie’s mannerisms won’t evoke horror, but will be just one more way of being one of our own kind.
Of Gods and Magic
When it comes to Sci-Fi I am easy going on believability. Give me a simple (though sometimes far fetched) explanation for how or why something works and I’ll play along. But I am a stickler when it comes to “magic” (in Clarke's sense of the word). If I don't know how it works, I at least want to know its extent and cost.
My biggest problem with the episode is that Charlie’s powers are never defined in either category. Charlie is seen doing everything from procuring an object from thin air, to aging a character within seconds. Many of his abilities appear to be unrelated, yet exceptionally unlimited.
I almost wish Charlie’s powers had been to manipulate perception, like the alien in “The Cage.” This would have explained the variety of tricks Charlie executes during the episode: silencing Uhara, making crew members disappear – none of these things are really gone, just no longer perceivable under Charlie’s illusion. Even the change of beef to turkey could have been a simple trick of the senses.
Then again, there is a cost to Charlie's use of his "magic." It is, of course, that Charlie can never relate to other humans, and as a result, is exiled to emotional prison, living out his days with the Thasians. And while this isn't the kind of "cost" I was describing above, it does make for a compelling — and ultimately unsatisfying — episode.
Does he deserve to be condemned? I am hesitant to convict a character like Charlie of such a fate. After all, I believe his corruption was not from his powers alone. He endured some fifteen years of solitude. It is obvious Charlie lacks the socialization he needed during his formative years. I think in different circumstances, Charlie could have been more empathic, more willing to learn cooperation and patience in exchange for the social interaction and praise he so clearly desires. I think under proper care he could have been rehabilitated. Rather than thrown onto a large ship of strangers, better had he been given one on one time with a professional who could teach him what to expect once reintroduced to society. The Enterprise could really use a ship's psychologist. Failing that, Bones should have taken on the job.
While I’m happy the solution wasn’t to kill Charlie off, as the conclusion has been for menaces in episodes prior, I felt that Charlie was unjustifiably written off. It makes me wonder, what is the point of this episode? Charlie shows no character development or revelations. The Captain and crew feel badly for Charlie, but will they learn from their missteps that led to the crisis in the first place? I think this idea was ripe with potential left unexplored.
The Silent Treatment
Between the strange glares, close-ups, and whining monologues, we have the smatterings of a story about an awkward teenager playing grab-ass on the starship Enterprise. Much like “Where No Man” we’re often left staring at the characters staring at other characters waiting for someone to say something. Anything. Silence can be powerful, but sometimes silence is just silence. If I had wanted to watch a silent film, I would have chosen something a little more exciting.
Charlie really had his eyes set on Yeoman Rand, which is understandable. Any man with a good pair of eyes would, but she made it abundantly clear early on that she wasn’t as interested in Charlie as he was in her. The episode made sure to portray his advances as juvenile and unwelcome, which is a refreshing take on the overly aggressive pursuer getting the girl cliché. I appreciate seeing the consequences when “no” isn’t taken seriously. Charlie had powers that allowed him to do as he pleased, but it just goes to show that power isn’t everything.
I can appreciate that there was a deeper story here, but it wasn’t very well executed. I might have been sympathetic if Charlie was more likeable, but he just wasn’t. Nobody made an effort to improve Charlie’s experience in this episode. Not even the writers.
From the Young Traveler
"Charlie X" had an interesting premise that didn't quite match its execution. Charlie is meant to be a boy who has been raised in a completely alien context, his only reference to humanity being records and memory tapes. Yet aboard the Enterprise , his alienness is manifested in, at most, a lack of maturity and recognition of social cues. The difference should have been far more severe.
I believe the two main elements of "Charlie X" could have been better served as two different stories. One would be about an alien-raised human learning to assimilate with humanity. The other about an adolescent with ESP and the problems he causes.
We essentially got the second story, which after the mismatched premise, I have to admit was executed fairly well. Three stars.
Space Fashion
Obviously the most powerful organization in the future depicted in Star Trek is the fashion union. Changing starship uniforms every few weeks takes a lot of political swing!
Kirk appears in three different types of uniform in this episode: his command outfit, which he wears on the bridge, a gold shirt that looks more like what the other officers are wearing, and an exercise outfit that consists of tight red pants and little else.
When he goes to teach Charlie the basics of combat, Charlie wears a red gi top (which must be standard sports outfit, since it's got the Federation patch near the shoulder), and Kirk wears… well…
That's certainly an interesting choice. It almost makes up for this being the fourth episode (out of four) with dangerous psychic powers.
Things I didn't like about this episode: Destructive mental powers (again). The crew leaving a rescued teenager to wander around the ship unescorted. Not assigning the teenager a guide, mentor, or other assistant to adapt to life in human society.
The ending felt a bit rushed; I'd like to see the Enterprise (or some other ship) visit the area again, and volunteer someone to live wherever Charlie's stuck with the aliens. Let them give another human — an adult — the same powers, and see if that person can teach Charlie how to live among humans without resorting to murder when his whims are thwarted.
Things I did like: The musical interlude was lovely; I enjoyed Mister Spock's Vulcan instrument and Uhura's spontaneous singing. Also, Charlie was sympathetic: we could feel his confusion and understand his petulance. The story made sense , even if I sometimes wanted to throttle the captain for not assigning someone to pay attention to Charlie sooner. Also, I will forgive quite a few plot sins if it means I get to see half-naked men tumbling around the screen on prime-time television. 4 stars.
If you dig the latest shows, tune in to KGJ , our radio station! Nothing but the newest and best hits!
4 thoughts on “[September 20, 1966] In the hands of an adolescent ( Star Trek 's "Charlie X")”
On the whole, that was pretty good. Well written and well acted, certainly. I found it difficult to watch, though. Charlie's awkwardness frequently overwhelmed to the point that I found it almost too uncomfortable to watch.
To that point, the script makes an error and our reviewers seem to have followed. Charlie and his awkwardness are frequently tied to his adolescence. But in terms of emotional maturity and general socialization, he really isn't an adolescent. He's practically a toddler and much like Anthony in "It's a Good Life" (particularly the short story by Jerome Bixby), when he throws a temper tantrum or is confused by the way others behave, the consequences are terrifying.
Based on the two episodes we've seen so far, it looks like the producers are trying to develop something between Mr. Spock and Lt. Uhura. I wonder how long the network will allow that to continue.
A very good episode, fleshing out what the crew does when not actively on duty (singing in the rec area, playing chess, sparring in various ways).
I really like this episode, and think that's it's a big step forward from "The Man Trap" (which wasn't bad.) Much praise must go to Robert Walker, Jr., an actor in his mid-twenties, who completely convinced me that he was the universe's most confused and immature teenager. (True, the comparison to "It's a Good Life" is inevitable. However, in that classic story/TV show, the all-powerful kid is a purely selfish god, with no trace of caring about others. What makes Charlie so moving a character is the fact that, deep inside the violent temper and giant ego, he wants to be liked by people.)
Although this might be seen as another "monster of the week" episode, I suppose, the "monster" is so much to be pitied that the story reaches the level of tragedy. It is true that Charlie must be confined forever, or else be destroyed, so there's no possibility of a happy ending.
I asked Lorelei how old he thought Robert Walker was, and she assumed he was a late teen, like the character (he's 26). He did a fine job.
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55 years ago: Science Fact and Fiction
Memory Beta, non-canon Star Trek Wiki
A friendly reminder regarding spoilers ! At present the expanded Trek universe is in a period of major upheaval with the continuations of Discovery and Prodigy , the advent of new eras in gaming with the Star Trek Adventures RPG , Star Trek: Infinite and Star Trek Online , as well as other post-57th Anniversary publications such as the ongoing IDW Star Trek comic and spin-off Star Trek: Defiant . Therefore, please be courteous to other users who may not be aware of current developments by using the {{ spoiler }}, {{ spoilers }} OR {{ majorspoiler }} tags when adding new information from sources less than six months old (even if it is minor info). Also, please do not include details in the summary bar when editing pages and do not anticipate making additions relating to sources not yet in release. THANK YOU
"Charlie X" was the 7th episode of Star Trek: The Original Series , in the show's first season , first aired on 15 September 1966 . The episode was written by Gene Roddenberry and D.C. Fontana , directed by Lawrence Dobkin MA and novelized under the title "Charlie's Law" in Star Trek 1 by James Blish .
The cargo ship USS Antares transfers 17- year old Charles ("Charlie") Evans to the USS Enterprise on his way to Colony 5 from the planet Thasus . The Antares is mysteriously destroyed and Enterprise crew members disappear. Captain James T. Kirk realizes that Charlie is responsible but has no control over his deadly god -like powers.
- 2.1.1 Episode characters
- 2.1.2 Novelization characters
- 2.2 Starships and vehicles
- 2.3.1 Shipboard locales
- 2.4 Races and cultures
- 2.5 States and organizations
- 2.6.1 Technology and weapons
- 2.6.2 Materials and substances
- 2.7 Occupations and titles
- 2.8 Other references
- 3 Chronology
- 4.1.1 Adaptations
- 4.1.2 Video releases
- 4.2 Background
- 4.3.1 Episode images
- 4.3.2 Adaptation images
- 4.4.1.1.1 Translations
- 4.5 External link
Summary [ ]
The Enterprise .
The Enterprise is meeting the cargo ship USS Antares so they can transport a young teenage boy, Charles "Charlie" Evans , whom they discovered while surveying the planet Thasus . Charlie beams over to the Enterprise with Captain Ramart of the Antares , and the ship's navigator and first officer , Tom Nellis . Unknown to the Enterprise crew , Charlie has god -like powers. He does not inform Captain Kirk of his powers and is also influencing Ramart and Nellis, preventing them from informing Kirk of this. Charlie is supposed to transfer to the Enterprise , which is on route to Colony 5 , where, ultimately, he will stay with relatives.
Nyota Uhura .
After being away from all Human contact for so many years, Charlie begins to learn and integrate. Being a teenager, Charlie is also struggling with puberty and develops his first crush on the beautiful Yeoman Janice Rand . In one of the ship's recreation rooms , he secretly silences Lieutenant Nyota Uhura , who is singing, so that he can have all of Rand's undivided attention.
James T. Kirk .
Later, when Charlie is on the bridge , Captain Ramart tries to contact the Enterprise to warn them of Charlie's dangerous powers, but the Antares is secretly destroyed by Charlie before they can get a message off.
Yeoman Rand eventually introduces Charlie to a girl his own age— Yeoman Third Class Tina Lawton . Charlie immediately snubs Tina and confides to Rand his feelings for her. Rand realizes Charlie's crush is becoming difficult for her and discusses the issue with Captain Kirk, who takes pity on Charlie and attempts to befriend him. Kirk takes Charlie to the gym for some self-defense exercises. After sparring with Kirk, Charlie falls down, which prompts laughter from Sam , one of Kirk's sparring partners. Feeling hurt and humiliated, Charlie makes Sam "disappear"—finally revealing his god-like powers. Ultimately, Charlie admits to destroying the Antares . Soon, Spock suspects that Charlie might be a Thasian , a race of non-corporeal , psionically -powerful beings, rumored to have lived on the planet ages ago.
Charlie begins to take control of the Enterprise at different levels. Attempts to stop him fail, so he wreaks mayhem on some of the crew. He turns Tina Lawton into an iguana , a young female crewwoman into an old lady, and makes Yeoman Rand "disappear" after Kirk and Spock try to rescue her from Charlie's influences.
Determined to stop Charlie before they reach Colony 5, Kirk tries to overload his powers by activating different systems on the ship all at once. Then, he attempts to physically subdue Charlie. During the midst of this struggle with Charlie, an object suddenly appears alongside the ship. A translucent, floating human-like face appears on the bridge. The voice from the face informs the bridge that it is a Thasian, the powerful psionic beings Spock believed still existed. The Thasian states that it had taken its form from centuries ago so that it might communicate with Humans . The Thasians provided Charlie with psionic powers so he could survive. Thasians have the power to transfer psionic ability to other beings. Once they have done this, they either cannot or will not remove this power. Captain Kirk then suggests that Charlie belongs with humans and recommends that he might be trained not to use his psionic powers. The Thasian replies that " We gave him the power so he could live. He will use it—always ". Since it would be impossible for Charlie to live a normal life amongst humans, the Thasians "transport" him to their ship and inform the Enterprise bridge that they will continue to care for him. The Thasians depart peacefully without incident.
References [ ]
Characters [ ], episode characters [ ], novelization characters [ ], starships and vehicles [ ], locations [ ], shipboard locales [ ], races and cultures [ ], states and organizations [ ], science and classification [ ], technology and weapons [ ], materials and substances [ ], occupations and titles [ ], other references [ ], chronology [ ], appendices [ ], related media [ ].
- The scenes where Nyota Uhura sings in the recreation room and where James T. Kirk disputes with Charlie Evans on the bridge are replayed, as dreamlike scenery from Janice Rand 's memory, in the TOS comic : " The Dream Walkers ".
- A flashback adapting scenes from this episode was included in SA comic : " X2 ", the continuation of Charlie's story.
Adaptations [ ]
Video releases [ ]
Background [ ]
The Antares as depicted in the remastered edition of this episode
- In James Blish 's novelization this episode was titled Charlie's Law .
- The Antares was not seen in the original version of this episode; however, it is pictured in the 2007 remastered edition, the design strongly resembling that of the Federation drone ships of the TAS episode " More Tribbles, More Troubles ".
Episode images [ ]
Adaptation images [ ]
Connections [ ]
Timeline [ ], production timeline [ ], translations [ ], external link [ ].
- " Charlie X " article at Memory Alpha , the wiki for canon Star Trek .
- Charlie X article at Wikipedia , the free encyclopedia.
- ↑ The character of Clifford Brent was not named in the episode but the same actor, wearing an officer 's Starfleet uniform , was addressed as Brent in TOS episode : " The Naked Time ". The same actor also played the character of Vinci .
- ↑ The character Vinci was not named in the episode but the same actor, wearing the same operations division Starfleet uniform , was addressed as Vinci in TOS episode : " The Devil in the Dark ". The same actor also played the character of Clifford Brent .
- 1 Achilles class
- 2 Ferengi Rules of Acquisition
- 3 Odyssey class
Home » TV » TV Recaps
Flashback | Recap | Star Trek: The Original Series S1E02: “Charlie X”
Now from a planet out in space There comes a lad not commonplace A’ seeking out his first embrace. He’s saving it for you. Oh, Charlie’s our new darling, Our darling, our darling. Charlie’s our new darling. We know not what he’ll do.
– Uhura’s Song
What happened?
The Enterprise brings aboard an unfortunate passenger: Charlie Evans (Robert Walker), who spent almost his entire life alone on a planet. However, as Charlie tries to figure out who he is as a member of a community, it becomes clear just how Charlie survived for so long on the planet. The indigenous creatures of the planet have bestowed near godlike powers upon the boy, but he may not be mature enough to control them.
Let’s Dig Deeper
It’s not 90 seconds into “Charlie X” that we see that there’s something wrong with Charlie Evans. Yes, he’s a bit awkward, but the way the Antares captain dumps him off, sweaty palms and all, on Kirk, then suddenly changes his tune, boasts a subtlety I didn’t remember. I thought it would take a while before getting to Charlie’s creepy eyeroll powers, but no: just a minute in and it’s there in full force.
One thing Star Trek does best is speaking about the human condition. Charlie is a frightfully embarrassing teenager, compounded by the fact that he’s had no real human contact for fourteen years. He has no context for how to be a person, but he’s trying and growing more frustrated:
CHARLIE: Everything I do or say is wrong. I’m in the way, I don’t know the rules, and when I learn something and try to do it, suddenly I’m wrong! KIRK: Now wait, wait. CHARLIE: I don’t know what I am or what I’m supposed to be, or even who. I don’t know why I hurt so much inside all the time. KIRK: You’ll live, believe me. There’s nothing wrong with you that hasn’t gone wrong with every other human male since the model first came up. CHARLIE: What if you care for someone? What do you do? KIRK: You go slow. You be gentle. I mean, it’s not a one-way street, you know, how you feel and that’s all. It’s how the girl feels, too. Don’t press, Charlie. If the girl feels anything for you at all, you’ll know it. Do you understand? … KIRK: Charlie, there are a million things in this universe you can have and there are a million things you can’t have. It’s no fun facing that, but that’s the way things are. CHARLIE: Then what am I going to do? KIRK: Hang on tight and survive. Everybody does. CHARLIE: You don’t. KIRK: Everybody, Charlie. Me, too. CHARLIE: I’m trying, but I don’t know how.
If this isn’t something universal about the human condition (not just to males, but we do pretty well on our own here…), I don’t know what is. “He’s a boy in a man’s body, trying to be an adult with the adolescence in him getting in the way.” Charlie is sorting out his humanity, as are we all, and he thinks that Kirk has it all figured out. We all look to others and just assume their lives are sorted out, that they’ve hacked life and know how to level up faster than we do. But we’re all just faking it because it’s each of our first times.
Charlie awkwardly interrupts, doesn’t know how to talk to girls, slaps Yeoman Rand on the backside after seeing two male colleagues do so. He messes up – but don’t we all? He’s “got to live with people…[he’s] not alone anymore,” as Rand chastises Charlie. What’s even funnier is the fact that Kirk, Spock, and McCoy debate how to talk to Charlie about the birds and the bees, about who will be the boy’s best role model.
Charlie is just learning to be a person, but he’s had no context, and his powers have taught him that wishing will give him everything he can hope for. He does card tricks, makes turkeys for Thanksgiving (a noble move), gives gifts of perfume – all innocuous events. It’s when he starts taking away Uhura’s voice, removing a crew member’s face, turning Tina into an iguana, and zapping people away that he gets himself into real trouble, and everything spirals out of control from there.
Check another box for another trope that we’ll see repeatedly in the Star Trek franchise: people with superhuman powers who can’t handle them (we’ll see them again very soon, in an episode filmed before this one – it’s at the heart of Star Trek ), and the message doesn’t change: our human foibles remain, and no amount of power or technology can change that.
However, the deus ex machina of this episode leaves me deeply unsatisfied. While some episodes deal with the godlike human by killing the problem (“Where No Man Has Gone Before”), outwitting it (about 3/4 of the Q episodes, as well as “The Squire of Gothos”), or arguing that humanity is worth not squashing like puny insects (all the rest of the Q episodes) – this episode just takes the problem out of the Enterprise crew’s hands. They just survive the episode until Charlie’s adoptive green space mist parents come to collect him. There’s no humanity left for Charlie – it’s taken from him.
Earlier, I talked about the wonderfully uncomfortable debate about who will talk to Charlie about the ways of the world (obviously, it should be Kirk). However, the more important revelation in this conversation is the solidification of the dynamic between Kirk, Spock, and McCoy. In short, they are ethos , logos , and pathos. Kirk represents all the nobility and philosophy of the Federation – its ethos , its moral center. McCoy pushes forward with his pathos , often speaking out of turn, commenting on situations from an emotional standpoint, or providing a counterpoint to Spock’s logos . In all things, Spock must look from an utterly logical perspective, which Kirk needs and so does McCoy. The three balance one another out (at times throughout the series, Kirk and McCoy switch categories, but generally this remains).
This is an uneven episode in many ways, as the show was still trying to figure itself out. However, the main point takeaway for me is the burgeoning relationship between Kirk, Spock, and McCoy: it’ll become the core of the show, after all.
Random Thoughts on Star Trek: The Original Series
This is an episode I often skip when I rewatch. As a result, I haven’t seen it in a long time. I’ve always found Robert Walker’s Charlie to be just painfully awkward. Maybe it was a reflection of myself that I shied away from. I was a terribly awkward teenager (but who wasn’t, right? Don’t tell me if you weren’t…), and so it’s possible that I just didn’t want that mirror held up to myself. Or maybe it’s his daggone creepy eyes. Seriously, they still skeeve me out. His eyes are highlighted just about as much as Bela Lugosi’s Dracula , and I’m wondering who’s job that was on the Enterprise . Probably the same guy who puts vaseline on everyone’s eyes when Kirk has his shirt off, to make Kirk look extra dreamy. Perks of having your own starship, I guess.
I enjoy the belowdecks exploration of the Enterprise here: we see maintenance tubes (not Jeffries Tubes yet), the gym, the rec room, lots of the crew doing their job, not just the bridge crew. It builds this world nicely, especially seeing Spock there, who’s the last person we would expect.
Last week I mentioned that “The Man Trap” was the only source of the Abramsverse Spock-Uhura relationship, but Spock alluringly plays the Vulcan lyre while Uhura sings about his pointy ears. Seriously, get a room, guys!
D.C. Fontana’s immense contribution as a writer and producer for Star Trek (and therefore science fiction in general) cannot be ignored. She ran the first season of Star Trek: The Animated Series , helped kick off and run Star Trek: The Next Generation , and therefore was instrumental, second only to Gene Roddenberry, in ensuring the longevity of Star Trek through the decade-long desert after its cancellation in 1969. Her episodes are among the best in the entire franchise. Particularly “Yesteryear,” “Journey to Babel,” and “The Enterprise Incident,” in The Original Series .
We’ve got some great costume choices here: our first shirtless Kirk (don’t worry, it’s not the last!) and our first glimpse of Kirk’s informal, casual uniform shirt . It’s so strange and out of place. Still, I’d wear it.
Memorable Quotes from Charlie X
“is that a girl” “that’s a girl.”.
– Charlie asking Kirk about Yeoman Rand (that Antares crew has no women aboard – that’s definitely not very enlightened of them!)
“There’s no right way to hit a woman.”
– Kirk telling Charlie not to slap Yeoman Rand’s backside. (Apparently ignoring the fact that there’s an Orion Slave Girl trafficking ring going on under the Federation’s watch, but yeah, worry about that…)
“Captain Kirk is one of a kind, Charlie.”
– Dr. McCoy, just bromancing a bit.
Keep Watching?
Yes! Brace yourselves. Next week’s episode is a little rougher around the edges, production-wise, but it deals with very similar issues from a different angle. It’s really one of the best-written episodes of The Original Series . If you like good science fiction that talks about issues of who we are as humans – this is your place!
Article by Tyler Howat
Tyler Howat joined Ready Steady Cut in November 2017, publishing over 100 articles for the website. Based out of Wenatchee City, Washington, Tyler has used his education and experience to become a highly skilled writer, critic, librarian, and teacher. He has a passion for Film, TV, and Books and a huge soft spot for Star Trek.
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Charlie X (Episode)
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The USS Enterprise meets the Antares to take charge of Charlie Evans sole survivor of a transport ship that crashed on the planet Thasus. For 14 years, Charlie grew up there alone, stranded in the wreckage, learning how to talk from the ship's computer systems which remained intact.
He is to be transported to his nearest relatives on the colony Alpha V. Crew members of the Antares speak praises about Charlie, but seem pleased to see the boy removed from their ship. After the transfer, they bid the Enterprise an unusually hasty goodbye and depart. Charlie undergoes a medical examination by Dr. McCoy. He tells the doctor the crew of the Antares did not like him very much, and that all he wants is for people to like him.
When the Antares gets nearly out of sensor range, it transmits a warning message to the Enterprise , but the message gets cut off before it can give the warning. Shortly after, Spock determines that the Antares has blown up.
Charlie quickly becomes obnoxious and shows signs that he possesses strange powers. First, he develops an infatuation with Yeoman Janice Rand. He presents her with a bottle of perfume, which turns out to be her favorite scent. Having observed a man in engineering seal an agreement to go to the recreation room with a slap on the rear, he does the same to Rand.
Charlie meets Rand later in the rec room, where Mr. Spock plays a Vulcan lyrette and Lt. Uhura sings. Charlie is annoyed with being a subject in Uhura's performance as well as with Rand paying more attention to the song than to him, so he causes Uhura to temporarily lose her voice.
In an attempt to get Charlie interested in a woman his own age, Rand introduces him to Yeoman Tina Lawton, but Charlie only has eyes for Rand and brushes her off. Later, Kirk tries to teach the young man how to fight. Sam, Kirk's training partner, laughs at one of Charlie's falls, and Charlie makes him vanish before Kirk's eyes. Shocked, Kirk calls for security guards to escort Charlie to his quarters, but Charlie says he will not let them hurt him; he then makes their phasers disappear. Charlie admits he used his powers to destroy the Antares , but says the ship would have blown up on its own sooner or later and insists, "They weren't nice to me."
Charlie discovers Kirk's plans to divert from Alpha V, and takes control of the Enterprise . He forces Spock to recite Earth poetry, turns Tina into a lizard, and chases down Rand. When she resists his advances, he makes her disappear. Charlie then goes on a rampage, hideously transforming or vanishing crew members at will.
Meanwhile, a Thasian ship approaches the Enterprise . The Thasian commander appears on the bridge, saying that his race gave Charlie his powers to help him to survive on their world, but these powers render him too dangerous to live among humans. The Thasians return Yeoman Rand and repair the damage Charlie has done, apart from the Antares . They promise to take Charlie to live with them. Charlie begs Kirk for forgiveness and pleads with him to not let the aliens have him, that they don't feel anything. Despite Kirk's statement that Charlie belongs with his own kind, the aliens take him.
- 1 James T. Kirk
Star Trek: The Original Series
Charlie "X"
Cast & crew.
Frank da Vinci
Grace Lee Whitney
Yeoman Janice Rand
Robert Walker Jr.
Charlie Evans
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Star Trek: The Original Series
“Charlie X”
Air date: 9/15/1966 Teleplay by D.C. Fontana Story by Gene Roddenberry Directed by Lawrence Dobkin
Review by Jamahl Epsicokhan
Review Text
The Enterprise provides transport for 17-year-old Charlie Evans (Robert Walker Jr.), an adolescent who grew up alone on an uninhabited planet after being the sole survivor of a crash 14 years before. Initially unbeknownst to Kirk & Co., Charlie holds powerful abilities that were given to him by an alien race so he could survive his isolation. Charlie now finds himself unable to cope with life among humans, as he careens into social situations where, when he doesn't understand, he feels forced to throw people upon the mercy of his own abilities—including making people "go away," vanishing into apparent oblivion.
The true success in "Charlie X" is in its central character's sympathetic dilemma. Charlie is a boy who wants to be liked and understood, but he doesn't grasp the social norms, and as a result feels threatened whenever he is faced with anything approaching the unpleasant or adversarial. When he experiences a crush on Yeoman Rand, his determination to win her over is poisoned by his ability to harness his anger when his feelings aren't returned.
The episode depends less on plot manipulations than it does on intelligently analyzing one person and the understandable problems surrounding him. Walker Jr. turns in a vivid performance, making Charlie pitiable even when he's at his most sadistic and malevolent. His face-off scenes with Kirk are right on the money. The story's conclusion is a necessary yet unfortunate turn of events.
Previous episode: The Man Trap Next episode: Where No Man Has Gone Before
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69 comments on this post, aj koravkrian.
I just watched Charlie X, and well, it may be a good episode on coffee, but it's unbearably slow. I literally fell asleep during the last couple of acts.
Oh, and also in Charlie X, what's with that ridiculous singing by Uhura...not to mention Spock smiling ? That got my attention in the beginning...it was almost creepy.
I loved the Kirk-as-father-figure aspects of this episode. You do feel sorry for Charlie, which is a nice switch.
I began watching the first season of Voyager and then decided to return to TOS and start at the beginning of the franchise. What immediately strikes me in this episode is the horrifying conclusion and how easily outmatched the crew of the Enterprise were. There was no implausibly brilliant and impossibly convenient solution available to ensure a 'happy' ending. Voyager, in contrast, has felt far too cosy and safe so far. The danger of space exploration and the possibilities that the 'unknown' present, are much more tangible and direct here - the universe is a place were outcomes are not guaranteed and many answers will be beyond us. It's good to see the Original Series taking such risks so early in production. I imagine that the programme following in the footsteps of programmes such as the Twilight Zone in which the outcomes lacked redemption for the protagonists.
“Charlie X” is pretty similar in its basic plot setup to “Where No Man Has Gone Before,” in that not only does the crew have to deal with a superbeing, it’s a human who has these powers, and who increasingly insists that people be nice to them. Still, in spite of the episodes’ similarities they are really about different emotional states. Gary Mitchell’s rebellion is an adult one, and is connected with the frontier and ends with a big Western brawl. Charlie Evans is a teenager, and the adolescent-with-superpowers thing has a similar overall meaning to that in something like Carrie, though this time told primarily from the adults’ POV. All or almost all teenagers, we’re reminded, go through a phase of great change, in which they struggle to fit in and understand themselves and find themselves on the outside of society as a whole. That Charlie was completely cut off from human civilization and raised by powerful beings who don’t really understand him is meant to be an exaggeration of what all teenagers feel like. They want to join adult society and get away from the parents, and ultimately need to, but it’s a very painful process. And in some cases, they never quite do fit into society, and Charlie has to return “home,” to his misery. The eventual realization that Charlie was not a true orphan but did have an upbringing helps bring him closer to an exaggeration of a typical teenager’s experience, rather than the experience of a feral child or a Tarzan figure. What’s interesting about this episode is that the process fails. The gradual escalation here, from Charlie’s social awkwardness to lack of boundaries with Rand to eventually taking over the ship, is pretty well done, I think, where both the crew and Charlie seem to be trying, somehow, to make it work, but they are unprepared to deal with a social misfit teenager and he’s, well, a traumatized orphan with superpowers, so, that’s obviously not going to end well. The crew do seem to me to be on the insensitive side about the incredible trauma Charlie has been through, but I get that they, even McCoy who has some psychological training, are really underqualified for the task of reaching this kid. The gender politics are pretty bad, with Rand trying and not really succeeding to explain why people don’t slap each other’s behinds and that he should talk to Kirk or McCoy about that, at which point they are unable to answer him. But the basic idea that of course he’s going to crush, heavily and overwhelmingly, on an older woman and that this is going to go badly mostly stands. I think that the episode ends up losing much of its momentum about 2/3 of the way through, at which point it’s clear that Charlie’s left much chance of a healthy interaction with the Enterprise crew behind, and the Charlie Problem seems increasingly clearly outside the Enterprise’s grasp. Like “Where No Man Has Gone Before” and to an extent “The Man Trap,” this ending is notably downbeat, solidifying the early-series idea that the Enterprise crew is just on the edge, and the victories it can manage will often be provisional. Even the Enterprise crew can’t deal with a lonely, angry teenager in pain. This is one of the episodes which seems to be positioning Yeoman Rand as a major figure in the show; she seems to be somewhat on par with Uhura overall in this and “The Man Trap” but gets greater focus here. I like that she tries to balance sympathy with Charlie with the importance of setting the proper boundaries. Still, while the story tries to show Janice’s POV, the fact htat the story is primarily about Charlie and about Kirk means that Janice does remain mostly objectified, ending up on the bridge in her nightie because she’s just so hot. The episode furthers Uhura’s hitting-on-Spock habit, this time through song!, and while it’s weird to see Spock smiling the way he does, I don’t think it breaks the character so much as bends him—it’s implausible, but I could see Spock allowing himself a little bit of pleasant amusement while he’s playing music and sharing some quality time with a crew member he ultimately does respect and like (though not in that way). Kirk continues to be a mostly balanced guy, and his awkwardness and inability to talk to Charlie positions him as an adult uncomfortable with teenagers in a way that makes him almost Picardian. I think the episode is repetitive enough that I’d probably go with 3 stars rather than 3.5, but it’s a pretty good show.
Is it me or was kirk being half-hearted in his attempt to keep the blob from taking charlie back? Kind of like hes saying the boy belongs with his own kind but hes really thinking get that little sob off my bridge. Good ep 3.5 yup.
I thought Charlie was somewhat sympathetic at first but quickly became and for a long time remained very evil so for Kirk to try to help in the end at all was very impressive.
It's nothing deep or too analytical but my favorite part of the episode is when Charlie denies that Spock beat him at chess and Spock casually blows him off and refuses to deal with his temper tantrum. It's actually pretty funny the way he plays it. It's a little self-satisfied and a little selfish. He's not going to bother himself trying to correct the little pipsqueak or teach him anything. He doesn't give a crap. He's just going to Vulcanly enjoy that he made him look stupid and let him sit with it. Pshhhhh. Spock is outta here.
Good: Robert Walker Jr. is pretty great The sense of dread in the episode is strong. The threat feels real, and when I was a kid the woman who'd lost her face scared the hell out of me. Unlike in the "first" episode (Man Trap), there's much more of an attempt to sympathize with the threat, which is much more like Star Trek. I've always like Spock's sudden poetry outburst "I can't even touch them!" Bad: I don't mind Uhura singing, but it goes on too long Trying to keep an all-powerful being behind a forcefield is pretty stupid Ugly Nothing to speak of. Overall: Strong, moody piece with an ending that should feel like a cop-out, but doesn't. Three and a half out of four.
grumpy_otter
I like this one very much, and I think Walker does a great job, but he looks so odd that it kind of puts me off him. The way they do his hair makes his head into a triangle, and his orange makeup is a bit much. But this episode, as well-stated above by others, really is a good episode that explores great trek territory.
dreamlife613
Watching this episode (and this series) for the first time in 2016, I was struck by just how scary and creepy it was compared to the other series. Despite Deep Space Nine being the "dark" Star Trek, I don't recall ever feeling scared while watching it. Sure there were some disturbing, thought-provoking incidents and episodes, but nothing scary. In my current watch of Voyager, I've seen some revolting aliens, like the ones who steal organs, but don't recall feeling afraid while watching the episodes. Charlie was a very disturbing character, with that strange look on his face whenever he felt threatened and angered and his rapey behavior towards the female crew was very unsettling. Would have been a better episode if the treatment of the women wasn't so dated (the character with the funny hair (Janice?) and her inability to explain what was happening to her was frustrating. The lack of follow-up to what Charlie did to Uhura (looked like he hurt her throat to stop her from singing) was unfortunate, because so far in the show, she hasn't been treated as much more than a pretty secretary in a short skirt.
Pretty cool episode, I agree with the rest of the crew :P this is a bit creepy. The guest actor was a good one this time around. I think the ending is not a cop-out but thematically consistent with the story. Charlie was basically a (superpowered) teen playing around while his parents weren't looking. And I can't think of many other choices of an ending, either self-destruction or some way to stop him (his parents). He was beyond reasoning or redemption since he banished Rand. The basic idea of the episode reminds me of the classic short story "It's a good life". Charlie would have ended up like the kid from that story if he wasn't stopped. And yeah, Charlie was a sympathetic character, unlike some other ones I've seen so far (the thing of "The Man Trap"). Overall, I am satisfied. And btw, I think I am watching the episodes in production order, because this was my eight episode of TOS instead of the second.
Is it just me or is the face Charlie makes not the most hilarious thing you've ever seen? It seems over the top. It's so bad it's good!
Not a huge fan of the story although the portrayal of Charlie is well done and Shatner's acting is one of his better performances as he has to explain awkward things to Charlie as well as being tough on him. My issue with the episode is that I think it could have been compressed into 1/2 hour. Enough slow parts that show Charlie's nature as a teenager that also don't do much for the development of crew members. Spock must be a bad 3D chess player. The episode establishes a solution that Trek members will employ in subsequent episodes when dealing with a superior being - that of trying to overtax it. Bit of a fortuitous solution in the end when Charlie's "parent" show up to take him away. One can feel for Charlie who will have to live without human contact -- it does show a compassionate side of the crew in the bridge. For me, this one rates 2/4. In some ways similar to "The Man Trap" with a dangerous being roaming the ship, but "Charlie X" didn't have the interest/tension for me that the 1st episode of Season 1 did.
Towards the end I was really willing Kirk to go through with that punch, or just chuck the little sod out of an airlock. I'm a bad person :p This is an interesting episode for me in that it coincidentally follows me having read quite a good social skills series over on reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/socialskills/comments/47v23l/how_to_be_socially_skilled_pt1_getting_started Everything that is mentioned in that series came up in this episode. It felt like I'd just got to the end of a class and been shown a demonstration video :) As noted by someone in the previous episode's comments, you do see more UhuraXSpock than I remember, along with more emotions in Spock early on, kind of invalidating those criticisms when they're directed at the 2009 reboot. (I'm still not a big fan of the reboot though)
Charlie X is "puberty in space" as only Star Trek can do it. As we encounter the 17-year old Charlie learning to cope with powers he's not ready to exercise responsibly, there's a lot of fun to be had in watching Kirk try to parent the boy. But there's a difference in the Star Trek universe as always: This boy really IS all-powerful, rather than simply *thinking* he is such, and he can take revenge on all the people he perceives as slighting him. And when he takes his vengeance on the unwitting crew in Lord of the Flies fashion, evoking our audience fears of being in the hands of an unstable teenager as Spock puts it, there's a real sense of Twilight Zone-esque tension and dread as the crew gradually realizes they are powerless to control him. Robert Walker is stellar as Charlie, capturing all the ambiguities of adolescense. Shatner shines in his portrayal of Kirk, morphing from bemused half-engagement with Charlie to concern as he realizes the threat to his ship -- the wrestling scene and Kirk's bravado in basically telling Charlie "get out of my chair" at the end hearken to the heart of the Kirk character still being established in these early episodes. The message seems to be that Kirk will roll with a lot of things, but taking the captain's chair isn't one of them -- and Charlie's wavering in the face of a father figure who actually pushes back at him for taking "daddy's chair" is well-played by Walker. Also, as a commenter mentioned earlier, Spock's delicious response to Charlie in the chess scene is quintessentially Spock. While Shatner seems to have Kirk's character down pat from the pilot onward, Nimoy is obviously still working things out, and it's almost more fun to watch him develop the greater complexity of Spock's alien character than to watch Kirk do Kirk. While TOS sometimes veers into sexism, I actually didn't perceive that with Yeoman Rand's character in this one, as Charlie is clearly mimicking the behavior of one man to another man when he slaps her -- it's not like he saw a male crew member slap a female crew member on the rear. Also Grace Lee Whitney plays Rand very well here, trying simultaneously to protect the intense Charlie's feelings while sending off the "I'm not interested" vibe with increasing force, a very relatable experience for many people (even today) who have tried to let down unwanted crushes gently. Kirk's awkward effort to explain to Charlie that slapping a woman on the rear is wrong, far from coming across as sexist, feels more like the Abrams reboot Kirk -- the expression on Shatner's face, hinting at his own tendency to push boundaries with women rather than set them, comes across as pretty hysterical. Other highlights include the Uhura-Spock song in the rec room, elaborating our view of shipboard life as well as Uhura's musical character, and the freaky little moments like the faceless woman as Charlie takes his revenge. Very rarely does Trek in any incarnation feel dangerous and shocking, but it does here: We really don't know what vicious things this kid will do next. And Kirk's effort to show compassion for the kid at the end, even knowing how Charlie killed an entire freighter crew, feels very Trekkian in its effort to find *some* good in apparent evil. There's some good nuance here that sometimes doesn't appear in other Trek shows of various series in dealing with all-powerful beings. The omnipotent being as a teenager here is a nice twist on the formula. All in all, I particularly enjoy this one for the realistic way it reminds me of all the teenagers I've known, and for the salutary lesson that great power requires maturity to be exercised responsibility for the benefit of all. This is a classic Trekkian morality tale that remains somewhat unique in the canon. I'd give it 3 1/2 or even 4 stars.
Just another fan
Wow. Nice review, Trek fan. I'm re-watching TOS on Netflix from the beginning for the first time in many years. And so far I'm finding that despite the hokey sets that look like they're made of paper mache, they're still gripping. I forgot that TOS is much more like the Twilight Zone than it is like later Trek series -- happy endings are not guaranteed, and it's not only the red shirts who meet untimely ends. This episode had a real atmosphere of dread that continued to build throughout. Here, I felt sympathy for Charlie as he tried to navigate the rough seas of adolescence. Without human guidance during his prepubescent years, he had poorer social skills than most young people and no sense of how to control himself. Yet I never felt that he was "bad," only that he had never been taught. So I understood the dilemna the crew faced. I remember being a teenager with all those feelings of insecurity and angst. Even if it meant I could be younger, I wouldn't go through that stage of life again. So I could only imagine the pressure on a young person facing all of those painful rites of passage without an adequate support system. At the end, when Charlie begged not to be sent back with the aliens, the camera panned the faces of the crew and you could see that no one but Janice and Kirk felt they could even advocate for the boy to stay. A true, Trekkian dilemna, where there was no comfortable choice to make. I've also been taking note of how the women are treated in these episodes, and so far, it's not too bad for the time period. As usual on Star Trek, there's the odd mixture of an interest in looking at women and commenting on their appearance -- in skirts so short, women couldn't comfortably wear them today, in their nightgowns, sometimes with carefully torn clothing strategically placed, with green skin, with elaborate hair styles, and blue and silver nail polish -- but no real understanding of how to speak to women or relate to them, as if women also were aliens. Witness how Kirk cannot articulate to Charlie why he shouldn't slap a woman on the rear end. In the unaired pilot, the Cage, Captain Pike says he can't get used to having women on the bridge. So given that time period, where women were just beginning to join certain professions, some of the discomfort makes sense. But oddly enough, I see the same treatment of women in Enterprise, as though the people who write Star Trek haven't learned anything about how to relate to women in 40 years. It's a little funny, but while it was somewhat amusing in the sixties, by the 21st century it's more than a little sad. One thing they got right pretty fast with this series was the distinctive characters. It's early on in the show, and already most of the series regulars are establishing clearly differentiated personalities. It's fun to watch that come together.
Why couldn’t the Thasians just take away Charlie’s powers?
Great episode. Story, characters, development of plot. Even without the later joking/teasing remark at the closing moment of the show, you feel the chemistry between them is working as early as here. I don't see the smiling of Spock while playing his instrument and being mocked by Uhura's singing as contradictionary to his character. He could just pretend not to bother about her but being concentrated on his own music thereby. We see them off duty in a recreational setting so the formalities don't apply here as they would on the bridge. Playing chess, doing exercises in the gym, playing cards and nipping at drinks while socializing - the show does a good job at showing casual life on board of a ship en voyage. Also scenes with crewmembers working on engineer tasks, all this while developing the story around Charlie, or even the traffic in the corridors - it's enjoyable how the Enterprise is fleshed out as a ship with a living crew doing their job and having fun besides shifts on duty. They manage to do that without looking awkward or wooden, it has a 'natural' look. Something you don't see too such extent for example on ST Enterprise from 2003 so far I have accompanied its episodes (3rd season). TOS does the show and atmosphere very well and contributes to the authenticy it wants to convey. And all this besides a strong story. Chapeau!
consumption of classic sci-fi at this point is in a fundamental way an historicist exercise in tracking our social progression as much as it is entertainment. while there is no point maligning it for where it fails to meet modern sensibilities--especially since one is presumably there in the first place to celebrate where it still manages to succeed in doing the same--i do believe discussion of how our sensibilities have shifted out-of-universe is a useful and important continuation of the REAL WORK i like to see trek attempt in all its iterations. After all, trek doesn’t just inspire us to model our flip phones and ipads on ‘communicators’ and ‘padds’ and theorize about warp drives--it also attempts to give us a model for human behaviour in our BEST POSSIBLE FUTURE. Checking in with older versions of our best possible future is one way we find the consensus to course-correct our biggest and most necessary cultural shifts and recalibrate our (projected) trajectory (see TOS ref. interracial kissing or DISC ref. homosexuality. whatever you think of them, most of us apparently agree now that they will probably still exist in ALL of our possible future(s) and that our posterity will very likely not give whatever shits we might). So although i found myself mostly tracking themes of gender-interaction & adolescence in charlie x during THIS watchthrough and plan to spew some impressions about those subjects here, I’m not really trying to squabble/troll/strut my neo-americo-politico. For contrast, the last time i watched it the gender politics were totally eclipsed by my simultaneous reading of a ton of ray bradbury and harlan ellison so scifi-horror genre blending and twilight zone comparisons were my primary analytical lenses. anyway, people get real sensitive about gender discourse without pretty thorough disclaimers these days, but gender discourse is nevertheless part of that REAL WORK i was talking about before so feel free to engage, but only if you can sustain a picard-level of civility in the undertaking, thx. so as an artifact of its time, i find charlie x pretty daring in its effort to imagine its own time's 'less sexist' future. even stuck in our ‘past-future’, blind to its own blind spots, and missing some of its marks, this episode still feels like it’s doing some of that realwork in parsing sexual politics and departing from realworld madmen-era norms. I get that by modern standards the males here come off as (still in the 23rd century) somehow unable to explain simple ideas of autonomy and a sentient being’s innate right to bodily agency to an adolescent boy (even though they manage just fine to speechify the same concepts to/about blobs and gasbags)--but the take away to me is that they try at all in a less-than-totally-alien context. it’s a pretty bold depiction for the time of a woman flatly denying male attention without any consequence/scorn/joke (perhaps only possible then because of the young male/older woman angle)--especially of a woman who actually DOES appear to care about the person whose attention toward her feels increasingly rooted in the obsessive/possessive feelings that are so often real-world precursors to sexual violence. It devotes quite a lot of time to showcasing the yeoman’s gradual steps toward taking the actions that (may) become necessary to her bodily safety and which match the escalation of charlie’s advances in a pretty true-to-life way. She sends him to an older male for counsel, she tries to explain it herself, eventually she goes to her superior with her grievance. etc. I bet at the time it felt very familiar to women but maybe not so much to men who probably couldn’t bring themselves to break decorum and address harassment directly if at all then. In retrospect, rand’s comfort with sending charlie to a man in authority to ask about his misstep is kind of great since it supposes a future in which she is not ashamed and presumes that man will have a reasonably accurate understanding of her perspective sans any assumption that she herself somehow invited the affront. again, possibly only the age difference makes this work here, but in the mid-60s i call it a win. it does seem that her genuine affection-but-not-passion for charlie is presented as something that this adolescent (male?) just cannot decode without (male?) guidance though. without this guidance, it seems that every time rand responds warmly to him or appears friendly (as during the mess scenes with the card tricks), it appears not just to reinforce his crush (totally natural) but also feelings of entitlement to reciprocation (also natural? only correctable through social instruction? idk). his previous lack of human contact is the in-universe explanation for this inability, but he is not also a small child like anthony from twilight zone’s ‘it’s a good life’--he plays chess and runs a starship with his superpowers. he knows that HE feels emotion and that others do as well. he knows that he doesn’t like his feelings hurt. he says kirk is “not nice” when he tries to confine him, hates being laughed at or feeling humiliation but nevertheless laughs at spock and attempts to humiliate him on the bridge by having him spout poetry, turns that girl into an iguana and grins maliciously, etc so it’s difficult to buy from a contemporary standpoint that he doesn’t have enough on humans at his disposal to deduce that if the yeoman does not want him, his taking her or disappearing her is, in fact, ‘not nice.’ if charlie knows what he is doing is wrong, his acts against rand are much more frightening, but also much more analogous to realworld situations. when does a young man learn that it is wrong to force your will onto others? is the answer different now than it was then? The assumption of young men’s lack of emotional intelligence here is totally expected in this period, but I also think it’s worth noting that the apriori assumption that charlie (and by allegorical extension adolescents in general) CANT learn to identify, decode, and apply emotional information based on experience and observation alone (listening to rand and accepting her choice) helps absolve him/them of the responsibility of cultivating the skill (emotions are a skill some people have to work on), and then simultaneously punishes him/them for not having it down already--which is a very arrogant and adult failure. charlie is first snickered at for benign faux pas and then eventually banished for, in some sense, quitting the growing-up game and the intricacies of navigating adult space at a disadvantage while he is faced with perceived ridicule--a very adolescent failure, to be sure. but where does the episode place the blame for this failure? on him rather than the adults around him who fail him spectacularly even though they clearly want to help and feel that what they offer him should be enough for him to extrapolate the rest. so the episode positions kirk as the dispenser of knowledge, arbiter of justice, and guiding paternal hand here--all in keeping with period--but consider kirk's initial fail regarding the 'bum-tap.' it’s a less successful joke in today's atmosphere because its humor comes from our adult knowledge that there are, in fact, 2 answers to charlie's question, well why can’t you slapass anyway? answer 1) in public and in theory (and in fictional projections of our best future-selves which celebrate us at the height of our civility) we don't harass unfamiliar women/people like that because we agree as a society that certain areas of the body are restricted-access. they require familiarity and prior authorization to engage them. it is a violation of the other person's body-sovereignty/sentience/personhood to treat them as something you are free to manipulate without obvious encouragement if not outright verbalized permission. answer 2) well, son, when you're naturally 'gifted' at this (as i am, kirksmirk) you just KNOW when it's okay to initiate rump-thumping protocols and when it isn't, how can i possibly TELL you if you don’t already KNOW? It’s just INTUITION my boy... I wonder where charlie’s feelings of inadequacy start, eh? WE get kirk’s joke, of course, but charlie doesn’t. he needs the first answer but he only gets the second. worse, kirk’s delivery makes it pretty obvious that there IS some second meaning he should already know. coupled with the pain of rejection you’ve got a perfect kickoff for the development of feelings of inferiority in an adolescent superbeing. the episode’s “right” answer is of course what kirk says later in his failure--there are a million things you can have and a million you can’t--an oversimplification that only comes AFTER charlie has failed to miraculously devine human taboos through the very helpful mix of snickering, teasing, ignoring, and patronizing he endures at the hands of cap’n’crew. as an adult, you know uhura’s teasing song and the crew’s laughter is based in affection but if you know any teens you also know how obtuse they can be when they feel stupid academically, socially, or otherwise. so here, where charlie’s initiation into the club of adulthood becomes VITAL for him to be accepted/acceptable in society because of his power, again, the only instruction he receives is in the form of a frustrated, nervous adult laying down the law. if emotional intelligence IS innate, the implication becomes that charlie just ain’t got it, and his failure to meet ‘normal’ social standards is grounds for expulsion from the club of humanity. the inability of his untutored adolescent brain to decode rand’s or the rest of the crew’s behavior positions charlie, for all of that power, as inherently defective, unfixable, and dangerous. even if on the other hand, emotional management is a learned skill, the implication here is still that charlie couldn’t learn it because he was supplied by kirk with the KNOWLEDGE OF GOOD AND EVIL so to speak, and was still unable to process the information into a usable moral code within a few days. either way, it amounts to a very adult dismissal of a very real adolescent quandary--especially in a reality where humans are interplanetary superstars at diplomacy with various alien species of various emotional configurations all mostly figured out (snort from over here in reality snort). The real horror of this episode isn’t charlie himself really. It’s the terrifying, ever-fading ability of adults to communicate with, relate to, and/or control younger people who seem too volatile/reckless/fearless to wield the powers and knowledge they already have with wisdom they certainly do not have, yet cannot realize they lack. In other words, not all teens are a charlie, but every adult is a kirk--we all see ourselves as someone who could take a kid underwing, do a little boxing, fishing, and viola! But then we end up talking way too much instead of listening. We’re too busy reminiscing, too cringingly knowing, we think we’re funny (because we are) but we forget so easily that they don’t get us yet because we vaguely remember being like them. But when we abandon kids in trouble or railroad their lived experiences or titter at their juvenile antics its easy to forget the humiliation that is sometimes involved in learning the rules that govern adult conduct. Something small can feel big enough to a kid to justify copping out of learning these rules and avoiding people altogether. Then, a few years later that kid is a charlie, limited experience with people and a whole lot of new power, wondering why someone won’t just explain the rules and stop laughing at them.
Ein starkes Kapitel, das mich unbehaglich gemacht hat, die Gymnastik-Szene ist wirklich witzig
I think that Jammer is right in saying that the point of the episode lies not so much in its plot, but rather in the theme of adolescence which is actually treated well. I wrote about it here! https://vengonofuoridallefottutepareti.wordpress.com/2018/12/18/star-trek-tos-s01e02-charlie-x-english/
A good one. Robert Walker Jr does a great job. He freaks me out already as I've never seen any kid who was so much of a clone of his father. If you've never seen RW Sr, go goggle it. I actually remember this ep when it first aired. I was just a kid, but I'd seen Sr in something or other - probably an old movie or something - and I remember being confused about how he could be in this episode, so young . . . I think that's why I remember this ep. Definitely a "coming of age" story, but a weird and twisted one, that ends badly and sadly, without any real growth or change. Charlie's stuck forever, and I suppose the message of the ep is how much we need each other to learn our lessons in life, and for love and support while we do that. Shirtless Kirk. Uhura singing. Rand in a night gown. I think the early shows here are highlighting the cast's talents and sexy features to grab an audience.
I know these were written ages ago, but ... “When he experiences a crush on Yeoman Rand, his determination to win her over is poisoned by his ability to harness his anger when his feelings aren't returned.” Should that be “inability?”
When Kirk and Charlie were on the turbolift on the way to the bridge, did they stop off at Kirk's quarters so he could change his shirt?
"Witness how Kirk cannot articulate to Charlie why he shouldn't slap a woman on the rear end." I can get why people would find that problematic. Personally I felt like it was a combination of * Kirk is good at being the particular type of authority figure that his job requires of him. He's completely out of his element at being the authority figure for a lonely 14 year old kid who wants to look up to him and wants to feel that Kirk admires/respects him. Thus why the talk starts out really awkward. * Charlie feels out of place and wants to fit in, and has no idea of what normal social interaction is like. So he sees two people having fun and sees one of them give the other a "good game" pat on the rear end, and he thinks "ok, doing that is part of how I fit in". So Kirk is having trouble about the butt-slap because he doesn't know how to explain why it was ok for that other guy but not for Charlie (especially since Charlie is going to instantly default to whining about how it's unfair that other people can do things he can't, without waiting for the full explanation). * And I liked how Kirk finally quits talking about the social interactions of physical contact and just tells him basically "This is how life is: if you like someone, then you put what they want ahead of what you want. Sometimes that means you don't get what you hope for, and it hurts, but you keep on living and you'll be ok." which he delivers a bit stilted, but it's a good message.
Let's talk Charlie X. So this is basically a high concept similar to the much-maligned VOY episode "Q2" with the premise being "What if an adolescent had super powers?". The similarities with Q2 stop here. What works thematically about this one is we have a crew that's in its freshman years deep in space, just getting its bearings. We have Uhura singing, Spock smiling while playing music, card games and other games that can be considered youthful vices. The smart part of this is how Charlie can dig into all these activities like your typical teenager, but we see he is totally incapable of sharing these experiences with others. He wants to be the cool one, the mature one, the one everyone laughs with - not at. When he enters a room he hopes for cheers at his importance. So while he can relate to the Enterprise crew on a surface level, he fails to see the "why" behind all their playful activities. Failing to acclimate, he quickly finds a role model in the most charismatic person on the ship, Kirk. As Jammer notes, we see how despite everyone's earnest efforts to accept Charlie, it inevitably doesn't work. It's great how the differences start slow like Charlie just showing off a few abilities that can be dismissed as tricks or coincidence. But these parlor tricks add up and Charlie, in typical adolescent fashion, can't control his feelings well enough and has to keep compensating for more and more with flash over substance. As many have noted, Robert Walker Jr.'s performance really seals the deal as we see his innocence, passion, anger, and fear projected loudly in every scene. Apparently Walker practiced his part by keeping his distance from the cast, never socializing and sticking to character, and it really shines on the screen. Shatner is also good as an overwhelmed father. He does his best to provide guidance and a stern hand which make for some marvelous confrontations between the metaphorical Father-and-Son. A few things detract from the episode, however. The episode runs out of gas at some point, and it feels like the Enterprise crew is trying countermeasures like a containment field which they should know by that point is futile. He destroyed a whole ship, for Pete's sake! Also, it's diffcult to tell if something that happens on screen is Charlie's doing. For example, Uhura was singing about Charlie while Charlie hoped to put the moves on Yeoman Janice Rand. Suddenly, Uhura appeared to be violently silenced by Charlie using his powers to remove her voice. But this incident was never reported and could have tipped off Kirk to Charlie's powers before the Antares met its doom. Was that really Charlie at work or just a production error? But all in all, these are minor things in what's surprisingly the (second?) officially aired episode of Star Trek. We have get a great story of a lost child all can relate to who cannot truly return to humanity. Was it kindness of the aliens to keep him alive artificially or cruelty because of the life he'll have to lead? That's the kind of thought-provoking question that makes for great Star Trek. "Shirtless Kirk. Uhura singing. Rand in a night gown. I think the early shows here are highlighting the cast's talents and sexy features to grab an audience." Tango! A little known fact about this one is that RCA owned NBC at the time. So, in order to sell color TVs, they were pushing for the show to have vivid colors against the dull gray of the Enterprise. It stands to reason they'd want vivid images of actors too. Thus, this one was meant to be enjoyable on a technical level even if you didn't like the Sci-Fi.
I will have to watch this one again to verify some details, but I wonder whether we might take Charlie as a message about what happens when power is mixed with a lack of social checks, and specifically in the world of TV. Obviously in real life powerful people have their way with others, and we don't need any sci-fi show to tell us that. But what if the message is more about media, where we're used to seeing charismatic leads getting the ladies, with the presumption that an attraction woman is on-screen *to be won* by the male lead (or vice versa now). Likewise, we're inundated with material where people with powers - whether supernatural or just political - can get away with all kinds of stuff that we'll root for, whether it's Marvel characters doing zany stuff, or Kevin Spacey in House of Cards charming as the anti-hero. If we take all of this in context and give Charlie X a lot of credit, maybe we're seeing the underbelly of all of that: that it's naked power showing its unsophisticated self, wanting whatever it sees without consideration for what it means or whether it's good. Someone like Kirk, who by all rights *could be seen* as a standard womanizing lead who does whatever he wants (which I don't really think he ever was) is faced here with explaining to a juvenile why it's wrong and to try to put a stop to it. What starts off as innocent turns dark quickly when "no" is not an acceptable answer. Could this be some kind of examination of what might happen in standard media if leads in TV shows and film experienced rejection instead of victory?
@Peter G. That's a good observation. It might be the case that modern media is more and more aiming at adolescents, or adults who are adolescent at heart. In that sense, this episode works as an indictment against people who feed on their ids. They can influence events, people and hold enormous power, but when things don't go their way or there's too much to handle (note that the solution to this episode was turning all the functions of the ship on at once giving Charlie much more than he could control at once) the whole thing falls down like a well... house of cards. :-) But I do think that you're right, that Kirk and the others are rejecting this type of power and attention. They try to understand the boy and teach him, but they do not give into his demands when he fails to listen and grows ever more desperate. Pretty fascinating material here!
Peter I'll admit I thought your hypothesis was a bit out there. But then I watched the episode last night again for the first time in a while. I still doubt that was what they were going for with it, but I enjoyed applying your filter to the action. Kirk's utter inability to explain to Charlie why you can't slap a woman's behind (in essence, why consent is necessary to sex or simply no-means-no) may be just "ha ha sex is awkward" but one could wonder if Kirk simply can't address the question because it has never come up for him. In his universe, no woman ever says no to him. Kirk, like Charlie, exists in a universe where his will becomes reality. In a meta sort of way Kirk and Charlie are mirror images. Kirk is the hero, and for that sort of hero, "no" is alien, unfathomable. Charlie is what happens when heroes fall into a 'real' real world and ot ain't pretty.
Great early episode. Sad to read of Robert Walker jr 's passing on. Played an excellent role in this show.
Disliked this episode as a kid; dislike it now. Very dated and silly. The kid with super powers. Not that interesting. Weak second episode for a brand new sci fi series. The next few are much better. Charlie was just annoying. Sorry
I hadn’t seen this in like 30 years, but the lead in Bandersnatch reminded me very strongly of Charlie. So I’d say this ep left an impression on me. The reason is trivial though. A late teenage male with a bouffant who is more than a tad unsocial.
Proud Capitalist Pig
"Charlie X" -- It should be called "Charlie Z," because the titular brat is clearly a member of Generation Z: spoiled, whiny, "wanting a million things that he can't have," and throwing a temper tantrum when he is rejected or stymied. I should know; I parent three of them. What struck me as especially true of most contemporary teenagers was that he craves nothing but instant gratification without doing any work. He refuses to listen to Spock while he tries to explain three-dimensional chess, just wanting to play without learning the rules and caveats. And then later, he doesn't care to learn the initial wrestling and falling techniques Kirk is patiently and amicably trying to teach him because he wants to get right to the sparring. Seems to me that the Giant Heads who raised him should have spanked him on the backside a lot more. Maybe then he would know not to play grab-ass with the older officers (Kirk trying to explain to Charlie why he shouldn't be slapping Janice's ass was priceless). Poor Janice. The look on her face, after Charlie's incident with her, had my son and I bursting out laughing. So then they realize Charlie has incredible superpowers. He made a crewman disappear right in front of Captain Kirk's eyes. He transformed a junior yeoman into an iguana (what torture that must be). It was inevitably established that force fields and bulkheads will NOT hold him. And yet no one thought to SHOOT him? Or beam him into oblivion? They could have at least tried! Something tells me that despite having superpowers, he was still a human being (as Dr. McCoy basically reported), and probably could have been neutralized. One other thing confused me--at the end, with Charlie clearly not able to live among human beings, why didn't the Blob Head aliens simply take his powers away? Then Kirk could have thrown him back in jail with no fuss or muss. I did enjoy the little spots wherein we get to know the characters more. Uhura is still wanting some serious Vulcan Dick, and the scene of her singing while Spock accompanies her on the harp (trying not to grin) was delightful. William Shatner was admirable again as Kirk, this time the reluctant father-figure to the worst possible teenager who's ever lived. He brilliantly exerted Kirk's bemusement, patience, and calm authority throughout the episode. Best line: "There are a million things you can have, and a million things you can't have!" -- Kirk, a truism that ought be plastered on every billboard from Portland, Maine, to San Diego, California.
You're post contains some... interesting rhetoric, first compairing Charlie to Gen Z, as you see similarities to you're own kids, then you blame the parenting for Charlue's behaviour... which seems to indicate you blame parenting for the current generations behavour, which includes your own kids... so you... blame yourself for how your kids turned out? I don't think you meant to imply that. I also think you've avoided the fact that pretty much ALL teenagers are enititled brats who want things done NOW without putting hard work in from time-to-time, as well as the fact that Social Media and an increasing online life gives these teenage hormonal developing voices more airtime and more like-minded people to share and spread their views. I'd also like to point out that this is probably the only site where users can say "Okay boomer" without it being a generational backtalk thanks to a certain prolific poster. Haha.
@Nolan "I also think you've avoided the fact that pretty much ALL teenagers are enititled brats who want things done NOW without putting hard work in from time-to-time, as well as the fact that Social Media and an increasing online life gives these teenage hormonal developing voices more airtime and more like-minded people to share and spread their views. " You might also say that pretty much all parents are believers in the idea that hard work or sacrifice is a requirement to acquire or obtain something. Because without that belief, passed on down the generations, there is no basis for calling these teenagers "entitled brats".
@Nolan I live to serve. :) It was an interesting post. My children are horrible monster, but I love them. They are made that way by a society we created. Very meta.
OmicronThetaDeltaPhi
Funny how it's always "society" that's at fault, eh? Don't parents have a responsibility for their kids' upbringing and education? And the responsibility of setting a personal example, as well? Nah... what a silly idea. It must be society's fault. Meanwhile, lets get drunk on a regular basis, develop a super-negative cynical view of the world, troll random communities on the internet, and attack every person who sees the world a bit differently than we do. What could possibly go wrong? ;-)
As for Charlie being "Generation Z": Only people with a very short memory would say this. Teenagers have always been that way. It's part of the natural growth process of human beings, and always was. The important question is whether the youngsters grow out of this phase or not.
Omicron, when a single child is a brat you can comfortably say it's bad parenting. When it's say 500,000 children, then you can comfortably blame society. That goes for almost any social problem. I always kind of laugh when an older generation condemns a younger one - ummm who made us gramps? As for Generation Z I agree that they are not radically different from others save one important factor - social media. It doesn't just mold them the way TV or video games molded my generation - it also gives them the power to mold society in their own image, something no previous generation could do. When I was in high school lots of kids had stupid ideas but their tantrums couldn't bend the wills of multinational corporations and governments. A 16 year old on Twitter in 2020 can be more influential now than a national news anchor was in 1980.
Agreed on the effects of social media. As for whether we blame society or the individual parent: It's not an either-or proposition. Just because there are certain problems in society as a whole, doesn't mean that individual parents are off the hook. Sure, society will screw the kid's mind either way, but we can at least make sure that we aren't making the situation even worse with our own behavior.
"Sure, society will screw the kid's mind either way, but we can at least make sure that we aren't making the situation even worse with our own behavior." Sure, and I am not denying that people make bad choices. But if you're talking about a problem in generational broadly sweeping terms like "kids today!" or "how about that opioid epidemic!" it's asinine to turn it around and say it's just individuals behaving badly while dismissing "society" at large. A priori, anything that effects a generation must be societal. When you roll the dice a couple of times and you get sixes that's just luck. If you roll the dice 100,000 times and get nothing but sixes then you know something more is going on.
"This programme from the '60s reminds me of kids today, and how they are uniquely and unprecedentedly terrible."
You know Top Hat that just proves that Star Trek was always ahead of it's time.
This discussion reminds me of this exchange from Plan 9 From Outer Space (substitute gender for generation gap): Lieutenant John Harper: Modern women. Colonel Tom Edwards: They've been like that all down through the ages. Especially in a spot like this.
@Jason I'm not talking about general trends. I'm talking about the fact that a person who doesn't bother to get their own lives in order, has a cynical attitude towards life, and is blaming everybody but themselves for all their problems, is in no position to blame "society" for how their kids turn out. That's all I'm saying.
Charlie X Star Trek season 1 episode 2 3 stars (out of 4) "KIRK: We have a large supply of entertainment tapes, gentlemen. RAMART: No, we've a tight schedule to make, Captain. Just twenty of us, we're making out fine. KIRK: Not even Sarian brandy?” - Kirk’s offer of porn and booze is rebuffed by a ship of gay mormons When The Graduate premiered in 1967, the actress playing Mrs. Robinson was 36 years old, exactly the same age as Janice Rand in “Charlie X” which aired the year prior. There is something about a woman at that age. Would you believe that Stacey’s Mom was 34 when that video came out? That’s exactly the same age as Uhura was in this episode, when she sang and she shimmied as Mr. Spock played his harp. Teenagers think they know what sexy is. Charlie thought it was ass-slapping. Star Trek these days thinks it is twenty-somethings acting all deep and mysterious. But the sultry mid-thirties are incredible. Gate McFadden (Doctor Beverly) was 38 when TNG premiered. That’s the same age as Stifler’s Mom in American Pie, yes the movie that popularised a crude modern word for Mrs. Robinson. Jeri Ryan was 33 when Seven first kissed Chakotay. Kira was 36 when DS9 started. https://youtu.be/yiXu3PGscDs We see the first sparks between Troi and Worf when Troi is, that’s right, 36. Soji is 21. Which by the way is the same age as that Yeoman Third Class Tina, who Charlie didn’t give two fucks about. Who can blame him?
There’s no Charlie wxyz here, this is a very simple story of a (very well tanned) young boy in puberty in a completely alien world. This is unfortunately the hellish nature of what the TNG The Bonding was really offering the boy there. Although, damn, should Kirk allow this? Does he have a choice? Whatever these aliens have done, is it right for them to take the boy away? And in a more meta sense, it’s fascinating the much smaller 1701 in a very large and mysterious galaxy vs the mighty 1701-D seeming to virtually lord over the Alpha quadrant.
The little sadistic bastard was held accountable for his actions in the end and paid for them accordingly. What a concept!!! Great ending for that was a cruel and monstrous boy that was Charlie X. A very good episode and a frightening reminder about how power can be abused. I give it a sold A.
I liked this a lot more than the aired Pilot, Charlie's character is intriguing, an alien teenager who doesn't fit in and doesn't understand social norms, sounds like many a teenager on Earth! It's relatable. You feel for Charlie despite the despicable things he's doing to stay in control. [The actor is excellent.] Unfortunately the ending lets it down, Kirk and crew's plan is to put some ship lights on and for Kirk to punch him. Ha ha! Really? Take him on Kirk! As Jammer said, the resolution is necessary but still disappointing. A good ep though.
I always connected this episode strongly with "It's a GOOD Life" by Jerome Bixby, a rather famous short story from the Golden Age of science fiction. In that story the superbeing was an 8-year-old who could "send you to the cornfield" if he didn't like you. (You didn't want to know more . . . ) He could read minds, change the weather, pretty much anything. Everybody had to pretend to be happy all the time. It was turned into a Twilight Zone episode. That story also had an unhappy ending, worse than the Trek one. I'm surprised so few people are aware of it. Jerome Bixby wrote one or two TOS episodes, though I can't remember which ones now.
@The Queen I, too, see the similarity of this episode to Bixby's story. It is also very similar to another Trek episode, The Squire of Gothos. Trelane is not human, and apparently grows up with parents of his own species, but like Charlie, he is a naughty boy with unspeakable power.
Robert Walker is almost too good at playing this part. Very annoying, but still sympathetic. Still, I really really wanted Kirk to deck him at the end of the episode. Trek's long tradition of bad wigs begins with Grace Lee Whitney's beehive. It's especially ridiculous in this episode. I was looking at some old promo pics and they gave her much nicer looking hair initially: https://www.trekcore.com/specials/rare/rand_althair.jpg A funky but kinda cool looking space retro thing: https://www.trekcore.com/specials/rare/kirk_rand2.jpg I wonder why they made the switch.
Interesting parallel, but although the “Generation Z” reference made me smile, I don’t think that the episode’s central message is that all teenagers are spoiled brats who deserve to be spanked. What makes Charlie dangerous is not his age, but his superior powers, and concerning this subject, I agree that there are some parallels to Where No Man Has Gone Before. But unlike Gary Mitchell, Charlie has grown up with these abilities, with the consequence that they are an intrinsic trait of his personality, a part of his reactions to his environment, as natural and incidental as other body functions like breathing or batting eyelids. When he arrives on board the Antares, his mind powers immediately establish a border between him and the ship’s crew, which means that the total isolation in which he’s lived until then and which he’s desperate to overcome, still continues. On the Enterprise, the first thing he does to break out of this isolation is to reach out to those around him (like McCoy), to model himself on others, to imitate their behavior, which is basically what most children and adolescents do. So why doesn’t this work? I admit that I’ve been mulling over this for some time after watching the episode. After all, McCoys plan to appoint Kirk to act as a sort of father image for Charlie does make some sense, considering that Kirk has many characteristics that make him a father figure: authority, empathy, understanding, even sensitivity… and when he interacts with Charlie, like in the scene in his quarters, he brings all that to bear, devotes his time to him, even charging Spock with an important task he wanted to perform himself so he can take Charlie to the gym. But what he can’t tolerate is Charlie’s egotism, his self-centered way of thinking, circling exclusively around his own wishes and desires… in the microcosm of the ship’s crew, there is no place for this kind of behavior; everyone must respect the others and if necessary, place their needs above his or her own. I agree, maybe that’s the egotism of youth, albeit certainly not of a particular generation but in general. And while this contrast immediately opens a gap between Charlie and Kirk, the episode doesn’t stop here: the real conflict hasn’t even broken out by the time this scene happens, and when it does, in the end, it’s again more about Charlie’s powers than about his young age. Maybe the problems of adolescence are best described as a sort of “fire accelerant” for the destructive potential of his mind powers.
Michael Miller
3rd episode, and literally 2 out of the 3 based on humans turning into gods essentially. And his obsessive attraction to Jannice is overdone and ridiculous. He's got all these powers and that's all he can think about? Why is a 17 year old so interested in a 30-40 year old? And that whole Kirk being a daddy figure couldn't be any more ironic, considering how he takes advantage of every woman of every species he can get his hands on, his genes are spread throughout half the quadrant by the end of that season, oh the irony. If I started watching it in order and these were the first 3 episodes I saw, I would think this was a stupid show, am glad I didn't.
EventualZen
@Michael Miller >Why is a 17 year old so interested in a 30-40 year old? Did you never like any of your teachers when you were at school?
Ughhh. A spoiled brat with superpowers given to him by the Wizard of Oz. Not my cup of tea. The scene in the gymnasium with kirk wearing spandex has to be one of the cheesiest of all time.
Robert Walker Jr. Was only 9 years younger than William Shatner. It's amazing to me to think these two actors pulled off the son/father figure roles. I have always liked this tragic episode, moreso as I've gotten older. It forever leaves me with the question of why more couldn't have been done for Charlie, not from the human who tried to help them but the aliens who gave him his powers.
I really liked Yeoman Rand in the Man Trap and in this episode. She was a spunky, self-confident character and Grace Whitney acted the role well. I was very sorry they discontinued her character.
When I Came Aboard
It would have saved the day if Lt Uhura's looks (as in glances and scowls) at CHarlie in the last few scenes could kill, with the same efficiency as his looks could kill.
How did they come up with that facial...er...gesture Charlie made when invoking his powers?
Enjoyable episode. Interesting story and strong acting,especially Robert Walker Jr. Hell, I'd like to have given Rand a tap on the fanny too.
It’s interesting how often the idea of super powered young people is used in post war pop culture. The Twilight Zone did it, and TOS did it at least three times(Charlie X, Trelane, those bonk-bonk-on-the-head kids). The fear of out of control youth was a pretty big anxiety in the late 20th century I guess. As for the episode, it exceeds expectations by quite a bit. Normally stories centered around kids or teens don’t really grab me. But here it works on almost every level, and really lands heavy with Charlie as a tragic figure. The only weak area is TOS’s usual Achilles heal of dated gender stuff. The fact that Rand can’t calmly explain boundaries and personal space to Charlie comes across as very contemporary rather than futuristic. Although I’d say that in kirk’s case it serves his character development( the guy’s uncomfortable around kids, I sympathize). Overall a very strong, very human, episode.
"Teenagers have always been that way. It's part of the natural growth process of human beings, and always was. The important question is whether the youngsters grow out of this phase or not." Actually, all teenagers are not that way. There are teenagers who get through it just fine. That brings me to a question on Charlie. Why was adolescence so troubling for him? According to the background of this story, At some point during age 3, he was orphaned and the Thasians took over his care, giving him powers to help him survive. I used to think that these aliens simply flew by, saw this baby, and gave him these powers. After that, they flew away, and then left him to his own devices. However, this is a three year old, who would have no concept of what he could do with these powers. Maybe he could connect two and two and dream up a giant baby food jar full of food, but he couldn't craft himself clothing, or shelter. The only way Charlie would learn about his powers is through teaching. The only ones who could teach him to use them were the Thasians and, they would have to be in close contact with this baby in order to do that very thing. Charlie states these beings don't "love", which is supposed to lead us, the viewer, to the conclusion that his existence is a terrible, lonely one. But, if these Thasians were raising him like any other Thasian, he would never know love because they don't love. In reality, Charlie would be a teenager, but well ingrained into the Thasian way of living, so in the reality of the episode, I very much doubt he'd leave with the Antares. To me, he'd almost be reminiscent of a young Flint, without the human background to create a robot companion. Loneliness would be non existent.
A very effective horror story and I was quite impressed Kirk tried to keep such a dangerous entity aboard in the end. The comments of some people here linking Charlie with whatever they don't like about 'current' youth shows this is a powerful episode for the ages I suppose. One thing that I noticed coming from the TNG is how the music on TOS is way more present. Seems I don't even remember they used music in that series to carry anything. In here they don't shy away from using that orchestra at all.
wanderer2575
< Charlie now finds himself unable to cope with life among humans, as he careens into social situations where, when he doesn't understand, he feels forced to throw people upon the mercy of his own abilities—including making people "go away," vanishing into apparent oblivion. > Did anyone else immediately think of Billy Mumy pointing and saying "You're a very bad man!" on The Twilight Zone?
The first of two consecutive episodes about how absolute power corrupts absolutely. Did not the crew of the Antares experience Charlie's "powers"? Or, perhaps they did, and thus are happy to hand him off to the Enterprise -- without warning -- and get the heck out of there. It would explain their lack of interest in the entertainment tapes Kirk offers. Toward the end, the Thasians saw enough of what was going on to save Rand, but they didn't step in right then, instead permitting Charlie to escape the brig, erase a woman's face, and break Spock's legs. The 26-year-old Robert Walker always looked too old for the part, but I assume he was intentionally chosen to play a 17-year-old in order to emphasize the disparity between Charlie's physical and emotional development. There are too many plot holes and cringeworthy moments for me to enjoy this episode. The Corbomite Maneuver, which was produced before Charlie X, would have made a much better episode to introduce early viewers to TOS, but special effects delayed its readiness for airing. 2 of 4 warped baffle-plates
SlappyMcGee
Loved the SFX in this early Trek. Especially: the disappearing force field wall, the faceless crewmember, and the floating green head at the end. Thoughtful script and the cast feels pretty settled to me.
I agree that this is a great episode. The "Charlie X" character is compelling but also pretty seriously disturbing in a way that feels connected to real things. Charlie reminds me, in this day and age, of so-called incels and other young men who cannot handle disappointment and rejection in any way other than through acts of violence. You pity them, and yet they are dangerous and scary. It is not a new problem. I think this includes some extremely good acting on Shatner's part. His supposed overacting, in general, is kind of a cliche of criticism, but he is capable of intensity with controlled physicality and expression mostly through his face and eyes. He really shows some chops here. I did not appreciate the writing at one point here, namely the scene where Kirk is trying to explain to Charlie why it is not acceptable to slap a woman on the ***. I don't quite know if they (writers) were just trying to be funny with all the hemming and hawing, or if there wasn't quite the language for it then. It's just respect! He just had to say, women don't like to be touched without their consent and it is disrespectful to do what you did. That is all. Kirk was weirdly tongue-tied about it. (He did come through later finally explaining to Charlie that love requires that the woman have a choice in the relationship too--good job, Kirk!) One sees in Star Trek TOS, so ahead of its time in so many ways, the struggle to figure out relations between the sexes in the context of equality. There is a lot of inconsistency and occasionally a nauseating cringe moment. Apparently Gene Roddenberry himself had problems in this regard. But I give them points for trying.
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Star Trek - The Original Series, Vol. 4, Episodes 8 & 9: Charlie X/ Balance of Terror [DVD]
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Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.33:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : NR (Not Rated)
- Product Dimensions : 7.5 x 5.38 x 0.6 inches; 3.2 ounces
- Media Format : Closed-captioned, DVD, Dolby, NTSC, Color
- Run time : 1 hour and 40 minutes
- Release date : October 19, 1999
- Actors : William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, DeForest Kelley, Nichelle Nichols, James Doohan
- Subtitles: : English
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 5.1)
- Studio : CBS Paramount International Television
- ASIN : B00001MXXW
- Writers : Gene Roddenberry
- Number of discs : 1
- #4,828 in Science Fiction DVDs
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Charlie X: Directed by Lawrence Dobkin. With William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, Robert Walker Jr., DeForest Kelley. Captain Kirk must learn the limits to the power of a 17-year-old boy with the psionic ability to create anything and destroy anyone.
"Charlie X" is the second episode of the first season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek. Written by Dorothy C. Fontana from a story by Gene Roddenberry, and directed by Lawrence Dobkin, it first aired on September 15, 1966.. In the episode, the Enterprise picks up an unstable 17-year-old boy who spent 14 years alone on a deserted planet and lacks the training and ...
(The Star Trek Compendium, p. 39) For most of the episode, Charlie wears a gold wraparound jacket, which appears to be an unused, early version of Kirk's green tunic made for "The Enemy Within". It is apparently too big for him. (The Star Trek Compendium, p. 39) After this episode William Shatner only wore tights once more, in "Errand of Mercy".
"Star Trek" Charlie X (TV Episode 1966) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Menu. Movies. ... All Star Trek Episodes and Movies I've seen so far. a list of 36 titles created 22 Oct 2011 Star Trek, Ranked a list of 38 titles ...
In this week's Star Trek episode, "Charlie X" Robert Walker plays the titular 17-year-old, progressing from awkwardness to outright violence; viewers moved with him from discomfort to horror to pathos. What made us react so strongly to Charlie? Charlie speaks too quickly or too slowly; interrupts Captain Kirk; stands too close; touches people ...
"Charlie X" was the 7th episode of Star Trek: The Original Series, in the show's first season, first aired on 15 September 1966. The episode was written by Gene Roddenberry and D.C. Fontana, directed by Lawrence DobkinMA and novelized under the title "Charlie's Law" in Star Trek 1 by James Blish. The cargo ship USS Antares transfers 17-year old Charles ("Charlie") Evans to the USS Enterprise ...
Charlie X. " Charlie X " is the second episode of the first season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek. Written by Dorothy C. Fontana from a story by Gene Roddenberry, and directed by Lawrence Dobkin, it first aired on September 15, 1966. Quick Facts "", Episode no. ... In the episode, the Enterprise picks up an unstable ...
This is a really good early Star Trek episode; Charlie is a distinctly creepy antagonist even before his god-like powers are revealed he slaps Yeoman Rand on the backside, although this could be put down to him not knowing what behaviour is acceptable and what isn't. Guest star Robert Walker Jr. does a good job portraying this troubled and ...
Flashback | Recap | Star Trek: The Original Series S1E02: "Charlie X". Now from a planet out in space. There comes a lad not commonplace. A' seeking out his first embrace. He's saving it for you. Oh, Charlie's our new darling, Our darling, our darling. Charlie's our new darling.
The USS Enterprise meets the Antares to take charge of Charlie Evans sole survivor of a transport ship that crashed on the planet Thasus. For 14 years, Charlie grew up there alone, stranded in the wreckage, learning how to talk from the ship's computer systems which remained intact. He is to be transported to his nearest relatives on the colony Alpha V. Crew members of the Antares speak ...
Charlie "X". S1 E2: Raised from infancy by noncorporeal beings, 17-year-old Charles Evans is ferried by an Enterprise crew unaware of his true nature. Once aboard, the teenager develops a crush on Yeoman Rand and proves dangerously unable to wield his enormous psionic powers with maturity until higher authorities intervene.
Lawrence Dobkin. Fabien D. Tordjmann. Fred Steiner. Joseph G. Sorokin. Jack F. Lilly. D.C. Fontana. Gene Roddenberry. Charlie Evans, the sole survivor of a transport crash, is transferred to the Enterprise from a different ship. Why are they so eager to rid themselves of him, though?
Charlie "X". A powerful teenage boy wreaks havoc aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise. S1E2 50 min. Pluto TV. Movies and Shows in United States. Star Trek: The Original Series. Stream Star Trek: The Original Series free and on-demand with Pluto TV. Season 1, Episode 2.
© 2024 CBS Studios Inc., Paramount Pictures Corporation, and CBS Interactive Inc., Paramount companies. STAR TREK and related marks are trademarks of CBS Studios Inc.
Includes all episodes of Star Trek: The Original Series, The Animated Series, The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, Voyager, Enterprise, Discovery, Picard, Lower Decks, Prodigy, and Strange New Worlds. ... Charlie X Star Trek season 1 episode 2 3 stars (out of 4) "KIRK: We have a large supply of entertainment tapes, gentlemen.
"Charlie X" is one of my favorite episodes. It was the second episode of the series to air, and the sixth regular episode produced after the two pilots. Based on a story by Roddenberry himself, it is also the first script by famed Trek writer D.C. Fontana, and got her promoted from her job as secretary to one of the most important young voices ...
Star Trek season 1 Charlie X - Metacritic. Summary "Space...The Final Frontier. These are the voyages of the Starship, Enterprise. Its 5-year mission: to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations, to boldly go where no man has gone before!" The series is set in the 23rd century where Earth has survived World War III ...
Charlie Evans : I've got your ship, Captain. Capt. Kirk : Maybe, Charlie. But I don't think you can handle any more. [at his cue, Spock and Bones begin turning on instruments and lights] Capt. Kirk : I think you've reached your limit and can't take on one more thing. But you're gonna have to.
2 more additions to the continuing episodes of the first season: "Charlie X" which is strikingly similar in storyline albeit different in setting to a very memorable "Twilight Zone" episode and "Balance of Terror" where we are introduced to the Romulans, that cousin race to the Vulcans which evolved in a very different direction.
55:20. Star Trek The Original Series S01E02 Charlie X. Star Trek The Next Generation. 52:23. Star Trek The Original Series S01E03 Where No Man Has Gone Before. Star Trek. 55:54. Star Trek The Original Series Season 1 Episode 7 What Are Little Girls Made Of [1966] Bubble Guppies.
The iconic series "Star Trek" follows the crew of the starship USS Enterprise as it completes its missions in space in the 23rd century. Captain James T. Kirk -- along with half- human/half-Vulcan science officer Spock, ship Dr. "Bones" McCoy, Ensign Pavel Chekov, communications officer Lt. Nyota Uhura, helmsman Lt. Hikaru Sulu and chief engineer Lt. Cmdr. Montgomery "Scotty" Scott -- confront ...
Wed, Nov 2, 1966. Kirk and psychiatrist Helen Noel are trapped on a maximum security penal colony that experiments with mind control and Spock must use the Vulcan mind-meld to find a way to save them. 7.4/10 (4.4K) Rate.
La primera temporada de la sèrie de televisió de ciència-ficció estatunidenca Star Trek, creada originalment per Gene Roddenberry, es va estrenar a NBC el 8 de setembre de 1966 , i va concloure el 13 d'abril de 1967. La temporada va debutar al Canadà a CTV dos dies abans de l'estrena als Estats Units, el 6 de setembre de 1966. Constava de 29 episodis, que és el nombre més alt d'episodis ...
Continuity. When the captain of the Antares is trying to warn Kirk of Charlie's abilities, Kirk is in a corridor talking to Charlie about not slapping girls on the butt. He says, "I'm on my way to the bridge now," and gets on the turbolift wearing his usual yellow shirt. When he arrives on the bridge he is wearing the green tunic.