Star Trek - The Original Series, Episode 64: The Tholian Web
Star Trek - The Original Series, Episode 64:

Star Trek - The Original Series, Episode 64: The Tholian Web

Manufacturer:
Paramount

UPC:
097360006438

Retail Price:
$12.95

Avg. Rating:

  • Color
  • Closed-captioned
  • HiFi Sound
  • NTSC
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Star Trek - The Original Series, Episode 64: The Tholian Web Specs:
Product NameStar Trek - The Original Series, Episode 64: The Tholian Web
ManufacturerParamount
Retail Price $12.95
UPC097360006438
Specifications 
Release Date1966-09-08
FormatVHS Tape
Director(s)James Goldstone, Jud Taylor, Vincent McEveety, Herb Wallerstein, John Newland, Gene Nelson, Harvey Hart, James Komack, Murray Golden, Robert Sparr
RatingNot Rated
Num. of Items1
Deal first added on:6-March-2004

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Latest 6 Reviews
Here is what people are saying about the Star Trek - The Original Series, Episode 64: The Tholian Web
5 Star Rating  "Have we lost the captain?"2009-05-15
- Reviewed By Lokai from Ohio, USA
This episode is one of the coolest in the entire series, especially the Third Season. You have fights between Spock and McCoy, a dangerous enemy, Captain Kirk missing, and of course the Tholian Web surrounding the Enterprise. One of the series finest moments was when the Tholians started making the web. That was so cool.
 
3 Star Rating  "A ghost story where Kirk is the ghost"2005-01-27
- Reviewed By (cashbacher@yahoo.com) from Marion, Iowa United States(cashbacher@yahoo.com)
The Enterprise encounters another starship, the Defiant, adrift in a region of unexplored space. When there is no answer to their hails, Kirk, McCoy and Chekov beam aboard the Defiant and encounter a dead crew. However, they are astonished to learn that the members of the Defiant crew killed each other. For unknown reasons, they went mad, turned on each other, leaving no one alive. Suddenly, the Defiant begins to fade away, so they prepare to beam back to the Enterprise.
However, the systems aboard the Enterprise are being affected by that area of space, and Kirk must stay behind, as there is not enough power to beam all of them at once. The Defiant fades into another universe before they can beam Kirk back to the Enterprise, so he fades away with it. Spock determines when the next period of interphase will occur, so he keeps the Enterprise stationary, hoping he can rescue Kirk during the next interphase. A Tholian ship appears and challenges the Enterprise, accusing them of trespassing in their space. Spock explains that they are on a rescue mission and the ship they are aiding has phased into another dimension. The Tholians agree to stand by for the specified amount of time.
Unfortunately, the presence of the Tholians has disturbed the space, so the interphase does not take place on schedule. Thinking that they have been deceived, the Tholians open fire on the Enterprise and they are forced to respond, disabling the Tholin ship. Another Tholian ship arrives and the two begin constructing an unbreakable energy field around the Enterprise.
The situation on board the Enterprise deteriorates as the madness that destroyed the Defiant crew has infected the Enterprise. Checkov is the first to go and others soon follow. McCoy determines that it is the area of space that is causing the madness and he works frantically for a cure. Meanwhile, Spock declares Kirk dead, so he assumes permanent command. As usual, McCoy and Spock do battle, until they view Kirk's last orders that were to be viewed if he were to die. This dampens the tension and MCCoy discovers a cure. At the last moment before the Tholians complete their cage, another interphase takes place and the Enterprise is able to escape the cage and recover the captain.
This episode is memorable for another Spock-McCoy battle over Spock's command decisions, which has already occurred in the episodes, "The Galileo Seven" and "The Gamesters of Triskelion." Once Spock is in command, McCoy seems obligated to challenge his authority. This is of course nonsense, McCoy is an officer and in the rigid command structure of Star Fleet, his actions are extremely insubordinate. By this point in the series, McCoy's challenges of Spock's authority is very predictable and somewhat stale. The Tholian cage is also a bit of an absurdity, why spend all that time building a giant cage to hold the Enterprise when they could at any time power back up and leave through a hole? With two ships, they could have attacked the Enterprise and probably destroyed it.
 
4 Star Rating  "The first third of Season Three was actually quite good"2003-09-23
- Reviewed By ruben_lopere
This episode, in which Kirk disappears and a web is built around the Enterprise, in many ways belongs in another season. It has a lot of action and a straightforward plot. However, it also has some signatures of the third season, such as the trippyness of a winking-out Kirk floating through space, as well as a subtle pitting of illusion vs. reality. Plus it's always nice to meet new aliens--the Tholians even have a visible ship
 
4 Star Rating  "Tholians and the earliest U.S.S. Defiant."2003-07-13
- Reviewed By Wes Huntington from Le Sueur, MN
The U.S.S. Enterprise arrives in an uncharted area of space to answer a distress call from the U.S.S. Defiant, NCC-1764. The starship is visible on their viewscreen, but sensors on board the U.S.S. Enterprise say it's not.

Kirk, Spock, McCoy and Chekov beam aboard and spread out to investigate. Everyone aboard is dead ... apparently killed in a bizarre mutiny, although there are no life readings aboard. McCoy, in the ship's sickbay, tells Kirk that he can find no clue as to why the crew died, but has taken readings to study. Then, as his hand passes through a body and exam table, McCoy realizes the U.S.S. Defiant is dissolving.

Quickly Kirk orders them beamed back to the U.S.S. Enterprise, but Scotty explains that due to the poor stability of the space around them, he can only beam three aboard. After the usual debate, Kirk stays behind while the others beam back. When Scotty tries to bring Kirk aboard, his image wavers, and disappears. Interphase, Spock calculates, will occur in a little over two hours. In the meantime, they must wait. If the captain is still alive, they should be able to retrieve him then.

Complications arise when Chekov goes crazy and attacks Spock on the bridge. Slowly, more members of the crew fall prey to the "illness," attacking their crewmates. McCoy and his staff work round the clock to find a cure. When the doctor suggests Spock "put some distance" between the Enterprise and the Defiant, Spock explains that any movement in the weakened space could disturb both ship's positions and jeopardize Kirk's rescue.

At a little over an hour before interphase, a Tholian ship appears, telling Spock that the U.S.S. Enterprise has violated Tholian space. The Vulcan explains that they were answering a distress call from the nearby U.S.S. Defiant and are waiting until they can retrieve Kirk. The Tholians agree to wait until the appointed time before taking action.

Unfortunately, when the interphase occurs, Kirk is not where he should be. Spock suspects that the Tholian's entrance into the area of space disrupted the U.S.S. Defiant's position. A funeral service is held for Captain Kirk, following which McCoy insists they view the Captain's last orders. Spock reluctantly agrees and the two men go to their friend's quarters and listen to Kirk's touching advice.

Uhura is the first to see Kirk's image floating before her, and for a time, McCoy thinks she's contracted the disease. But when he and Spock see the Kirk on the bridge, they realize that he is, in fact, still alive.

The Tholians decide that Spock has, lied to them and opens fire. Making a decision, Spock orders the phasers fired at the ship. The Tholian ship is disabled, but soon another ship joins it and they begin "building" a sort of web made of shining filaments. Spock analyses the web and announces that if they don't bring Kirk aboard and leave before the web is completed, they "won't see home again." At the last minute, Spock orders full power against the web and the U.S.S. Enterprise is thrown outside the Tholian's trap, several parsecs from their previous position. The hope is that Kirk, caught in the U.S.S. Enterprise tractor beam when they changed position, was brought with them.

Tensely McCoy waits with a hypo of tri-ox for Kirk, whose air is running out as he's successfully beamed on board the U.S.S. Enterprise, alive and unharmed. In a humorous tag, McCoy and Spock convince Kirk that there had been no time to view his final orders and Kirk, somewhat disappointed that his wisdom had gone unheard, says that he hopes there isn't a similar circumstance where the two men will view the tape.

 
4 Star Rating  "As close to a 'ghost story' as the original series would get"2002-12-12
- Reviewed By trekviewer from Brooklyn Center, MN USA
When it was originally written this episode had placed Spock in the dilemma that Kirk would eventually find himself in. Changing it to Kirk benefits the entire show as it allows for some of the best Spock and Dr. McCoy clashes of will that the series would offer up. Another change involved adding the environmental suits that were substituted for a belt device worn around the waist that provided a force field for the wearer and provided a supply of oxygen also. Both of these alterations to "The Tholian Web" help significantly, resulting in one of the strongest entries in the uneven third and final season.

The Enterprise finds the USS Defiant a floating derelict but the Enterprise cannot detect anything with the starship scanners. Further complicating things is the state of flux the Defiant is in due to a spatial interface in the unstable area of space. Kirk boards the Defiant with Spock, Dr. McCoy and Chekov to investigate why there is no response and they discover that the crew had killed each other in a fit of frenzy. Within a few moments McCoy reports that the area he is investigating is becoming transparent and he believes the rest of the ship will also. Attempting to beam back Scotty explains that the transporters can only handle three at a time so Kirk remains while the others return. The Defiant then disappears completely taking Kirk with it. Spock finds evidence that the same spatial interface will occur in a short while and that they will make an effort to beam Kirk back aboard then. The Tholians then encounter them, which disrupts the plans made by the Enterprise and compounds the situation with a ship to ship attack. Meanwhile McCoy makes an uncomfortable discovery - if they remain in this area of space they will experience the same calamity as the Defiant unless he finds a cure. Soon afterward crewmembers report sightings of a ghostly image of Captain Kirk appearing to them.

The few moments when Kirk appears as a 'ghost' are quite effective and thankfully not overplayed, each one happening at perfect intervals. Instead of having Kirk wander through the starship in ghostly form, attempting to communicate, he appears infrequently precipitating the spatial interface the Enterprise is waiting for. All of the story elements are balanced well here: the encounter with the Tholians, the disappearance and recovery of Kirk, the expected volatile dialogues between Spock and Dr. McCoy, the effects the crew experiences in the unstable area of space. Placing Kirk in an environmental suit works better than the previously suggested use of a force field type belt. The introduction of such a device would have caused extreme complications in later episodes yet to be produced. His ghostly appearances in the suit have an unsettling horror feel to them as well, emphasizing the idea that he is stranded.

The only trifle I have with this episode is the way in which Kirk is recovered. At the moment Kirk appears onscreen on the bridge Spock has full power restored to the starship and this sudden effect throws the Enterprise completely free of the Tholians energy field and Kirk as well as soon discover because he was caught in Enterprise's transporter beam. Hold it! Back up a minute...just before full power is restored Spock says "Ready to transport on my order," but he never gives the order or at least we never hear it. However, we do know that Scotty had locked a transporter beam on the coordinates provided him; perhaps he didn't want to risk losing the captain one more time! Also notable: McCoy ruins a perfectly good (and I assume quite costly) environmental suit - as soon as Kirk is beamed aboard the doctor gives him a shot with a needle directly through the material of the suit.

 
4 Star Rating  "Captain Kirk gets trapped in outer space ---- literally"2001-03-17
- Reviewed By retrowens from Alabama, USA
"The Tholian Web" is one of the most original episodes of Star Trek - The Original Series. The Enterprise ship runs up on a mysterious ship in space that is supposedly not even there, but they can see it. Soon they all find out that they are in a part of space where matter disintegrates. Before the Enterprise crew knows it, Captain Kirk vanishes in space and Spock has to take command. Will Captain Kirk vanish just like the mysterious ship or is there a possible way to find Kirk and beam him back onboard the ship?

"The Tholian Webb" is slow going, but it's not boring. It has some of the best special effects of any of the episodes. The alien enemies that make the energy-draining webb and the idea of Captain Kirk being trapped in outer space is intriguing.

If you like original episodes of Star Trek that are interesting and have great special effects for their time, I recommend getting "The Tholian Webb."

 
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