The Apple (TOS episode)

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Star Trek: TOS episode
"The Apple"
Image:STTheApple.jpg
The Enterprise crew encounters "Vaal",
The Apple.
Episode no. 34
Prod. code 038
Airdate October 13, 1967
Writer(s) Max Ehrlich
Director Joseph Pevney
Guest star(s) Keith Andes
Shari Nims
David Soul
Eddie Paskey
William Blackburn
Celeste Yarnall
Jay Jones
Jerry Daniels
Mal Friedman
Dick Dial
John Winston (actor)
Paul Baxley
Bobby Clark
Vince Deadrick
Ron Burke
Year 2267
Stardate 3715.3
Episode chronology
Previous "Mirror, Mirror"
Next "The Doomsday Machine"

"The Apple" is a second season episode of Star Trek: The Original Series. It is episode #34, production #38, first broadcast on October 13, 1967 and repeated July 12, 1968. It was written by Max Ehrlich, and directed by Joseph Pevney.

Overview: The crew of the Enterprise visits a mysterious paradise controlled by computer.

[edit] Plot

On stardate 3715.3, the starship USS Enterprise arrives at Gamma Trianguli VI, a planet that appears to be a tropical paradise. Captain James T. Kirk, Dr. McCoy, Lt. Chekov, and Mr. Spock, along with several survey personnel, beam down to the surface to have a look.

They discover a world of poison dart-shooting plants, unstable explosive rocks, and bizarre lightning storms that appear out of cloudless skies. One of the crewmen is shot by a plant and is killed, and then Spock is hit by another plant's darts when he steps to block them from hitting the Captain. Spock is stunned, and McCoy rushes over to assist, injecting him with serum to counteract the poison. Spock is more resilient to the poison and later recovers on his own.

Realizing there is too much danger, Kirk orders an immediate beam-out, however Mr. Scott reports that the ship's power systems are being drained by an unknown energy field emanating from the planet. The Enterprise's transporters don't have enough power to beam anyone back.

As the stranded party figures out what to do, Kirk notices they are being watched. He attacks their "observer", finding it to be a shy, and frightened primitive humanoid who wears glitter and colorful paints on his skin. Kirk promises not to hurt the curious man and holds him for questioning. The man calms down and identifies himself as Akuta, chief of the people known as the "Feeders of Vaal". Spock notices that Akuta appears to be in some kind of communication with someone, and points out the small antennae on Akuta's head. Akuta explains that those are his "ears for Vaal", enabling him to interpret Vaal's commands for the people, and that he is "the eyes and the voice of Vaal", who is their God.

Meanwhile, Mr Scott calls down to inform Kirk that the Enterprise is being held in orbit around the planet by some kind of tractor beam and is unable to break away. Kirk asks Akuta about "Vaal", and requests to be taken to meet him. Akuta agrees and leads the landing team to a large stone dragon head carved into the side of hill. Akuta points to the structure and indicates that it is Vaal.

The dragon's mouth appears as a kind of doorway. Spock's tricorder indicates that it leads underground. The structure is also protected by a powerful force field. The temple appears to be some type of sophisticated computer, possibly built by an ancient civilization, with a rudimentary artificial intelligence, and emanating great power. Spock also concludes that it may be the source of the energy draining field that is affecting the Enterprise.

Akuta says Vaal is "sleeping", but will awake "hungry" and might speak to the landing party at that time. He then leads the party to meet his people. They appear as young men and women, but all have a curious, childlike mentality. Kirk points out that the tribe doesn't seem to have any children and asks Akuta why. Akuta doesn't know what a child is, saying that Vaal has forbidden love and copulation, and provides them with "replacements" as they are needed. McCoy scans the tribe and is shocked when he discovers they are ageless and all in perfect health. The party later observes them as they perform a ritualistic "feeding" of Vaal, carrying loads of the explosive rocks down into the underground tunnel. The picture is now clear; the people live only to service Vaal, to dance, and to gather food. They don't even do their own agriculture, since Vaal controls the environment right down to "putting the fruit on the trees".

Mr. Spock observes the symbiosis between the Feeders and Vaal as an "excellent example of reciprocity", but McCoy vehemently disagrees and says the Feeders are not really alive, but stagnating, all their needs and wants provided for by a "hunk of tin". He insists that because they are humanoid, certain "universal standards" apply to them, "the right of humanoids to a free and unchained environment, the right to have conditions which permit growth." Kirk says it's more important to get the Enterprise out of danger, but his later remarks and actions show he clearly sides with McCoy. Star Trek fans and critics cite this episode as one of several which seem to show Kirk as imposing not only Earthly values, but American values, on alien societies.

Throughout their time on the planet, Chekov and Yeoman Martha Landon (Celeste Yarnall) have been showing interest in one another, and during a lull in the action slip away to be alone together. A tribal couple observe the pair and try to imitate their kissing. Vaal is instantly aware of this and radios instructions to Akuta, telling him to gather his people and kill the strangers who have trespassed here. Akuta rounds some of his men and instructs them to kill the landing party by bashing their skulls with clubs.

The landing party goes to Vaal to investigate the structure. Vaal defends itself by striking Spock with a lightning bolt. The Feeders then attack, surrounding the landing party and killing a crewman. The landing party fights them off pretty easily however, and detains them, preventing them from feeding Vaal.

Vaal becomes weakened and loses its hold on the Enterprise. Kirk orders the ship's weapons to target the structure and fire. The ship blasts the dragon head with phasers and the structure is destroyed. Akuta and his people are devastated, but are told by Kirk that they are finally free and will soon discover work, birth, death, and the normal everyday ways of life.

Spock compares what the Captain has done to giving the primitive people the equivalent of the apple of knowledge and driving them from their Garden of Eden, but Kirk maintains that Spock's resemblance to the Devil is much more apparent than his own.

[edit] Trivia

  • This episode, more than any other, earned the series its reputation for killing redshirts — four die in "The Apple."
  • After apparently switching to metric in "The Changeling", the crew reverts to customary units in this episode (Spock says the planet has a uniform temperature around 76 degrees, which if it were Celsius would make the planet inhospitably hot, and says the force field extends 30 feet away from Vaal).

[edit] External links

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Last produced:
"The Changeling"
Star Trek: TOS episodes
Season 2
Next produced:
"Mirror, Mirror"
Last transmitted:
"Mirror, Mirror"
Next transmitted:
"The Doomsday Machine"