Trials and Tribble-ations (DS9 episode)

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Star Trek: DS9 episode
"Trials and Tribble-ations"
Episode no.
Prod. code 503
Airdate November 04, 1996
Writer(s) Ira Steven Behr
Hans Beimler
Robert Hewitt Wolfe
Ronald D. Moore
René Echevarria
Director Jonathan West
Guest star(s) Jack Blessing
James W. Jansen
Charlie Brill
Year 2373
Stardate 4523.7
Episode chronology
Previous "The Assignment"
Next "Let He Who is without Sin..."

"Trials and Tribble-ations" is a fifth season episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.

It was written as a tribute to the original series of Star Trek, in the 30th anniversary year of the show : sister series Voyager produced a similar episode, "Flashback".

The episode sees the crew of DS9 travel into their past, and encounter the events of the origial series episode "The Trouble With Tribbles".

The crew interact with events of that episode, meeting James T. Kirk and visiting the original series Enterprise by means of modern special effects technology which allows the DS9 actors to be inserted into footage from the original episode.

It was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation.

Contents

[edit] Background

Two Department of Temporal Investigations Agents, Dulmer and Lucsly, interrogate Captain Sisko of Deep Space Nine as to why he and his crew aboard the USS Defiant travelled to the year 2268, to Station Deep Space K-7. While the crew was there they foil an assassination attempt on Captain James Kirk of the USS Enterprise, registry NCC-1701.

[edit] Trivia

  • Appearing as an Enterprise crew-member is David Gerrold, who wrote the original "The Trouble with Tribbles" episode for the original series and helped develop Star Trek: The Next Generation. This is more apt than the usual cameo appearance, though. Gerrold wrote the character of Ensign Freeman into the original episode with the intention of playing the part himself[1]. However, Gene Coon nixed the idea, saying Gerrold was too skinny. Paul Baxley, William Shatner's frequent stuntman, was cast in the role.
  • Paul Baxley being William Shatner's stuntman is referenced by Bashir's and O'Brien's mis-identifying Freeman as Kirk in the K-7 bar.
  • Between the original episode and DS9 the appearance of Klingons had changed radically (their design had originally been altered for Star Trek: The Motion Picture). When Bashir and O'Brien ask Worf why 23rd Century Klingons look so different he will only tell them "we do not discuss it with outsiders". Bashir and O'Brien ponder possible causes, genetic engineering and mutated virus, both of which were later shown to be the cause in an episode of Star Trek: Enterprise.
  • The two Temporal Investigations officers' names "Dulmer" and "Lucsly" are anagrams of the two main characters on The X-Files "Mulder" and "Scully".
  • This episode answers one question from the original episode: after Kirk opens the grain bay door and is inundated with thousands of tribbles, it was originally unknown why -- after all the tribbles had fallen out -- a tribble would periodically fall on Kirk every few seconds. The DS9 episode reveals that it was Sisko and Dax (hiding in the grain bay) who were scanning the tribbles and then tossing them out the bay door. During the actual filming of this scene in the original series, the occasional tribbles were chucked at William Shatner by stage crew above the set...apparently they had great fun continually hitting the star with tribbles.
  • Events in the original episode are either stretched or shortened for this episode. Kirk has an extended intercom conversation with Baris, including dialogue from a beam-over, to allow Sisko and Dax an extended conversation. The three day layover of the Enterprise, from Jones' sale of the first tribble to the million tribbles falling on Kirk, is shortened to barely a day. Also, devices function slightly differently: Bashir's scanner does not rotate as fast as McCoy's, the doors open and close more slowly, and enhanced sound effects accompany such as the turbo-lift activation handles, Kirk's chair's comm button. The Klingon D-7 battle cruiser, never seen until the third season, appears in rich detail in rendezvous movement with Station K-7 (the only time a Klingon ship was seen before the third season of the original series was a multi-colored "wedge shape" in "Friday's Child"). The K-7 station and the Enterprise also have richer exterior shots.
  • While the majority of scenes showing the original cast came from "The Trouble With Tribbles", Sisko's last scene on the Enterprise bridge (in which he speaks with Kirk) made use of a scene from "Mirror, Mirror".
Preceded by:
"The Assignment"
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episodes Followed by:
"Let He Who is without Sin..."

[edit] Notes

  •   David Gerrold (1973). Trouble with Tribbles: The Birth, Sale, and Final Production of One Episode. Ballantine Books. ISBN 0-345-23402-2.

[edit] External links