This Side of Paradise (TOS episode)

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Star Trek: TOS episode
"This Side of Paradise"
Image:STThisSidePara.jpg
This Side of Paradise.
Episode no. 24
Prod. code 025
Airdate March 2, 1967
Writer(s) D.C. Fontana
story by D.C. Fontana
Nathan Butler
Director Ralph Senensky
Guest star(s) Jill Ireland
Frank Overton
Grant Woods
Michael Barrier
Dick Scotter
Fred Shue
Bobby Bass
Ron Veto
Eddie Paskey
Sean Morgan (actor)
John Lindesmith
Year 2267
Stardate 3417.3 - 3417.7
Episode chronology
Previous "A Taste of Armageddon"
Next "The Devil in the Dark"

"This Side of Paradise" is a first-season episode #24, production #25, of Star Trek: The Original Series. It was first broadcast on March 2, 1967 and was repeated on August 10, 1967. The episode was written by D.C. Fontana and Nathan Butler, and directed by Ralph Senensky.

Overview: The Enterprise visits a planet, where the inhabitants are kept in check by some strange plant life.

[edit] Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

On stardate 3417.3, the Enterprise arrives at Omicron Ceti III, where a Federation colony has been in place for several years. The planet however, is known to have been showered by Berthold Rays, a deadly form of radiation which causes severe tissue damage within a few weeks of exposure. To make matters worse, there has been no communication with the colony for quite a while. The Enterprise's sad mission is to retrieve the colonist's remains and their equipment.

Captain Kirk, along with Dr. McCoy, Mr. Spock and a few other crewmen, beam down to the planet's surface and make the startling discovery that the colonists are still very much alive. The crew is greeted warmly by Elias Sandoval, a farmer who assures them that there have been no problems other than a faulty communications system. They encounter another colonist, Leila Kalomi, who was a love interest of Mr. Spock's six years earlier back on Earth. At a loss to explain why these people are still alive, Dr. McCoy arranges to do medical exams on a number of the colonists while other crew members search the vicinity for answers.

The puzzle deepens as McCoy finds all colonists in flawless, textbook-perfect health, and although medical records indicate that Sandoval had had his appendix removed, it is discovered he now has an intact appendix. Another discovery is that there is no animal life present, no livestock, no birds and no insects. Sandoval explains simply, "We're vegetarians," and evades when Kirk asks what happened to the farm animals they brought with them.

As Spock is searching the surrounding area for clues, the lovely Leila meets up with him and agrees to show him how the colonists have survived. She takes him to a place where there are strange flowers that shoot a puff of spores at him.

Being half Vulcan, Spock doesn't normally express his emotions, but moments after exposure to these spores, the formerly logical Spock is able to tell Leila, "I love you." Spock soon exhibits other emotional behaviors such as laughing, enjoying cloud formations, and later, ignoring Captain Kirk's orders.

Spock shows the strange flowers to Kirk and other crewmen, but somehow only Captain Kirk remains unaffected by them. When Kirk returns to his ship, it is full of the flowers and their spores. The whole ship's crew, in an open, but peaceful mutiny, begin to beam down to the planet. Before she leaves, Lieutenant Uhura sabotages the ship's communications system.

Soon Kirk is the only person remaining aboard the ship. Eventually, the spores overcome Kirk's resistance; he begins to feel peaceful and makes plans to beam down to the colony. But as he is about to leave the Enterprise, he feels a wave of violent emotions which overwhelms and destroys the spores within him.

Kirk now realizes the spores cannot survive the presence of strong needs and feelings. He asks Spock to come up to the ship, ostensibly to help him with some things that they won't be able to retrieve once the last of them leaves the ship, but actually to talk some sense into him. The Captain states for his log that his plan to kill the spores by enraging Spock carries considerable risk: Spock is a Vulcan, a being far stronger than a human, whose race once were ferocious warriors before their control of emotion ended the slaughter on their world. Nonetheless, Kirk insults Spock with a stream of racist abuse and taunts him as a freak who dares to make love to Leila. Spock becomes angry and a brawl ensues. Fortunately, Spock's rationality returns to him before he seriously injures the Captain. Together they rig a device to send a subsonic frequency through the communicators that will irritate everyone in the colony. Fights break out all over, quickly leading to the end of the spores' influence.

As the Enterprise, with the colonists safely on board, prepares to exit the planetary system, Spock comments about his experiences saying: "For the first time in my life, I was happy."

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Trivia

  • In Jerry Sohl's original draft (first titled "Power Play," then "The Way of The Spores"), it was Lt. Sulu who was infected by the spores and was able to fall in love with Leila.
  • The title of this episode is the same as that of a novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald. It is part of an old expression describing an exceptionally pleasant place, e.g. "Southeastern Kentucky is the most beautiful spot this side of paradise."
  • This episode is one of three in Star Trek in which Vulcans are revealed to have more than one name. In all three -- according to Spock in this episode and in The Enterprise Incident, and according to his mother in the episode Journey to Babel -- the second name is described as difficult to pronounce by non-Vulcans.
  • This is the episode referenced in the notorious "Get-A-Life" sketch on Saturday Night Live. The question asked to William Shatner was "When you were preparing to beam down to the planet, and you opened your safe, what was the combination?"
  • Leonard Nimoy has recalled that Charles Bronson was on set during his love scenes with Jill Ireland (then Bronson's girlfriend, later his wife), to "keep an eye on her."
  • Nathan Butler was the pseudonym of writer Jerry Sohl, who was displeased with the rewrites to his script, originally entitled The Way of The Spores. His original was written with Sulu as the love interest for Leila Kalomi.
  • Eddie Paskey as Lt. Leslie gets his biggest scene in the series, telling the captain off.
Leslie: I'm sorry sir, we're beaming down to the planet.
Kirk: This is mutiny, mister!
Leslie: Yes sir, it is.

[edit] External links


Last produced:
"Space Seed"
Star Trek: TOS episodes
Season 1
Next produced:
"The Devil in the Dark"
Last transmitted:
"A Taste of Armageddon"
Next transmitted:
"The Devil in the Dark"