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showtimesofficial sitesmiscellaneousphotographssound clipsvideo clips"Star Trek" Day of the Dove (1968)
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Overview
User Rating:
Director:
Writers:
Jerome Bixby (written by)
Gene Roddenberry (creator)
TV Series:
Original Air Date:
1 November 1968 (Season 3, Episode 7)
Plot:
An entity traps the Enterprise crew and the crew of a disabled Klingon battle cruiser in an unending war aboard the Enterprise. full summary | add synopsis
User Comments:
The Kang War - Stardate: Armageddon more (5 total)
Cast
(Episode Credited cast)| William Shatner | ... | Captain James T. Kirk | |
| Leonard Nimoy | ... | Mr. Spock | |
| DeForest Kelley | ... | Dr. McCoy | |
| Michael Ansara | ... | Kang | |
| Susan Howard | ... | Mara | |
| James Doohan | ... | Scott | |
| Walter Koenig | ... | Chekov | |
| George Takei | ... | Sulu | |
| Nichelle Nichols | ... | Uhura | |
| David L. Ross | ... | Lt. Johnson (as David Ross) | |
| Mark Tobin | ... | Klingon | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Charlie Picerni | ... | Klingon | |
Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Runtime:
USA:60 min | Argentina:60 min
Country:
Language:
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
1.33 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Certification:
Company:
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
As in the Starfleet of the Mirror Universe, this universe's Klingon Empire used agonizers (on Ensign Chekov). These are later painsticks on "Star Trek: The Next Generation". more
Goofs:
Continuity: Just before Chekov forces a kiss on Mara, we see in the close-up shots of her that she is wearing lipstick. Kirk and Spock then arrive and intervene, and in the cutaway shots of Mara during Kirk's subsequent speech, the lipstick is gone. Then Kirk has Spock take her, and as she and Spock exit frame, we see she's wearing lipstick again. more
Quotes:
Captain James T. Kirk: [narrating] Captain's log Stardate... Armageddon. We must find a way to defeat the alien force of hate that has taken over the Enterprise. Stop the war now or spend enternity in futile, bloody violence. more
Movie Connections:
Referenced in Free Enterprise (1998) more
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This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more (5 total)
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One thing about the original Trek series - it had its share of great titles, this one included. It's probably my personal favorite of the episodes from the 3rd season: it's an obvious action episode and doesn't let up for its entire length. This also contains the best Klingon interpretation on the original series, courtesy of actor Ansara. I recall reading somewhere a long time ago that Ansara wasn't the first choice for the part; well, after he got it, he just tore into it with a fearful vengeance. If the original Trek series had continued into a 4th and 5th season, this would have been the Klingon to bring back for another confrontation with Kirk and the crew. Only the Khan character from "Space Seed" presented a superior antagonist for our Starfleet heroes. Kang just oozes that tough leathery Klingon orneriness which set a new standard for how the race was portrayed (he was also one of the Klingons brought back during the later series, on DS9). He really commands our attention here with a truly charismatic portrayal by Ansara. This episode also delivers a few memorable scenes of our heroic Enterprise officers behaving in atypical fashion, recalling a few other episodes where they were subverted mentally somehow. In this case, it involved reversion to basic primal instincts such as race hatred and bloodthirst, allowing actors Kelley, Doohan, Koenig and even the usually placid Nimoy to tap into their inner rage. The intense quarrel between Spock and Scotty is especially startling.
The plot seems very simple, yet is deceptively brilliant: group two sets of warring factions (Starfleet & Klingons) into equal numbers of 38 each on a ship such as the Enterprise, remove all advanced weapons and arm each side with swords; then set them at each others throats. Then sit back and watch. One can envision an entire season of such a story, an endless tale of conflict on a drifting starship out in space. It's an early version of video games that wouldn't come about until over a decade later. Of course, this is a bit more sophisticated, a commentary on the nature of war and bigotry. It's very easy to hate such beings as the Klingons for most of us, especially in view of the way they were depicted on the original series, including in this episode. They come across as, at best, belligerent and vicious, in contrast to the more civilized Starfleet crew. But, as the episode progresses, we begin to see less and less differences, until, by the end, we also begin to wonder what these guys are fighting about; they're two sides of the same coin with minor idealogical differences, as mentioned way back in "Errand of Mercy." It's interesting to hear Kang's wife speak of the Federation's death camps and realize we'd heard pretty much the same thing about Klingons in this and earlier episodes. It's an exciting entry for the 3rd season, with excellent pacing, superb editing (Scotty thrusts with a sword and it cuts to the ship zooming towards us) and loads of tension. The ending is a bit too syrupy for my taste, but I still get a kick out of Kang's last shot at Kirk. Klingons just can't resist some of the baser things in life.