IMDb > "Star Trek" Let That Be Your Last Battlefield (1969)
Prev | 71 of 80 Episodes | Next

"Star Trek" Let That Be Your Last Battlefield (1969)


Videos
"Star Trek" (1966): Season 3: Episode 15 -- Two survivors of a devasted planet remain committed to destroying one another

Overview

User Rating:
7.2/10   330 votes
Director:

Jud Taylor

Writers:

Oliver Crawford (teleplay)
Gene L. Coon (story)
more

Contact:

View company contact information for Let That Be Your Last Battlefield on IMDbPro.

TV Series:

"Star Trek" (1966)

Original Air Date:

10 January 1969 (Season 3, Episode 15)

Genre:

Adventure | Sci-Fi more

Plot:

The Enterprise encounters two duo-chromatic and mutually belligerent aliens who put the ship in the middle of their old conflict. full summary | add synopsis

Plot Keywords:

more

User Comments:

Red Alert - Self-Destruct Sequence in Progress! more (7 total)


Cast

  (Episode Credited cast)

Additional Details

Runtime:

USA:60 min | Argentina:60 min

Country:

USA

Language:

English

Color:

Color

Aspect Ratio:

1.33 : 1 more

Sound Mix:

Mono

Certification:

Argentina:Atp


Fun Stuff

Trivia:

Archive stock footage of World War II-era London, England burning was shown, superimposed on the fleeing scenes of Lokai and Beele. more

Goofs:

Continuity: Captain Kirk calls a red alert, but a few seconds later, when Bele appears, the alert cannot be heard in the bridge scene. After the commercial fade out, when the scene reappears on the screen, the red alert can be heard again. more

Quotes:

Mr. Spock: [Lokai and Bele have transported to their decimated world] All that matters to them... is their hate.
Uhura: Do you suppose that's all they ever had, sir?
Captain James T. Kirk: No. But that's all they have left.
more

Movie Connections:

Referenced in "That '70s Show: Red's Birthday (#2.10)" (1999) more


FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
6 out of 9 people found the following comment useful.
Red Alert - Self-Destruct Sequence in Progress!, 3 March 2007
6/10
Author: Bogmeister from United States

I was prepared to vote lower on this overbearing, transparent commentary on racism until I viewed it again: there are some compelling scenes, it turns out, mostly courtesy of actor Gorshin (better known as the Riddler on the "Batman" TV show) as Commissioner Bele. He does overact as he spews his venomous hatred to anyone within earshot (anyone within a light year, it seems like), but it's a curiously appropriate performance - apropos the wild, irrational tone put on display for the taken aback Enterprise crew. Bele grits his teeth, chews up phaser blasts, and appears ready to hurl physical bile past his abused larynx due to so many years of pent-up fury (very many years, it's revealed - see below). The crew, of course, are well evolved beyond the petty prejudices we see here and so we see things from their aghast perspective. Bele is, for purposes of this story, the half-black: the upper class establishment figure of his alien planet, used to putting certain people in their place. But, the story doesn't take sides; Lokai, the half-white - the pursued lower class persecuted figure - doesn't come off looking any better. He seems most content being the center of attention, displays similar prejudice against mono-colored peoples and probably wouldn't mind sacrificing thousands of his 'followers' if it made him look heroic in the end. Though a product of the relevant sixties, this hasn't dated as much as one would think.

There's a reason, by default, that this episode may not rate higher: with no one to root for, the story lacks a focal point or someone we can relate to. We listen to both Bele & Lokai angrily espouse their views throughout the episode, reminding us of various speeches by political leaders, but, in the end, it all comes off as pointless ranting and babbling - neither one is worth listening to. It's a 'message' episode, watch out. And, in this case, the message seems to be that if you're filled with hate, you'll end up running around the Enterprise corridors to no purpose. That's it, after 50,000 years? I would've preferred a number of 50 years or even 50 centuries, but, according to this episode, these two guys have been running around the galaxy since Cro-magnon man first developed on Earth. I suppose this extreme length of time was meant to stress the futility of their irrational hatred or to lend a cosmic slant to their never-ending antagonism, but come on, Trek. So these guys are immortal, have personal force shields and Bele can control the ship with his mind. Were all their race so accomplished? We'll never know. This episode does have the marvelous self-destruct sequence initiated by Kirk, in which Spock & Scotty join in to voice the self-destruct codes. This sequence manages to squeeze out every bit of suspense possible for such a televised few minutes and foreshadows the now-famous sequence later duplicated in the 3rd Trek film, "The Search For Spock." Knowing what we do now about that movie, the countdown to doom in this episode is all the more chilling.

Was the above comment useful to you?
more (7 total)

Message Boards

Discuss this movie with other users on IMDb message board for "Star Trek" (1966)

Related Links

Main series Episode guide Full cast and crew
Company credits IMDb TV section IMDb Adventure section
IMDb USA section Add this title to MyMovies

You may report errors and omissions on this page to the IMDb database managers. They will be examined and if approved will be included in a future update. Clicking the 'Update' button will take you through a step-by-step process.