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Star Trek :: The Galileo Seven (01x16)

 
Episode Information
 
Title: The Galileo Seven
Episode #: 01x16
Production Number: 6149-14
Original Airdate: Thursday January 05th, 1967
8.5/10 (2 Votes cast)
Episode Crew
Director: Robert Gist
Story: Oliver Crawford
Teleplay: Oliver Crawford
Shimon Wincelberg
 
Episode Summary
 
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McCoy, Scott, Spock, and four other crewmen crashland on a hostile planet while on an exploratory mission in the shuttlecraft Galileo. While the stranded crew attempt to survive against hostile natives, Kirk must choose between looking for them and following his mission to aid a plague-infested planet.
 
There are no foreign summaries for this episode: Contribute
English Recap Available: View Here
 
Guest Stars
 
Starring Roles
DeForest KelleyplayedDr. Leonard Horatio "Bones" McCoyRecurring (13th appearance)
James DoohanplayedLt. Cmdr. Montgomery "Scotty" ScottRecurring (8th appearance)
George TakeiplayedLt. Hikaru SuluRecurring (9th appearance)
Nichelle NicholsplayedLt. Nyota UhuraRecurring (14th appearance)
Co-Guest Stars
Phyllis DouglasplayedYeoman MearsRecurring (first appearance)
Grant WoodsplayedKelowitzRecurring (first appearance)
David L. Ross (1)playedTransporter Chief (as David Ross)Recurring (third appearance)
Don MarshallplayedBoma 
John Crawford (1)playedCommissioner Ferris 
Peter MarkoplayedGaetano 
Rees VaughnplayedLatimer 
Robert MaffeiplayedCreature (as Buck Maffei) 
Uncredited
Frank Da VinciplayedSpock's Stunt DoubleRecurring (7th appearance)
Gary Coombs (1)playedLatimer's Stunt DoubleRecurring (first appearance)
Majel BarrettvoicedComputerRecurring (9th appearance)
 
Main Cast
 
William ShatnerplayedCaptain James Tiberius Kirk
Leonard NimoyplayedCommander Spock
 
Episode Notes
 
Yeoman Rand was originally supposed to be the female aboard the Galileo, but Grace Lee Whitney had left the show by the time the episode went into production and susbtitute character Yeoman Mears was added.
 
Shimon Wincelberg is credited as S. Bar-David.
 
 
Episode Quotes
 
Scotty: What a mess.
Spock: Picturesque descriptions will not mend broken circuits, Mr. Scott.
 
McCoy: Traces of argon, neon, krypton. All in acceptable quantities. However, I wouldn't recommend this place as a summer resort.
Spock: Thank you for your opinion, it will be duly noted.
 
Spock: I realize that command does have its fascination, even under circumstances such as these, but I neither enjoy the idea of command nor am I frightened of it. It simply exists, and I will do whatever logically needs to be done.
 
McCoy: Mr. Spock, life and death are seldom logical.
Spock: But attaining a desired goal always is.
 
Spock: It is more rational to sacrifice one life than six.
McCoy: I'm not talking about rationality.
Spock: You might be wise to start.
 
Spock: I'm frequently appalled by the low regard you Earthmen have for life.
 
McCoy: Respect is a rational process.
 
Ferris: What do you intend to do?
Kirk: Do? I intend to continue the search, inch by inch, by candlelight, if necessary, until the last possible moment. If you'd keep your nose off my bridge, I'd be thankful.
 
Spock: Your tone is increasingly hostile.
Boma: My tone isn't the only thing that's hostile, Mr. Spock!
 
Spock: The logical thing for you to have done was to have left me behind.
McCoy: Mr. Spock, remind me to tell you that I'm sick and tired of your logic.
Spock: That is a most illogical attitude
 
Yeoman Mears: I don't want to die here!
Spock: Infinitely preferable to the kind of death we would be granted on the planet's surface.
Boma: I admire your ability to make so measured a choice.
 
McCoy: It may be the last action you'll ever take, Mr. Spock, but it was all human.
Spock: Totally illogical. There was no chance.
McCoy: That's exactly what I mean.
 
Kirk: Uh, Mr. Spock, there's really something I don't understand about all of this. And maybe you can explain it to me. Logically, of course. When you jettisoned the fuel and ignited it, you knew there was virtually no chance of it being seen, yet you did it anyhow. That would seem to be an act of desperation.
Spock: Quite correct.
Kirk: We all know, and I'm sure the doctor agrees, that desperation is a highly emotional state of mind. How does your well-known logic explain that?
Spock: Quite simply, Captain. I examined the problem from all angles, and it was plainly hopeless. Logic informed me that, under the circumstances, the only possible action would have to be one of desperation. Logical decision, logically arrived at.
Kirk: Aha, ha ha. I see. You mean you reasoned that it was time for an emotional outburst.
Spock: Well, I... wouldn't put it in exactly those terms, Captain, but...
those are essentially the facts.
Kirk: You're not going to admit that for the first time in your life, you committed a purely human, emotional act?
Spock: No, sir.
Kirk: Mr. Spock, you're a stubborn man.
Spock: Yes, sir.
 
 
Episode Goofs
 
In several scenes the "fake" nature of the rocks is clearly visible. When a spear misses Spock and hits the nearby rock, chips of what are clearly lightweight styroform fly off. When DeForest Kelley pulls the "boulder" off of Leonard Nimoy's leg, his grip visible deforms it.
 
Shield and spear props were scaled down and given to Buck Maffei to make him look larger, then larger ones were used when the Enterprise crew handled them. In the shot where a shield is dropped on the crew, a scaled down shield is used in the first shot but the larger one in the second, making it appear that the shield has expanded.
 
Gaetano's sideburns change shape several times from pointed to straight and back again.
 
 
Episode References
 
This is the first and only time that someone (Kirk) makes references to the Enterprise having transporters, rather than a transporter.
 
 
Analysis
 
What Changed in the Remastered Version
Besides the usual CGI ship upgrade, and a reuse of the shuttlebay revamped footage (first seen in "Journey to Babel"), the Murasaki quasar phenomena is extensively reimaged, including an opening shot where it is seen from a distance outside the ship (in the original episode all views of it were on the ship's viewscreen). Taurus is given a rocky surface visible from orbit and surrounded by green gas. All shuttlecraft liftoffs and spaceflight are done in CGI, removing the transparency issues of the original. The jettisoned fuel is clearly visible and several shots of it are shown at different angles. The Galileo is now seen above the planet (rather then in empty space) as it reenters and burns from the re-entry.

 
 
Other Episode Crew
 
CreatorGene Roddenberry
Executive ProducerGene Roddenberry
ProducerGene L. Coon
CastingJoseph D'Agosta
Costume DesignerWilliam Ware Theiss
Make-upFred B. Phillips
GripGeorge Rader
Property MasterIrving A. Feinberg
GafferGeorge H. Merhoff
OtherHerbert F. Solow (Executive in Charge of Production)
Special EffectsJames Rugg
Main Title ThemeAlexander Courage
 
 
Featured Songs
 
 
 
Cultural References
 
 

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