THE THOLIAN WEB
__NOTOC__
'"The Tholian Web"' is a third season episode of ''. It is episode #64, production #64, first broadcast on November 15, 1968 and repeated August 19, 1969. It was written by Judy Burns and Chet Richards, and directed by Herb Wallerstein.
It is the episode that introduced the aliens known as the Tholians.
'Overview': Captain Kirk is caught between dimensions while the ''Enterprise'' is trapped by an energy-draining web spun by mysterious aliens.
On stardate 5693.2, the starship USS ''Enterprise'' enters an uncharted region of space to answer a distress call from her sister ship, the USS ''Defiant''. Nearing the location, the ''Enterprise's'' engines begin to lose power and sensors detect a nearby dimensional fracture in space that seems to be the cause of the energy drain.
The ''Defiant'' appears on the monitor, adrift, and with a strange green glow surrounding the hull. Strangely, sensors show no indication that the vessel is there. There are no lifeforms detected, nor are communications established with the ship. Captain Kirk assembles a boarding party consisting of himself, Dr. McCoy, Mr. Spock and Mr. Chekov to beam over and investigate. Before they go, the team dons environmental suits.
They arrive on the ''Defiant's'' bridge finding the crew all dead; having killed each other in what appears to have been some kind of bizarre mutiny. McCoy makes his way down to the ship's sickbay, but he can find no real explanation for the crew's deaths. He goes to look at a deceased crewman lying on the floor and suddenly discovers his hands can pass right through the body. In fact, the whole ship's physical structure seems to be dissolving.
As other members of the team notice the ''Defiant's'' structure is fading, Kirk orders them to return to the ''Enterprise''. Mr. Scott informs the team that owing to problems caused by the phenomenon, he can only retrieve three of them at once. Kirk decides to remain behind allowing Spock, McCoy and Chekov to return, however his delay causes him to phase away with the ''Defiant''. Kirk now finds himself stuck between two dimensions and floating helplessly in nothingness. Spock rushes to analyze the situation and determines that the ''Defiant's'' phasing effect should recur within a few hours. When it does, they may be able to retrieve the Captain if he is still alive.
Meanwhile, the same dimensional interphase begins to affect the ''Enterprise'' and her crew. Chekov suddenly goes berserk and attacks Spock on the bridge, and then more violent outbursts occur between crewmembers. McCoy and his personnel rush to find the cause, but they can only assume that the phasing and violent behavior are connected. The same murderous hostilities that affected the ''Defiant's'' crew have begun on the ''Enterprise''. McCoy strongly suggests that they put some distance between themselves and the ''Defiant'' but Spock refuses, believing any movement from their position could disrupt the ''Defiant's'' position and jeopardize finding the Captain.
An hour passes, and unexpectedly, a tiny metallic vessel of unknown configuration, approaches the ''Enterprise''. A crystalline being appears on the bridge monitor that seems to be surrounded by a radiant energy screen. The being identifies itself as Loskene of the Tholians and demands that the ''Enterprise'' leave their territory immediately. Spock apologizes for their intrusion and explains their situation to Loskene, asking they be given time to retrieve their Captain. The Tholian agrees to give the ''Enterprise'' 1 hour and 53 minutes, and no more.
The moment comes when the ''Defiant'' should phase in again, and Spock attempts to lock onto the Captain; however the ship is not where it is supposed to be. Spock believes the arrival of the Tholian vessel has somehow disturbed the ''Defiant's'' position and they have lost Captain Kirk for good.
McCoy and Spock conduct a makeshift funeral in the Captain's quarters where McCoy plays a recording Kirk made for them just in case he was ever killed on a mission. The somber recording gives the officers their final orders and some words of advice for their future missions without him; especially when he exhorts them to use their constant arguments and different points of view to support and help each other.
After the message is heard, Spock orders the ''Enterprise'' to leave the area. However, in the midst of her private memorial for Kirk in her quarters, Lt. Uhura notices a ghostly image of the Captain, still in his space suit, and floating inside the ship, beckoning for help. Spock thinks Uhura is seeing things and suggests she report to Dr. McCoy, but then Scotty reports catching a glimpse of Kirk in engineering and confirms that Uhura isn't hallucinating.
Spock rushes to locate the Captain, but Kirk phases out again before he can get a lock. If indeed the Captain is still alive, his pressure suit's life support would be dangerously low and his time is running out.
By now, the Tholians' time limit has already passed, and right on the dime, the aliens attack. Spock returns fire, managing to drive off the Tholian ship, but the maneuver leaves the ''Enterprise'' critically low on power and Scotty is unable to guarantee survival from another bombardment.
A second Tholian ship arrives on the scene, sure to finish the ''Enterprise'' off, but instead, the two alien ships curiously "link up" and begin to extend an energy thread between themselves. Like spiders, they begin to weave the strange energy strands, in a sphere, around the crippled ''Enterprise''.
Spock quickly analyses the "web" filaments and announces that if the Tholians complete their trap, ''Enterprise'' will not survive. More reports of Kirk's "ghost" come in from around the ship and Spock tries to lock a tractor beam on him when he appears again. In the meantime, Dr. McCoy has discovered an antidote for the phasing effect by using a diluted form of the Klingon nerve gas, Theragen.
As the Tholians' web is nearing completion, Kirk's ghost is spotted once more and Spock locks onto him with the tractor beam. At that moment, Spock uses all remaining warp energy in the ship's engines to break free of the Tholian's web. The burst of energy not only releases them, but throws the ''Enterprise'' 2.72 parsecs away and well out of range of the enemy ships. Kirk miraculously remains held in the tractor beam and he is quickly transported aboard where McCoy stands ready to inject him with the serum.
Kirk makes a full recovery and is keen on learning what happened aboard his ship while he was "away". He was surprised to learn McCoy and Spock worked well together, and a little disappointed when McCoy claims they didn't have time to open their Captain's "last orders" and his words of wisdom had gone unheard.
This episode was remastered in 2006 and first aired on March 31, 2007 as part of the remastered 40th Anniversary original series. It was preceded three weeks earlier by "Wolf in the Fold" and will be followed a week later by "The Immunity Syndrome". Video and audio have been digitally restored, and the episode features the all-CGI USS ''Enterprise'' that is standard among the revisions. Other changes to this episode include:
★ The USS ''Defiant'' has been replaced as a digital model and its dimensional phasing effects have been cleaned up.
★ The Tholian ships have been redesigned and their "web" has been given animated energy pulses.
A two-part episode set of '' called "In a Mirror, Darkly", aired on April 22 and 29, 2005, is a sequel to this episode as it reveals what happened to the ''Defiant'' after it disappeared: it found itself in the Mirror Universe, where the local version of the Tholians had hoped to lure the ship. We learn that the mirror Tholians intentionally caused the interphase to form, with the hope of capturing the ''Defiant'' from the other universe and using it as the vanguard of an invasion force.
The Tholians in this alternate universe spun a web around the alternate Enterprise extremely quickly because they had over a dozen ships creating it, while in "The Tholian Web" there were only two. In the two episodes a Tholian Web has appeared, this is the only time we got to see one completed.
★ Remastered FX reel for "The Tholian Web" at Trekmovie.com
★ ''The Tholian Web'' at StarTrek.com
★
'"The Tholian Web"' is a third season episode of ''. It is episode #64, production #64, first broadcast on November 15, 1968 and repeated August 19, 1969. It was written by Judy Burns and Chet Richards, and directed by Herb Wallerstein.
It is the episode that introduced the aliens known as the Tholians.
'Overview': Captain Kirk is caught between dimensions while the ''Enterprise'' is trapped by an energy-draining web spun by mysterious aliens.
| Contents |
| Plot |
| 40th anniversary remastering |
| Sequel |
| External links |
Plot
On stardate 5693.2, the starship USS ''Enterprise'' enters an uncharted region of space to answer a distress call from her sister ship, the USS ''Defiant''. Nearing the location, the ''Enterprise's'' engines begin to lose power and sensors detect a nearby dimensional fracture in space that seems to be the cause of the energy drain.
The ''Defiant'' appears on the monitor, adrift, and with a strange green glow surrounding the hull. Strangely, sensors show no indication that the vessel is there. There are no lifeforms detected, nor are communications established with the ship. Captain Kirk assembles a boarding party consisting of himself, Dr. McCoy, Mr. Spock and Mr. Chekov to beam over and investigate. Before they go, the team dons environmental suits.
They arrive on the ''Defiant's'' bridge finding the crew all dead; having killed each other in what appears to have been some kind of bizarre mutiny. McCoy makes his way down to the ship's sickbay, but he can find no real explanation for the crew's deaths. He goes to look at a deceased crewman lying on the floor and suddenly discovers his hands can pass right through the body. In fact, the whole ship's physical structure seems to be dissolving.
As other members of the team notice the ''Defiant's'' structure is fading, Kirk orders them to return to the ''Enterprise''. Mr. Scott informs the team that owing to problems caused by the phenomenon, he can only retrieve three of them at once. Kirk decides to remain behind allowing Spock, McCoy and Chekov to return, however his delay causes him to phase away with the ''Defiant''. Kirk now finds himself stuck between two dimensions and floating helplessly in nothingness. Spock rushes to analyze the situation and determines that the ''Defiant's'' phasing effect should recur within a few hours. When it does, they may be able to retrieve the Captain if he is still alive.
Meanwhile, the same dimensional interphase begins to affect the ''Enterprise'' and her crew. Chekov suddenly goes berserk and attacks Spock on the bridge, and then more violent outbursts occur between crewmembers. McCoy and his personnel rush to find the cause, but they can only assume that the phasing and violent behavior are connected. The same murderous hostilities that affected the ''Defiant's'' crew have begun on the ''Enterprise''. McCoy strongly suggests that they put some distance between themselves and the ''Defiant'' but Spock refuses, believing any movement from their position could disrupt the ''Defiant's'' position and jeopardize finding the Captain.
An hour passes, and unexpectedly, a tiny metallic vessel of unknown configuration, approaches the ''Enterprise''. A crystalline being appears on the bridge monitor that seems to be surrounded by a radiant energy screen. The being identifies itself as Loskene of the Tholians and demands that the ''Enterprise'' leave their territory immediately. Spock apologizes for their intrusion and explains their situation to Loskene, asking they be given time to retrieve their Captain. The Tholian agrees to give the ''Enterprise'' 1 hour and 53 minutes, and no more.
The moment comes when the ''Defiant'' should phase in again, and Spock attempts to lock onto the Captain; however the ship is not where it is supposed to be. Spock believes the arrival of the Tholian vessel has somehow disturbed the ''Defiant's'' position and they have lost Captain Kirk for good.
McCoy and Spock conduct a makeshift funeral in the Captain's quarters where McCoy plays a recording Kirk made for them just in case he was ever killed on a mission. The somber recording gives the officers their final orders and some words of advice for their future missions without him; especially when he exhorts them to use their constant arguments and different points of view to support and help each other.
After the message is heard, Spock orders the ''Enterprise'' to leave the area. However, in the midst of her private memorial for Kirk in her quarters, Lt. Uhura notices a ghostly image of the Captain, still in his space suit, and floating inside the ship, beckoning for help. Spock thinks Uhura is seeing things and suggests she report to Dr. McCoy, but then Scotty reports catching a glimpse of Kirk in engineering and confirms that Uhura isn't hallucinating.
Spock rushes to locate the Captain, but Kirk phases out again before he can get a lock. If indeed the Captain is still alive, his pressure suit's life support would be dangerously low and his time is running out.
By now, the Tholians' time limit has already passed, and right on the dime, the aliens attack. Spock returns fire, managing to drive off the Tholian ship, but the maneuver leaves the ''Enterprise'' critically low on power and Scotty is unable to guarantee survival from another bombardment.
A second Tholian ship arrives on the scene, sure to finish the ''Enterprise'' off, but instead, the two alien ships curiously "link up" and begin to extend an energy thread between themselves. Like spiders, they begin to weave the strange energy strands, in a sphere, around the crippled ''Enterprise''.
Spock quickly analyses the "web" filaments and announces that if the Tholians complete their trap, ''Enterprise'' will not survive. More reports of Kirk's "ghost" come in from around the ship and Spock tries to lock a tractor beam on him when he appears again. In the meantime, Dr. McCoy has discovered an antidote for the phasing effect by using a diluted form of the Klingon nerve gas, Theragen.
As the Tholians' web is nearing completion, Kirk's ghost is spotted once more and Spock locks onto him with the tractor beam. At that moment, Spock uses all remaining warp energy in the ship's engines to break free of the Tholian's web. The burst of energy not only releases them, but throws the ''Enterprise'' 2.72 parsecs away and well out of range of the enemy ships. Kirk miraculously remains held in the tractor beam and he is quickly transported aboard where McCoy stands ready to inject him with the serum.
Kirk makes a full recovery and is keen on learning what happened aboard his ship while he was "away". He was surprised to learn McCoy and Spock worked well together, and a little disappointed when McCoy claims they didn't have time to open their Captain's "last orders" and his words of wisdom had gone unheard.
40th anniversary remastering
This episode was remastered in 2006 and first aired on March 31, 2007 as part of the remastered 40th Anniversary original series. It was preceded three weeks earlier by "Wolf in the Fold" and will be followed a week later by "The Immunity Syndrome". Video and audio have been digitally restored, and the episode features the all-CGI USS ''Enterprise'' that is standard among the revisions. Other changes to this episode include:
★ The USS ''Defiant'' has been replaced as a digital model and its dimensional phasing effects have been cleaned up.
★ The Tholian ships have been redesigned and their "web" has been given animated energy pulses.
Sequel
A two-part episode set of '' called "In a Mirror, Darkly", aired on April 22 and 29, 2005, is a sequel to this episode as it reveals what happened to the ''Defiant'' after it disappeared: it found itself in the Mirror Universe, where the local version of the Tholians had hoped to lure the ship. We learn that the mirror Tholians intentionally caused the interphase to form, with the hope of capturing the ''Defiant'' from the other universe and using it as the vanguard of an invasion force.
The Tholians in this alternate universe spun a web around the alternate Enterprise extremely quickly because they had over a dozen ships creating it, while in "The Tholian Web" there were only two. In the two episodes a Tholian Web has appeared, this is the only time we got to see one completed.
External links
★ Remastered FX reel for "The Tholian Web" at Trekmovie.com
★ ''The Tholian Web'' at StarTrek.com
★
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