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All Our Yesterdays (Star Trek)

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Star Trek: TOS episode
"All Our Yesterdays"
Image:STAllYesterdays.jpg
Spock and McCoy meet Zarabeth
Episode no. 78
Prod. code 078
Remastered no. 27
Airdate March 14, 1969
Writer(s) Jean Lisette Aroeste
Director Marvin Chomsky
Guest star(s) Mariette Hartley
Ian Wolfe
Kermit Murdock
Johnny Haymer
Ed Bakey
Al Cavens
Stan Barrett
Anna Karen
Year 2269
Stardate 5943.7
Episode chronology
Previous "The Savage Curtain"
Next "Turnabout Intruder"

"All Our Yesterdays" is a third season (and the penultimate) episode of Star Trek: The Original Series, first broadcast March 14, 1969 and repeated on August 5, 1969. It is episode #78, production #78, written by Jean Lisette Aroeste, and directed by Marvin Chomsky. It guest-stars Mariette Hartley as Zarabeth. Overview: Kirk, Spock and McCoy are trapped in the past on a world threatened by a supernova.

Plot

On stardate 5943.7, the USS Enterprise arrives at the class M planet Sarpeidon to evacuate inhabitants that are doomed by an impending supernova explosion of the system's star. Oddly, sensors detect no signs of humanoid life on the surface and Captain Kirk, along with Dr. McCoy and Mr. Spock, beams down to investigate. Once there, the landing party finds a sophisticated computer library where they encounter a man named Atoz. Atoz explains that the library contains an archive of historical data disks. Kirk warns Atoz of the planet's imminent destruction and that they must leave immediately. Atoz however, says he is aware of the destruction of his world, and is already prepared. He informs that he will be joining his wife and family soon. He then activates a machine called the "atavachron". By viewing the historic disks, the time portal can send any who enter back in time to the point recorded in the data. Kirk hears a woman's scream on the other side of the portal. Without realizing what the doorway is, he rushes through and disappears. McCoy and Spock rush into the portal after him despite Atoz's warnings not to go through since they have not been "prepared". The two find themselves transported through time 5,000 years in the past to when Sarpeidon was in the midst of an ice age. The two are trapped in the brutal cold and desperately look around for their captain. Meanwhile, Kirk arrives in an alleyway at a point in Sarpeidon's history reminiscent of Earth's Medieval era. He manages to rescue a disheveled-looking woman from being assaulted by sword-bearing nobles. Kirk chases the assailants away, but then discovers the "maiden in distress" is really a thief that was attempting to steal the man's purse. He offers to have McCoy treat the woman's wounds, but on looking where he came from, sees only a stone wall. Kirk steps back to the alley but cannot locate the time portal. He discovers he can still talk to McCoy and Spock but cannot get to them. Spock surmises that all of the planet's inhabitants have escaped their demise by going through the portal to their past, which explains why only Atoz is left. (Atoz later confirms this. He was just about to depart when the landing party arrived.) Authorities arrive and arrest Kirk for helping the thief. At the same time, McCoy asks his captain about what is going on at his end, and the guards are shaken when they hear the mysterious disembodied voice. The thief then betrays Kirk and tells the guards that he is using witchcraft, and the voices forced her to steal against her will. On the verge of freezing to death, Spock and Bones look for shelter and encounter a figure wrapped in heavy furs, who leads the strangers to a warm cave. Unrobing to reveal a beautiful woman, she identifies herself to Spock as Zarabeth, and explains that she and her family have been exiled because one of them was involved in a plot to assassinate Zor-kahn, the tyrant who ruled in her time, or as she wryly puts it, her crime was "choosing my kinsmen unwisely". Meanwhile, Kirk, taken to a jail cell, is interrogated by a prosecutor. Kirk mentions the "library" from which he came through time, and the prosecutor becomes nervous, realizing what Kirk means, for the prosecutor is also a refugee from Sarpeidon's future. At first, the prosecutor pretends to believe that Kirk is innocent but the guard and thief maintain they heard the mysterious voices and that Kirk must be a witch. Kirk realizes the prosecutor is from the future, and earnestly refers to the library and Mr. Atoz in the hope of getting back. The prosecutor gets scared and rushes away, saying he wants nothing more to do with the prisoner. Back in the ice age, Zarabeth listens to McCoy's and Spock's story of their arrival, and informs them that she too is from Sarpeidon's future. She explains that the Atavachron portal is "one-way" and alters a traveler's molecular structure so that if they return to their time, they will die. Meanwhile, Kirk sits in his cell and overpowers the jailer when he brings him food. The prosecutor arrives and Kirk confronts him, accusing him of being from Sarpeidon's future and threatening to expose him to the others as a "witch" if he does not help him escape. The prosecutor tries to calm Kirk down, admitting that he is indeed from the future but Kirk cannot return because of the "preparation" through the atavachron. Kirk points out that Atoz never prepared him, and the prosecutor says Kirk must return at once since an unprepared individual can only survive a short time in the past. He guides Kirk back to the alley, and Kirk feels for the portal, soon finding it.

The Enterprise warps away from Sarpeidion just as Beta Niobe goes Super Nova.
The Enterprise warps away from Sarpeidion just as Beta Niobe goes Super Nova.

Kirk steps through the portal returning to the library. He confronts Atoz and demands he help him rescue his friends. Atoz refuses to help until Kirk "prepares" himself before returning to the past. Believing his friends are dying and no more time can be wasted, Kirk tries to force Atoz to cooperate, but he zaps Kirk with a weapon, knocking him unconscious. Back in the ice age, Mr. Spock slowly reverts to the barbaric nature of ancient Vulcans, an effect that may be the result of remaining in the past when those Vulcans are living. McCoy notices the hostile changes in Spock when the Vulcan reacts angrily to one of his typical insults. Spock begins to fall in love with Zarabeth, losing all intention of returning to the future anyway and wanting only to remain with his new love. McCoy however, is not convinced that they are trapped despite Zarabeth's statement that trying to return through the portal would cause death; McCoy believes that only Zarabeth is somehow unable to return, but he is willing to risk death for himself. Back in the library, Kirk awakens on a cart just in time to stop Atoz from wheeling him into the time portal, and forces him to find his companions. Trying various disks, Kirk locates Spock and McCoy in the ice age and opens a portal. Meanwhile, McCoy, with Spock and Zarabeth at the base of the ice cliff where they arrived, hears Kirk's voice and manages to drag Spock away from Zarabeth long enough to follow it back to the library. The three are happily reunited, and with time running out, they watch Atoz slam a disk into the machine and make a panicked run for the portal and disappears. Realizing they have seconds before the planet is destroyed, the landing party quickly return to the Enterprise which safely warps away just as the star explodes.

40th Anniversary remastering

This episode was digitally re-mastered in 2006 and was first aired April 21, 2007 as part of the remastered 40th Anniversary original series. It was preceded a week earlier by the remastered version of "And the Children Shall Lead", and followed a week later by the remastered version of "A Piece of the Action". Aside from remastered video and audio, and the all-CGI animation of the Enterprise that is standard among the revisions, specific changes to this episode also include:

  • The planet Sarpeidion is given a more Earth-like detail.
  • The supernova of Beta Niobe at the end is interpreted quite differently by showing the star becoming a Crab Nebula-like nova and Sarpeidion's breaking up and being destroyed as the Enterprise warps away.

Notes

  • The title for this episode is from Shakespeare's Macbeth, Act V, Scene 5, line 22. Other episodes from the original series whose titles are from Shakespeare are Dagger of the Mind, The Conscience of the King, and By Any Other Name (Thine Own Self from The Next Generation; and The Undiscovered Country, film VI).
  • Author A.C. Crispin wrote two novel sequels to this episode, titled "Yesterday's Son"(#11), and "Time for Yesterday"(#39) (Simon & Schuster).
  • Mr. Atoz's name apparently derives from the phrase "A to Z", a reference to his occupation as a librarian. Veteran actor Ian Wolfe who plays Mr. Atoz appeared previously in the second season episode Bread and Circuses.
  • The atavachron, whose name derives from the Latin for "distant ancestor" and the Greek for "time", bears an uncanny likeness to Gary Seven's Beta-V computer. It is, of course, the same prop.
  • Likewise, Mr. Atoz's desktop disc viewer is made from Sargon's sphere holder, turned upside-down (from Return to Tomorrow).
  • Mr. Spock tells Zarabeth that Vulcan is a planet "millions of light years" away. That's quite a long distance, considering that the Milky Way galaxy is only about 100,000 light years across.
  • When Mr. Spock changes in the distant past, a role reversal is seen, with Spock supplying the passion and Dr. McCoy supplying the logic.
  • This is the one episode of the original series in which none of the action takes place aboard the Enterprise.
  • This episode was the inspiration for Allan Holdsworth's 1986 album "Atavachron", which features instrumental tracks named Atavachron and All Our Yesterdays, and cover art showing him dressed in a Star Trek uniform standing before the time portal, with a selected disc showing him in childhood. Also, his 1992 album, Wardenclyffe Tower, includes an instrumental track named Zarabeth.
  • The sound effect for the Atavachron was probably derived from the audio time code broadcast by the National Bureau of Standards shortwave radio station, WWV, from 1961 through 1971. A description of this "NASA 36-bit Time Code" appears in "1970 guide to NBS Time and Services," section 1.8, available at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) website.

External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
All Our Yesterdays
 This box:     edit Star Trek time travel stories
Star Trek: The Naked Time | Tomorrow Is Yesterday | The City on the Edge of Forever | Assignment: Earth | All Our Yesterdays | Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home
Star Trek: The Animated Series: Yesteryear
Star Trek: The Next Generation: We'll Always Have Paris | Time Squared | Yesterday's Enterprise | Captain's Holiday | A Matter of Time | Cause and Effect | Time's Arrow | Tapestry | Timescape | Firstborn | All Good Things... | Star Trek: First Contact
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Past Tense | Visionary | The Visitor | Little Green Men | Accession | Trials and Tribble-ations | Children of Time | Wrongs Darker than Death or Night | Time's Orphan
Star Trek: Voyager: Time and Again | Eye of the Needle | Future's End | Before and After | Year of Hell | Timeless | Relativity | Fury | Shattered | Endgame
Star Trek: Enterprise: Shockwave | Future Tense | Twilight | Carpenter Street | | Zero Hour | Storm Front
Last produced:
"The Savage Curtain"
Star Trek: TOS episodes
Season 3
Next produced:
"Turnabout Intruder"
Last transmitted:
"The Savage Curtain"
Next transmitted:
"Turnabout Intruder"

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All Our Yesterdays (Star Trek) from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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