Commentary: Trek Stars: The Work of Star Trek Creators Outside of Star Trek (Harlan Ellison)

Ellison, Part 4: Recap.

Few writers are as prolific as Harlan Ellison. But perhaps his greatest contribution to the world of sci-fi is his commentary on the genre itself. This week, Mike and Max recap Ellison's work on The Outer Limits. We look at his two episodes, "Soldier" and "Demon with a Glass Hand," as well as his episode of Star Trek, “The City on the Edge of Forever." We also discuss his career outside television, and his impact as a public figure in the sci-fi community.

Direct download: ctrek-057.mp3
Category:Harlan Ellison -- posted at: 8:00pm MDT

Ellison, Part 3: Demon with a Glass Hand.

In 1964, Harlan Ellison won the Writer’s Guild of America Award for his second entry into The Outer Limits, “Demon with a Glass Hand.” The episode tells the story of a man with a computer hand who is humanity’s last hope in an intergalactic war. This week, Max and Mike are joined by Tysto of Tysto.com to look at “Demon with a Glass Hand.”  We discuss why it is so acclaimed, how it is part of a much larger story, and how it might have tied into Babylon 5. We also talk about how awesome The Sci-Fi Buzz was.

Direct download: ctrek-056.mp3
Category:Harlan Ellison -- posted at: 8:00pm MDT

Ellison, Part 2: Soldier.

In 1964, the cult sci-fi show The Outer Limits was renewed for a second season. The new production team decided to shift the focus away from a "monster of the week" format, and into a "hard sci-fi" direction. As part of this change, Harlan Ellison was brought in to write two episodes of the anthology series.

The first of these was “Soldier,” based on his own short story entitled “Soldier from Tomorrow.” As the title suggests, it tells the story of a soldier from a future war, played by Michael Ansara, who is thrown back in time to the strange land of America in the mid-20th century.

This week, Mike and Max take a look at both “Soldier” and the story upon which it's based. We discuss The Outer Limits in general, the episode in particular, and the allegations of plagiarism which Ellison brought against James Cameron's The Terminator. We also look back at the Shatner-starring, Esperanto-speaking opus which is Incubus.

Direct download: ctrek-055.mp3
Category:Harlan Ellison -- posted at: 8:00pm MDT

Ellison, Part 1: Trek.

This week, Max and Mike begin a new series on writer Harlan Ellison, looking at his work on The Outer Limits.

Ellison's “The City On the Edge of Forever” is considered by many to be Star Trek's finest hour. The story of Kirk finally falling in love, only to have that love snatched away by the Universe is both epic in scale and personal in emotion. It is thought of by most to be a masterpiece. But not by Ellison.

The episode's road to the screen was undoubtedly the most troubled of any Trek episode. Ellison's original screenplay was thought to be unfilmable and uncharacteristic of Trek. As such, it was heavily rewritten by Gene Roddenberry and others, until it became something that Ellison despised. Three decades later, Ellison published his original screenplay along with an essay telling his side of the story. The book is almost as epic as the episode itself.

For the first part in our series on Ellison, we are joined by Drew Stewart of Standard Orbit and John Mills of Words with Nerds to look at both the finished episode and the original screenplay. We discuss whether or not it is the best episode of Trek, how the aired version differs from the first draft, whether or not the changes are for the better, and what Ellison's essay says about the creative process.

Direct download: ctrek-054.mp3
Category:Harlan Ellison -- posted at: 8:00pm MDT

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