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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Binding: DVD
EAN: 9780792174745
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Subtitled, NTSC
ISBN: 0792174747
Label: CBS Paramount International Television
Manufacturer: CBS Paramount International Television
Number Of Discs: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: CBS Paramount International Television
Region Code: 1
Release Date: July 10, 2001
Running Time: 100 minutes
Sales Rank: 25434
Studio: CBS Paramount International Television
Theatrical Release Date: September 08, 1966
Related Items:
Editorial Review:
Amazon.com: "Assignment: Earth" The final broadcast episode of Star Trek's second season was this clever and funny story in which the Enterprise travels back in time to 1968 (the year this program aired) to discover how the nuclear arms race came to an end. Captain Kirk (William Shatner) encounters a strange fellow named Gary Seven (Robert Lansing), who claims to have been trained by extraterrestrials in sabotaging the escalating nuclear threat. With the ambivalent aid of a nervous secretary (Teri Garr), Seven (yes, there was a Trek character with that name before Voyager) attempts to carry out his assignment, but Kirk isn't sure if he can be trusted. Lansing's droll and somewhat imperious performance is nicely counterpointed by Garr's cute confusion, and the eerie presence of his familiar--a black cat named Isis--adds a hint of hoodoo exotica. (Don't blink at the end or you'll miss the really exotic creature Isis briefly turns into.) "Assignment: Earth" was actually the pilot for an intended Gene Roddenberry-produced TV series that never happened. Too bad... But speaking of eerie, Spock (Leonard Nimoy) at one point refers to an important assassination that will soon take place. A week after this episode's original airdate, Dr. Martin Luther King was murdered.
"Spectre of the Gun" In this taut, exciting episode, the Enterprise trespasses Melkotian space and is punished in a unique fashion. Kirk (William Shatner), Spock (Leonard Nimoy), McCoy (DeForest Kelley), Scotty (James Doohan), and Chekov (Walter Koenig) are all transported to the planet's eerie surface, where they are trapped in a re-creation of 1881 Tombstone and mistaken for the Clanton brothers, doomed principals in the infamous gunfight at the OK Corral. Despite their efforts to avoid trouble, Kirk and company can't seem to avoid their fateful duel with the Earp brothers and Doc Holliday (Sam Gilman). When Chekov is shot dead by Morgan Earp (Rex Holman), the danger is all too clear. The strange Twilight Zone look and atmosphere of this episode--tumbleweeds and Old West facades popping up in a black void--grips one's imagination and doesn't let go until the very end. Fans of Captain Kirk's street-fighting style will especially enjoy the thrilling climax. --Tom Keogh
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
This volume would come under the "nice-to-have but not essential" category if you are picking which volumes to keep. We have a couple of strange episodes here but for different reasons.
In the first episode, the Enterprise clearly plays second fiddle as Gary Seven and his assistant played by the multi-talented comedianne, Teri Garr, take the leading roles as an episode of Trek is sacrificed so that a pilot for a new sci-fi adventure could be showcased and mooted for public acceptance. ... Read More
Rating: -
The enterprise is sent back to the late 60's to see how a potently deadly nuclear situation was avoided. They may have to do a little interfering themselves. While there their transporter snags a string man, Gary Seven (Robert Lansing), and his feline looking traveling companion Isis. A secretary Miss Roberta Lincoln (Terry Garr) to a missing agent is suspicious and thinks that Gary Seven may be a spy.
Is Gary Seven a sinister being, or part of a larger plan? And keep a close eye on his co ... Read More
Rating: -
Episode 55 is great, yet episode 56 is a dud. What's more, Seven & his secretary, Teri Garr, are xellent in the two novels, "The Eugenics Wars". Given, the books are far better than this episode. Yet, this does give key (& very eerie) clues to the future.
Rating: -
Assignment: Earth-This episode, which featured the crew returning to Earth in 1968 to observe a rocket launch, was certainly unusual. it becomes much more than an observation once they are forced to decide whether Seven's role is a positive or negative one in the prevention of nuclear war. Any viewer unaware that this was a pilot episode of a proposed spy show would be forgiven for wondering how the crew ended up in a such a mundane setting. While Robert Lansing and Terri Garr are a big step up from ... Read More
Rating: -
REVIEWED ITEM: Star Trek® Original Series DVD Volume 28- Assignment: Earth © / Spectre of the Gun ©
ASSIGNMENT: EARTH © PRELIMINARY BRIEFS:
Moral, Ethical, and/or Philosophical Subject(s) Driven Into the Ground: Messin' with the space-time continuum; trusting the motivations of complete strangers
Expendable Enterprise Crewmember (`Red Shirt') Confirmed Casualty List: Three incapacitated
REVIEW/COMMENTARY:
Was `Assignment: Earth' just another rip ... Read More
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