On a planet of intelligent plantlike creatures, the clone of a human scientist clones Mr. Spock for use in a galactic peace mission.On a planet of intelligent plantlike creatures, the clone of a human scientist clones Mr. Spock for use in a galactic peace mission.On a planet of intelligent plantlike creatures, the clone of a human scientist clones Mr. Spock for use in a galactic peace mission.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
William Shatner
- Capt. Kirk
- (voice)
Leonard Nimoy
- Mr. Spock
- (voice)
- …
DeForest Kelley
- Dr. McCoy
- (voice)
George Takei
- Sulu
- (voice)
Nichelle Nichols
- Uhura
- (voice)
James Doohan
- Scott
- (voice)
- …
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This animated series seems to be getting worse as it goes along. The guys go to a planet that is inhabited by plants that move around. Sulu picks up a plant with his bare hands (a little stupid considering it's an alien planet). He would be killed except the walking, talking plants save him. Then we find out the place is being run by some big human who is the fifth clone of some other guy. He has some plans for the master race and kidnaps Spock using dragons with corkscrews. Then McCoy creates a plant spray and..... I can't even try to explain what happens. This has got to be about as ridiculous as one can get. I know this was Saturday morning stuff, but it pretends to have an intelligent basis. It's as if some writers were in a room with about an hour to put together a plot and they turned in the first draft.
Phylosian philosophy is primarily built on botany but has tentacles and twisting shoots resident in most biology and they've genetically and evolutionary become advanced in organic chemistry while displaying light years in advance their skills with rocket technology.
Planet of the plants kidnap Mr. Spock and drain his essence for their plans to save a universe that's not taking root.
Planet of the plants kidnap Mr. Spock and drain his essence for their plans to save a universe that's not taking root.
The animated "Star Trek" series sucked in many ways. However, often the scripts were decent enough you could almost ignore that the animation was drawn by chimps. Well, in the case of "The Infinite Vulcan" you have the worst of both worlds--terrible animation and an incredibly dopey story--one written by Walter Koenig and Gene Roddenberry!
When I try to explain the plot, bear with me. This is because I really have no idea what I saw and the story is an incomprehensible mess! The crew land on a planet ruled by sentient plants and their leader is a giant clone of a crazy plant-lover from over two centuries ago! His plan was to invade the galaxy and impose peace on everyone. Now, for no real reason, they abduct Spock and try to make a giant Spock to rule over everyone. Huh?!
This is just crap...total crap. I don't know how the voice actors could even utter such dopey lines as you'll hear in this one and my suggestion is that you take heed from the summary--which was spoken by Dr. McCoy during the episode!
When I try to explain the plot, bear with me. This is because I really have no idea what I saw and the story is an incomprehensible mess! The crew land on a planet ruled by sentient plants and their leader is a giant clone of a crazy plant-lover from over two centuries ago! His plan was to invade the galaxy and impose peace on everyone. Now, for no real reason, they abduct Spock and try to make a giant Spock to rule over everyone. Huh?!
This is just crap...total crap. I don't know how the voice actors could even utter such dopey lines as you'll hear in this one and my suggestion is that you take heed from the summary--which was spoken by Dr. McCoy during the episode!
Did you know
- TriviaThe idea of the Phylosians was forced upon Walter Koenig by Gene Roddenberry, who wanted a race of talking plants in the animated series because it was not possible to do on the original Star Trek (1966). Koenig had to write ten to twelve drafts of the script before it was accepted by Roddenberry. According to Koenig, he was offered the chance to write additional scripts for the series; however, he turned it down because of Roddenberry's excessive and controlling demands for rewrites. As a result, this is the only episode involving him.
- GoofsMcCoy mentions his grandfather's weed spray "brewing in sickbay." This would not be necessary. He could have given the formula to the ship's replicators and had it produced instantly; however, McCoy is a bit obsessive and quirky about certain high-tech matters (e.g., his legendary discomfort with transporters in Star Trek (1966)), so he might regard a replicated weed spray as inauthentic.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Drawn to the Final Frontier (2006)
Details
- Runtime
- 23m
- Color
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