14-5 Animated, Allegorical, and Ahead of Its Time
Description
In 1973, Star Trek: The Animated Series debuted as a Saturday morning cartoon, but early reviewers quickly realized it was something far more ambitious. A contemporary article from the Pantagraph (Bloomington-Normal, IL) praised the show’s complex themes and emotional storytelling, declaring it a breakthrough in children’s animation that adults could take just as seriously.
This week, The Trek Files welcomes back Adam Kotsko, author of Late Star Trek, to explore the deeper legacy of TAS from its psychological depth and allegorical storytelling to its role as the franchise’s first major reinvention. With Gene Roddenberry at the helm and the original cast returning, The Animated Series wasn’t just a placeholder between live-action runs; it was a bold step into new narrative territory.
Was it canon? Does it matter? Adam and Larry unpack how TAS laid the groundwork for later series, balanced nostalgia with innovation, and helped define Star Trek’s long-standing ability to evolve with its audience.
📰 Document and additional references: Pantagraph review of Star Trek: The Animated Series – September 29, 1973
📘 Adam's book: Late Star Trek: The Final Frontier in the Franchise Era
The Trek Files Season 14 on Memory Alpha
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