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"Revolt on Dak-Alpha" was a 21-page Star Trek: The Original Series comic strip published in 1970. It was the 17th story arc in the UK comic strips series, released in seven parts within issues of TV21 Weekly.

Description[]

Teaser, November 14, 1970
Believing a revolt on the planet Dak-Alpha had been put down by the space Federation governor, LeBrun, Captain Kirk took a party from Enterprise to ferry prisoners to Earth. The whole thing was a trap, and Kirk and his men found themselves at gunpoint within one of five massive statues.

Summary[]

A revolt by native Alphans on the Federation colony Dak-Alpha is reportedly suppressed, and Governor LeBrun asks Starfleet to pick up imprisoned rebel leaders before they can make any more trouble. Admiral Nivens dispatches the Enterprise, and the next day Captain James T. Kirk, Spock, Hikaru Sulu, Hopkins and a crewman lands the Galileo at the designated coordinates, strangely in an arid wilderness. Above a rise, they discover massively tall statues of themselves. A door opens in the foot of Kirk's statue, and when they hear LeBrun call them up, they ride a turbolift to the Kirk statue's head. There, they are confronted by rebels, who hold LeBrun hostage and seize their phaser rifles.

Because LeBrun disabled all spacecraft on the planet, the rebel leader had been forced to lure a starship to Dak-Alpha. He plans to transfer an invasion force to the Enterprise, and the huge statues will become monuments honoring the deaths of the landing party members. The Kirk statue is lowered into a huge underground military hangar, and the landing party subjected to energy fields that will kill them, but leave their bodies animated as zombie slaves. Although LeBrun short-circuits the equipment at the cost of his life, the crew rise and obey commands. When Montgomery Scott lands a second shuttle nearby with an armed rescue squad, rebels engage them, then allow Scott to "rescue" Kirk's team.

Both shuttles return to the shuttle bay. As the rebel leader watches on video, Kirk, Spock, and Sulu assemble the crew, then throw anesthesia gas grenades at them. The three wear gas masks as they make their way back to the hangar deck. They send five shuttles down by remote and fly back together in the sixth shuttle. The three are taken below ground to die, while the six shuttles are flown back by armed rebel troops.

The soldiers expect to find the ship littered with corpses, but instead are confronted by squads of security officers. Kirk's team had actually survived exposure to the zombie weapon and managed to alert the crew before gassing them. Most of the invading rebels are captured, but a few flee in the Einstein. Meanwhile, Kirk, Spock and Sulu sabotage the main generators of the rebel base. Aboard the Galileo, Pavel Chekov witnesses scores of rebels flee as their base explodes. All are to be rounded up for a trip aboard the Enterprise.

References[]

Characters[]

Pavel ChekovHopkinsJames T. KirkLeBrunNivensMontgomery ScottSpockHikaru SuluNyota Uhuraunnamed Dak-Alphansunnamed USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) personnel

Starships and vehicles[]

EinsteinUSS Enterprise (Constitution-class heavy cruiser) • NCC-1701/3NCC-1701/4Galileo (II) (class F shuttlecraft) • unnamed Federation shuttlecrafttanks

Locations[]

Dak-Alpha (Central City)
Referenced only
EarthJupiterKalakon

Races and cultures[]

Dak-AlphanHumanVulcan

States and organizations[]

Federation

Science and technology[]

airlockcannoncommunicationscommunicatorforce fieldgas grenadegeneratorliquidation chamberrifleturboliftviewscreenweapon

Ranks and titles[]

admiralcaptainchief engineercolonelcrewmanensignFederation Starfleet ranks (2260s)generalgovernorofficerrankrebelskippersoldierStarfleet ranks

Other references[]

21st centuryassignment patchbrigcitycivilizationcolonydaydesertdogfiring squadgalaxygashelmethostageparking orbitplanetprisonquartersrebellionsecondsectorsecurityshuttle bayspacestarStarfleet uniformStarfleet uniform (2265-2270)statueuniformventilation systemvideozombie

Appendices[]

Related media[]

Background[]

  • The story was not printed with a title, but it was given one ("Revolt on Dak-Alpha") for its reprinting in the omnibus The Classic UK Comics, Volume 1.
  • Artists Harold Johns and Ron Turner drew separate halves of the story, with their distinct styles resulting in differing interpretations of the rebel leader.
  • The writer presented the Federation as analogous to the British Empire during its reign over India. In this story, the Federation establishes a colony on a previously inhabited world, with Humans in charge of a government over native Dak-Alphans who resemble the people of India. Rather than respecting the rights of the indigenous population, Federation authorities respond to an uprising with military force. (British Raj article at Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.)
  • One might assume that Kirk and Spock would visit Dak-Alpha, which gave the rebels one day to build 100-foot statues of them. However, it is unexplained how statues of Sulu and Hopkins can be built in the brief time it took for them to be chosen for the mission, fly to the surface, disembark and climb up a slope. Since most of the statues were in different poses in the October 31, 1970 strip than in the November 7, 1970 strip, perhaps they were made of more malleable material than the rigid Kirk statue.
  • Kirk comments that the Enterprise is not equipped as an active combat vehicle. However, in several previous stories in the UK comic strips series, Kirk uses the Enterprise as an active combat vehicle, particularly in "The Third Party" and "The Eagles Have Landed".

Images[]

Connections[]

UK comic strips
Weekly story arcs "Life Form Nonexistent" • "The Crucial Element" • "Beware the Beast" • "The Third Party" • "The Children of Stai" • "Skin Deep" • "The Eagles Have Landed" • "Spectre of the Zond" • "Nor Any Drop to Drink" • "Menace of the Moloth" • "The Klingon Ultimatum" • "The Marshall Plan" • "Mutiny on the Dorado" • "The Ageless One" • "Thorpex" • "Under the Sea" • "Revolt on Dak-Alpha" • "Where Giants Tread" • "I, Emperor" • "Slaves of the Frogmen" • "Key Witness" • "Nova-Thirteen" • "Prison Break" • "Vibrations in Time" • "The Aging World" • "By Order of the Empire" • "Creeping Death" • "Ground Zero" • "The Collector" • "To Swiftly Go..." • "The Mindless Ones" • "The Perithees Alliance" • "The Saboteur Within" • "The Void of Storms" • "Spheres of War" • "Shell Game" • "To Rule the Universe"
Annual stories "Target: Zargot" • "A Bite of the Apple" • "Captives in Space" • "Planet of Rejects" • "Gateway to the Future" • "The Zodian Sacrifice" • "Smoke and Mirrors" • "Planet of the Dead" • "What Is This Thing Called Spock?" • "The Gods Have Come!" • "Rock and a Hard Place"
Collections The Classic UK Comics (123) • Graphic Novel Collection (102029121)

Timeline[]

Published Order
Previous comic:
Under the Sea
TOS comics (UK comic strips) Next comic:
Where Giants Tread
Chronological Order
Previous adventure:
Spectre of the Zond
Memory Beta Chronology Next adventure:
Spheres of War
Previous comic:
Spectre of the Zond
Voyages of the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701), Year Two Next comic:
Spheres of War
Production history[]
  • This story was serialized over seven weekly issues:
October 1970
November 1970
December 1970
  • 5 December: Pages 16-18 published in TV21 Weekly #63.
  • 12 December: Pages 19-21 published in TV21 Weekly #64.
April 2016
Reprinted in the omnibus The Classic UK Comics, Volume 1. (IDW Publishing)
28 September 2017
Reprinted in the omnibus Graphic Novel Collection, Volume 20. (Eaglemoss Collections)

External link[]

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