Getting into the current spirit of things.
"Spock's Brain" has to be one of most widely known of Star Trek episodes even if only for its title. It sounds so B mvoie and the story's idea doesn't help: a beautiful alien steals Spock's brain and Kirk races against time to retrieve it.
The episode does have a few genuine WTF moments, too, which doesn't help.
But aside from all that at the heart of this episode lies a genuinely valid science fiction idea: a living mind is needed to run a society (in the strictest sense many living minds are needed to run a society, but here we only need one). And large portions of this episode are played totally straight and are perfectly acceptable, but it's mostly undermined by poor choice in story elements.
Was it really necessary to have Spock's body brought along like some mechanized zombie??? In James Blish's adaptation I recall Spock's body being left aboard ship until the surgery was ready to proceed. As is it comes across as too absurd. Also was it really necessary to have the Morg women be total airheads??? A little nuance would have worked wonders here. But the last bloody straw was having Spock speak and direct McCoy through completion of the surgery.
And then to end the whole thing with a cheap laugh. Gimme a freakin' break!
Most of the episode is played straight with few missteps, but every so often one of the aforementioned absurdities would ruin what had been accomplished up to that point. It's really hard to accept that Gene Coon could turn in such a botched effort in writing this. I quite liked the design of the alien ship. I like the story idea, but I'm disappointed with aspects of its execution. And all I can add is that as disappointing as it is I like it better than "And The Children Shall Lead."
I imagine there could be a number of ways to fix this episode so lets hear some ideas. For myself one of the first things I'd fix would be the title. Even something as unimaginative as "The Controller" would be an improvement.
Anyone?
"Spock's Brain" has to be one of most widely known of Star Trek episodes even if only for its title. It sounds so B mvoie and the story's idea doesn't help: a beautiful alien steals Spock's brain and Kirk races against time to retrieve it.
The episode does have a few genuine WTF moments, too, which doesn't help.
But aside from all that at the heart of this episode lies a genuinely valid science fiction idea: a living mind is needed to run a society (in the strictest sense many living minds are needed to run a society, but here we only need one). And large portions of this episode are played totally straight and are perfectly acceptable, but it's mostly undermined by poor choice in story elements.
Was it really necessary to have Spock's body brought along like some mechanized zombie??? In James Blish's adaptation I recall Spock's body being left aboard ship until the surgery was ready to proceed. As is it comes across as too absurd. Also was it really necessary to have the Morg women be total airheads??? A little nuance would have worked wonders here. But the last bloody straw was having Spock speak and direct McCoy through completion of the surgery.



Most of the episode is played straight with few missteps, but every so often one of the aforementioned absurdities would ruin what had been accomplished up to that point. It's really hard to accept that Gene Coon could turn in such a botched effort in writing this. I quite liked the design of the alien ship. I like the story idea, but I'm disappointed with aspects of its execution. And all I can add is that as disappointing as it is I like it better than "And The Children Shall Lead."
I imagine there could be a number of ways to fix this episode so lets hear some ideas. For myself one of the first things I'd fix would be the title. Even something as unimaginative as "The Controller" would be an improvement.
Anyone?