D'oh! Now there's nothing left to like!M'Benga? In "The Apple"? Methinks you are think of Spock being shot in "A Private Little War", not Spock getting a chestful of thorns.
D'oh! Now there's nothing left to like!M'Benga? In "The Apple"? Methinks you are think of Spock being shot in "A Private Little War", not Spock getting a chestful of thorns.
You mean this guy?
Add in some really silliness about a fruit and vegetable eating computer shaped like a dragon's head (seriously, huh, WTF?!) and it's easily my least favorite episode of Season Two. 1/10
Infant mortality and mother death in childbirth here we come!
That's the way it is now, but the British government are going to randomly switch things up over the centuries just to annoy me. Like that time I thought I was buying 2 litres of milk but it was actually 4 pints of milk, and I was like "what am I going to do with all this extra milk?" I had to have slightly milky tea. It ruined my day.If it was Britain it would be long distances in miles, short distances in metres and temperature in Celsius.![]()
He's going to build a wall and make the 1% pay for it?You mean this guy?
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In some ways, that makes more sense. But then I realised that rocks don't grow, so the tribespeople would have to spread out further and further to find them. Unless the rocks actually do grow, in which case they're some form of plant, and then we're back to the vegetarian computer silliness.As to the fruit eating Vaal, if you look closely (and you really have to look) it's being fed the exploding rocks, not fruit.
And what’s with the mixed measurement systems at play here? They measure long distances in kilometres, short distances in yards, and temperature in Fahrenheit. What, is Britain in charge of Starfleet now? Either use the metric system or don’t, quit with this half and half crap.
Mirror, Mirror (****½)
After a transporter accident, Kirk, McCoy, Scotty, and Uhura find themselves in a nightmarish parallel universe where people trust one another and work together toward mutual goals. Also, the women cover their midriffs. How could anyone stand to live in such a pathetic universe? Anyway, not realising what has happened, Kirk goes to the bridge and orders the destruction of the worthless Halkans, at which point Spock mutinies and locks our four heroes in the brig. I love a good mutiny story, you know how much I enjoyed The Friendship Machine, the episode where Kirk mutinies against Commodore Decker of the ISS Consternation and flings his ship into the friendly extra-galactic probe, destroying them both. But the mutiny in this episode doesn't make sense to me. Spock doesn't mutiny so he can acquire wealth or power, he mutinies to save lives.
Thankfully, beardless Spock is unaware that Scotty has a robotic arm, which he received after his own arm was cut off by one of his murder victims in Sheep in the Fold. They use its circuitry to disable the forcefield and make their way to sickbay so that McCoy can concoct some deadly poisons. Once there, they are confronted by nurse Chapel, but Uhura uses her lesbian seduction techniques and brings Chapel back to her quarters. Meanwhile, Kirk makes his way to his own quarters in the hope of finding his Tantalus field device, but all he finds in the secret compartment is some dirty magazines and a Beastie Boys album.
The four meet up again at auxiliary control and seize control of the ship's weapons, firing torpedoes indiscriminately at the planet's surface. They set the auto-destruct sequence and try to escape to a shuttle, but they are stopped by beardless Spock before they can get there. He explains about the accident that led to our heroes being transported to this mirror universe and offers to send them back in return for Kirk ending the destruct sequence. Wishing to leave this pansy universe and return to his own, where he has a much more comfortable captain's chair, Kirk agrees. Spock escorts them to the transporter room, but before he leaves Kirk tries to convince Spock to save this universe from itself.
KIRK: I submit to you that your Federation is illogical because it cannot endure. I submit that you are illogical to be a willing part of it. Be the captain of this Enterprise, Mister Spock. Find a logical reason for eradicating the Halkans and make it stick. Push till it gives. In my cabin... is an album that will make you want to do reckless things.
SPOCK: Indeed?
KIRK: What will it be? Future or past? Freedom or Tyranny? It's up to you. In every coup, there's one man with a vision.
SPOCK: Captain Kirk, please be quiet.
This is a classic episode, one that shows us the sort of horrifying future we will face if America doesn't vote for Trump this November. The sex scene involving Uhura and mirror Chapel was just gratuitous enough, and the scene where Scotty crushes that guy's skull with his robot hand is exactly the reason why I watch Star Trek. Unfortunately, this is also the final great episode of the series. Whatever it was that happened in our universe while Kirk and co were gone, it completely changed the character of Spock for the worse. The way in which he comes to champion the cause of peaceful cooperation was a jump the shark moment for the franchise. Star Trek is supposed to be about enslaving new worlds and spreading fear throughout the galaxy, it's a shame that the writers lost touch with that in their attempts to be controversial.
Gratuitous Lesbian Scenes: 28
Before anyone complains that I did this joke already in the Enterprise thread, it's April 1st, so just give me this one.
Yes, very funny.THIS...IS...GREAT.
Dying here.
Mirror, Mirror (****½)
KIRK: In my cabin.... is an album that will make you want to do reckless things.
SPOCK: Indeed?
I wouldn't put it past him. He wants the 1% to pay for everything else. And while Trump might build a wall to keep people out, Sanders honestly strikes me as the kind of guy who would build a wall to keep people in.He's going to build a wall and make the 1% pay for it?
This scene wasn't in my copy of the episode and I demand to know why!!Once there, they are confronted by nurse Chapel, but Uhura uses her lesbian seduction techniques and brings Chapel back to her quarters.
I know, right? But for some reason they refused me access to the press screening of Into Darkness. That's why I chose to wait two years for it to show up on Netflix before watching it, at which point I understood why they didn't want me to review it.
Can anyone question why this man's contributions to the review world of, hell anything he wants to review, are so eagerly anticipated and sought!!!!
There's nothing more feminist than a gratuitous lesbian sex scene. It's just two (or three or eight) women bonding and having fun without the presence of a man, what could be more empowering than that?Chapel and Uhura talk to each other and don't talk about a man, so this episode is the feminist highlight of TOS.
You have to pay for the mirror universe package from your cable provider. It's pricey, but you'll get to watch great shows such as Breaking Good, The East Wing, and The Contraltos.This scene wasn't in my copy of the episode and I demand to know why!!
Spock's beard and Uhura's midriff
Yeah, the part about Chekov being scared shitless just because he saw a corpse (even if he did sort of stumble on it in the dark) always seemed contrived. Chekov is young but he's already an experienced officer. Surely he's seen a few dead people by now.The Deadly Years (*½)
. . . Chekov is the only member of the away team not afflicted with rapid ageing, apparently because he’s a sissy who has never seen a dead body before.
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