I remember loving Obsession when I was younger, but when I re-watched it recently I just thought it was good. I guess I have no obsession with it anymore?
*tumbleweed*
*tumbleweed*
Practically nothing works in it, it's just absurd on its face and it's borderline unwatchable. It's even worse when you watch the show in airdate order, as it comes immediately after "The Trouble with Tribbles".
The Gamesters of Triskelion (*)
I think it’s time to retire that joke. There’ll never be a more appropriate usage.
This episode is a hodgepodge of concepts and story elements that are combined to make one very silly hour. It starts with the abduction of Kirk, Uhura, and Chekov so that they can participate in some sort of interstellar fight club. Visually, this is about as goofy as TOS gets. There’s Ming the Merciless, the giant monster man, the yellow-skinned woman, and the green-haired woman in the skimpy outfit. Then we learn that the whole thing is orchestrated by brains who live in a glass bubble. They’re highly advanced, see, but they’ve allowed themselves to devolve by devoting their entire existence to gambling on the outcome of the fights. I’m sure there’s meant to be some sort of social commentary there, but it got lost behind the fact that they’re brains living in a glass bubble!
Then there’s the romance angle. Shahna wants to know what love is, and she wants Kirk to show her. Kirk obliges by kissing her, punching her in the face, threatening to slit her throat, and abandoning her to be educated by her former captors. That must be the “heartache and pain” part of the song. I don’t have a problem with Kirk using his charms to manipulate this poor, inexperienced woman as part of a ploy to escape captivity, Kirk is a ruthless bastard when he needs to be. But the ending plays the romance angle too earnestly.
We also have the subplot on the Enterprise. It’s pretty much just the same scene repeated three or four times; Spock follows the only lead on the Captain’s whereabouts, while McCoy and Scotty act like children. It’s not even necessary for the plot, the moment the Enterprise shows up they are disabled. They may as well have stayed where they were and saved us a few minutes of needless bickering.
Finally, there’s the slavery aspect of the story. Kirk rightly decides that the Brains’ fight club needs to be ended and the slaves set free, but instead of following the normal procedure of enacting reform through the legislature or court system, Kirk decides to wager that he can beat three experienced combatants in a fight. Luckily for him, his rivals went to the Assassin’s Creed school of combat and allowed him to take them down one-by-one while the rest watched. Victorious in the Emancipation Altercation, Kirk frees the slaves, then quickly leaves before Shahna asks for his number.
The God Things: 9
James T Flirt: 10½
Inform the Men: 0
I'll be honest - I would have rather had things like guys in rubber suits (like the Gorn) or people with their skin painted weird colors (like the aliens in "The Apple"). But that's just me. Though I do see where you're coming from with aliens who are completely indistinguishable from Humans. For crying out loud, the first aliens we meet on VOY (after the pilot episode) look exactly like Humans!
True, but Redjack displayed clear malevolence towards other sentient beings, whereas the smoke monster didn't display any awareness that it was feeding on intelligent creatures. The reason why it strikes me as a little odd is that the episode devotes so much time to the question of whether the creature is intelligent, and when they determine that it is they decide to blow it up anyway.Good point, but I suggest the circumstances are different, namely there is no indication that the smoke monster is doing anything other than eating the crew. It's certainly not defending it's eggs from destructive miners. It isn't even accepted as intelligent until it turns to attack, and even after that there's no way to say intelligent as say an ape or a dog or on par with a humanoid. The Wolf in the Fold monster , Redjack, was certainly highly intelligent and the got rid of it and I think that's a better comparison.
I'm of two minds on this. On the one hand, the forehead aliens were kind of lame. On the other hand, we avoided more creatures like the fish aliens.The were very against men in rubber suits, and in that time on a TV budget, I tend to agree with them.
I'm of two minds on this. On the one hand, the forehead aliens were kind of lame. On the other hand, we avoided more creatures like the fish aliens.
On the nosey about McCoy/Spock this ep. My absolute favorite lines between those two are here:What elevates the episode for me is the focus on the Spock/McCoy relationship. It’s my favourite dynamic on the show, and this episode has some of the best examples of their unusual friendship. First, the two compete with one another for the honour of conducting a suicide mission. When Spock is chosen to undertake it, McCoy refuses to wish him luck until after Spock left the room. And when Kirk decides to risk the Enterprise in order to save Spock’s shuttle, Spock and McCoy have a delightfully acerbic exchange.
Oddball fannish conjecture about "Immunity Syndrome"... Ever wonder if the amoeba was not a naturally developing life-form, per say, but rather the subject of an experiment? Maybe evolved beings of another quantum reality were "projecting" a "test subject" into a parallel dimension? The "hole in space" as it was quaintly described might have been an "interface" between the dimensions generated by scientists on the "other side". Poor schmucks probably retrieved their test subject; found it dead; and wrongly assumed the cause of death, attributing it to an "environment hostile to organic life".
Smooth move, Enterprise! You just f***ed up someone's science project!
Sincerely,
Bill
Exactly how I feel about "The Apple". I'm usually not one to agree with the Prime Directive, or it's often horrible implementation, but this is a rock-solid example of it needing to be enforced. Kirk absolutely left these people worse off than they were before. Oh, Kirk and McCoy don't like cultures like this? Well, fuck it then, contaminate it to your hearts content, fellas! Who cares if they're healthy, happy and not harming themselves or others? After all, you don't approve!
If I recall correctly (and I may not since it's been decades), one of the storylines in Peter David's 1980s Trek comic book for DC had one of the Vaal-ians (Akuta?) trying to take vengeance on Kirk for just those reasons.
Hello.... hello.... hello.... hello. Echo.... echo.... echo.... echo.... Pinch hitting for Pedro Borbon, Manny Mota.... Mota.... Mota.... Mota.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.