Well, the part where Spock is telling Norman about logic...I still crack up. Every. Single. Time.Embarrasing is the word I'd use rather than humerous, FP!
JB
Well, the part where Spock is telling Norman about logic...I still crack up. Every. Single. Time.Embarrasing is the word I'd use rather than humerous, FP!
JB
xD the only episode I ever failwd to watch was Let This Be Your Last Battlefield. It was just too boring. I would get 20 minutes into it and just couldn't watch any more. Is it good? Should I finish it?Well maybe and when I have a rewatch of the series I never miss any episodes out despite some not being my favourites!
JB
Spock's Brain is not the worst episode of the series! That (dis)honour goes to either, I Mudd, Whom Gods Destroy and Plato's Stepchildren! Take your pick!
JB
Wait, whst's funny about A Piece of the Action?When TOS did humour stories in the form of "Shore Leave" or even "The Trouble With Tribbles" it still works contextually without making the characters look ridiculous.
But "I, Mudd" and "A Piece Of The Action" cross the line of absurdty.
Yes, there are smirks, but it makes no sense in a universe we accept as serious and believable within its own context. These are two stories I would more expect to have seen come out of TAS, and indeed we did get another Mudd story there.
I think Roddenberry would have been okay with "The Troubles With Tribbles" on its own, but then pushing the comedic element further as was done with "I, Mudd" and "A Piece Of The Action" pushed it too far for GR's liking. Hence his subsequent dictum, "Star Trek is not a comedy." and impressing that upon Fred Frieberger for Season 3.
Contextual humour = okay
Nonsensical absurdity = don't go there.
yep
"I, Mudd" was a tremendous improvement over "Mudd's Women" and all three of those seemed pretty entertaining to me.
When TOS did humour stories in the form of "Shore Leave" or even "The Trouble With Tribbles" it still works contextually without making the characters look ridiculous.
But "I, Mudd" and "A Piece Of The Action" cross the line of absurdty.
Yes, there are smirks, but it makes no sense in a universe we accept as serious and believable within its own context. These are two stories I would more expect to have seen come out of TAS, and indeed we did get another Mudd story there.
I think Roddenberry would have been okay with "The Troubles With Tribbles" on its own, but then pushing the comedic element further as was done with "I, Mudd" and "A Piece Of The Action" pushed it too far for GR's liking. Hence his subsequent dictum, "Star Trek is not a comedy." and impressing that upon Fred Frieberger for Season 3.
Contextual humour = okay
Nonsensical absurdity = don't go there.
Not in details, no, because they sufficiently rationalize the situation."The Paradise Syndrome" - Stated onscreen that the natives are a transplanted society, with vague speculation that the 'Preservers' put them there. No intent for parallelism is even there.
: ) In some ways it's a little ridiculous, but it has this charm to it...I don't know. Kathryn Hays did a great job with Gem, though. I would be interested to hear what her voice sounds like xD
My feelings as well. I find many of the 3rd season episodes just as good as the best of any other season.My last rewatch I found easily half of S3 fair to good to even excellent. Another quarter of it was just okay. I found only about a quarter of it actually poor to bad.
xD the only episode I ever failwd to watch was Let This Be Your Last Battlefield. It was just too boring. I would get 20 minutes into it and just couldn't watch any more. Is it good? Should I finish it?
"I, Mudd" was a tremendous improvement over "Mudd's Women" and all three of those seemed pretty entertaining to me.
Ok!Oh indeed you should! I never liked it much as a kid but I think it's great these days, FP!
JB
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.