This. Compared to most of season three, this one is somewhat memorable, but in the broader context of the series, it's eminently forgettable.
Typical how Kirk came to the aid of the woman (The Mort) who was being harassed by the cavalier and then it is she that is his most ardent accuser when the judge trundles along!
JB
I'd be concerned about how the removal of the disks from the library would have on people who had traveled through the Atavachron to those periods. The disks were connected to the Atavachron, and people had to be prepared in order to enter history without ill-effects. It's possible that preparation was not only for the good of the travelers, but also to preserve the integrity of the timeline.
The library motif and episode title suggest that temporal paradox was resolved by having the travelers become part of the living history of the planet. History was evidently altered by the time travel, but in a way controlled by the preparation. Remove part of the system making that work, and you might break it.
Perhaps if you destroy a disk, it would prematurely kill the travelers who went through to that time. Move the disk beyond the Atavachron, and perhaps the same thing would happen. Spock would have cautioned against removal of the disks before they better understood their function.
I thought of that, too!Except that the sun went Nova at the end of the episode, destroying Sarpiedon and the library. So, then, what's the harm in grabbing some discs and preserving some information about the planet's history. If destroying a disc kills the traveler, then they all died when the planet was comsumed and evacuating them was a total waste of time.
The way I always took it was the library was just that: a library. The "tapes" were just history texts which fed the Atavachron the pertinent information. The time machine did the rest.
Not to put too fine a point on it, but location shooting means shooting outside the studio, not on a backlot. The only third-season episode shot on location was "The Paradise Syndrome," with its outdoor scenes filmed in Franklin Canyon Park just north of Beverly Hills.The only thing about this episode that didn't really work for me is the cinematography. The scenes of Kirk in the Three Musketeers street were all actually exteriors but they were filmed and lit so ineffectively, they looked like sets. The last "location" shooting on the series and it might as well have been indoors.
The point of what I'm saying is what I said before: "Spock would have cautioned against removal of the disks before they better understood their function."Those things *could* be true (and worth exploring in a sequel or fanfic), but nothing presented in the episode confirms it. We only know that the disks being viewed on a viewer link them to that time period when they go through the portal. The disks not on a viewer or in the drawers don't seem to be active to us (the viewer) or to our intrepid heroes who surely would want to preserve some Sarpeidon history.
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