^Think they first did that in "The Enemy Within."
According to Memory Alpha, here's the producers reasoning for starting with The Man Trap:
We see a Jeffries Tube, as well as that bit of business with somebody moving some sort of pole down through the decks of the ship...always wondered what was up with that.
And of course, we get scenes in the gym and the rec room, complete with 3D chess, card games, Uhura improv-singing, and that guy with the pointy ears (who's still prone to smiling) playing his weird harp!
Evidently the men on the Antares didn't slap each other on the ass
And this is two out of two episodes with somber endings instead of the much-maligned laugh lines.
And this is two out of two episodes with somber endings instead of the much-maligned laugh lines.
Yeah, you can tell Gene Coon hadn't joined the show yet. Star Trek began very dry and serious, Coon gave it a sense of fun, and then Freiberger tried to make it dry and serious again after Coon left. Nonethless, I enjoyed Charlie X a lot, and I think it's a good early effort by Roddenberry. For me, what makes the episode work is Robert Walker Jr. who, despite being 26 when it was shot (in July of '66), gives a compelling performance as a 17 year old caught between being a boy and a man.
Uhura improv-singing, and that guy with the pointy ears (who's still prone to smiling) playing his weird harp!
There are more scenes later to come that at least show that Spock has a respect and appreciation for Uhura that no one else seems to.This scene, and another in The Man Trap, to me, hint rather strongly at some sort of attraction between Uhura and Spock, which I assume is where the Abramsverse got the idea.
For me, what makes the episode work is Robert Walker Jr. who, despite being 26 when it was shot (in July of '66), gives a compelling performance as a 17 year old caught between being a boy and a man.
There are more scenes later to come that at least show that Spock has a respect and appreciation for Uhura that no one else seems to.
Spock / Uhura was never totally out of left field for me.
I remember not liking this ep as a kid when I saw it in syndication in the 70s, and now I realize that it was because Charlie's bratty, spoiled behavior reminded me of my own.![]()
This scene, and another in The Man Trap, to me, hint rather strongly at some sort of attraction between Uhura and Spock, which I assume is where the Abramsverse got the idea.
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