The greenness always put me off. Right from when I first watched Wolf in the Fold I thought the greenness really de-sexualized them. Now BLUE.. that's a lot sexier colour.
You're right about the Phlox line. But this does raise an interesting question about sexual preference. The Orions' pheremones were said to affect men "physiologically" by causing them to desire the girls so much that they all want to be the "alpha male" in hopes of attracting them.Isn't there a line from Phlox in which he states the Orion pheromones work specifically on "rival" females physiology causing them to feel off colour - thereby taking them "out of the game" as it were. I don't think it's got anything to do with sexual preference.It would have been nice if a couple of guys got the headache and a couple of girls fell under the Orion girls' spell. Or are we to believe there is not a single gay or bi crewperson on board the Enterprise?
Yes, you're right - it's all a big undefined grey area to say the least. Although, having said that, I doubt it's anything Manny Cotto thought about in great detail while penning the episode - if at all.You're right about the Phlox line. But this does raise an interesting question about sexual preference. The Orions' pheremones were said to affect men "physiologically" by causing them to desire the girls so much that they all want to be the "alpha male" in hopes of attracting them.Isn't there a line from Phlox in which he states the Orion pheromones work specifically on "rival" females physiology causing them to feel off colour - thereby taking them "out of the game" as it were. I don't think it's got anything to do with sexual preference.It would have been nice if a couple of guys got the headache and a couple of girls fell under the Orion girls' spell. Or are we to believe there is not a single gay or bi crewperson on board the Enterprise?
So if there had been any gay men on board, isn't the aforementioned definition saying that the gay men's sexual preference would be altered so that they would, possibly for the first and only time, want these particular women?
The episode may actually be kind of unconsciously throwing "born this way", under the bus. Not trying to make any grand political statements here, just speculating on the events in "Bound".
BTW, King Daniel, you should get some sort of prize for bringing up an issue in an Ent episode that (I don't think) has ever been raised before in this forum.
I liked Bound.
Not the best but far from the worst.
I thoroughly enjoyed this episode - tremendous fun.
Okay I'll give you Kirk but Bond? pfft. And still, where are the magic sex episodes with MEN?! You know where the man is emitting pheromones or has space drugged everyone or has a super power and it's all about EVERY SINGLE FEMALE ripping her clothes off for him. Has this ever happened?
Kirk was old school stuff where he left a trail of swooning females behind him, there was never any magic sex going on.
I have no idea, I am not one for vampire stories.
I am asking about tv shows, if that old trope about the magic sex female is ever turned round.
Because Kirk and James Bond already did that, plus it would probably be called sexist nowadays.
I didn't hate it but didn't like it much; average, somewhat enjoyable goofiness (and hotness). I disliked and didn't buy the idea that the Orion men were also/actually under the control of the Orion women, that went too much against what other episodes and the episode itself had suggested.
I disliked and didn't buy the idea that the Orion men were also/actually under the control of the Orion women, that went too much against what other episodes and the episode itself had suggested.
I still think this idea was a brilliant twist.
How much did the other episodes really "suggest" though? Everything in The Cage/Menagerie was an illusion and even then there was the "no man can resist them" comment. We didn't see Marta interact with any Orion men. Some people pointed out that Kirk seems to be weirdly immobilized when he attacks her, which likely was just awkward staging and not deliberate, but it does fit with what was later established. Garth on a certain level does appear to be unaffected by her (which you could blame on his insanity; if his mind isn't working properly the pheromones may not have the same effect) but on the other hand you could blame his suddenly killing her on his being made more aggressive. There could be a give and take type thing where Orion women have to be careful not to get their men too riled up or jealous given the effect of their pheromones, but still use them to control them. See, all of this stuff could have been interesting, but the episode largely ignored stuff like that in favor of just being sexy.
It does? It struck me as the obvious twist, the first idea you'd have after saying ``we can't seriously do sex-slave women in 200-freaking-5, we need to twist the premise somehow''. I admit I'm not sure what would be a good twist; maybe revealing the twist way earlier in the episode so it can actually be about sexual politics.
The greenness always put me off. Right from when I first watched Wolf in the Fold I thought the greenness really de-sexualized them. Now BLUE.. that's a lot sexier colour.
I love the teaser -- the Vulcan version of Here Be Dragons. I don't mind the episode except that it should have featured a revolt by all the women plus Tucker. It felt lazy that every female got a headache.
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