If they can make a human look like a Romulan or Klingon, I think making an Indian into a Anglo-Saxon should be a breeze.So you change the skin color in the process? Racial reassignment surgeries?
If they can make a human look like a Romulan or Klingon, I think making an Indian into a Anglo-Saxon should be a breeze.So you change the skin color in the process? Racial reassignment surgeries?
Fans don't like simple. They need boxes to tick and overly complex explanations. ( And then they complain about themBut why go that far? It's just silly. And, lest we forgot, Khan was basically white looking in TWOK.
But why go that far? It's just silly. And, lest we forgot, Khan was basically white looking in TWOK.
I don't think Montalban was that much of a method actor.People keep saying this. Take someone dark-complected and keep them out of the sun for fifteen years. I think they'll pale some.
or Khan having lighter complexion in TWOK than in "Space Seed."
Kor
IDW did a prequel comic that depicted Khan being physically changed from his TOS self into the form in which he appeared in ST:ID. IMO, it should have just been left a mystery. In the movie itself he made a vague hand-wavy statement about how the whole "John Harrison" persona was a smokescreen. No details were necessary, just like no details were ever necessary about the difference in Klingon appearance over the years, or Khan having lighter complexion in TWOK than in "Space Seed."
Kor
I think they were trying to play up the horrific aspect of Spock's brain being surgically removed while his body was left to die. The thieves didn't count on his incredible Vulcan physical strength to keep his body alive while brainless. Also, it having a remote-controlled Spock afforded Kirk those moments when he could display those pained expressions at seeing what had been done to his friend. I wonder, did the horrific aspect play out well in the sixties, or did it seem campy then too?In "Spock's Brain" (I know, I know), lose the idea that the brain has to be removed and replace it with Spock being abducted and hooked into the Eymorg compound controlling system so his brain could run it (I actually thought the description of what Spock's brain was doing was pretty clever).
This would eliminate the brain-restoration scene, as well as the preposterous remote-controlled Spock bit. This hardly saves the episode, but it's something.
Guess we may have to change the title while we're at it.
Why would he have taken that chance? When Kirk plays back Mirror Kirk's bio, it paints him as a pretty ill-tempered psychopath. Mirror Spock also knows that Mirror Kirk has a way of making his enemies disappear.I'm surprised that mirror Spock didn't immediately notice that the passive, subdued Kirk he beamed up wasn't the mirror Kirk.
![]()
Make it a two-parter episode: one change. I just elaborated on it a bit.That counts as one change?
Yes. That's what I meant.I think his point was the "off the shelf" 1966 spray bottle kind of blows the "centuries in the future" illusion.
With evil Rand as head of securityI would have made Mirror, Mirror a two-parter. The action happens too quickly and seems forced with too many "now, I gotcha" moments (Mirror Spock tries to foil the plan and is knocked out, Mirror Sulu comes in to finish the job and gets knocked out, McCoy stays to heal Mirror Spock but then Mirror Spock rapes McCoy's mind to find out where the others are, Moreau asks to go with and then pulls a weapon but Uhura quickly subdues her, Mirror Spock comes back again with mind-raped McCoy to add a little more suspense, Kirk takes the time to give his speech, and all's well that ends well). The episode needed more time to be developed into a really good story. A sub-plot of the Mirror crew on the Prime Enterprise temporarily taking over that ship might have added some different action and given us a chance to experience the Mirror versions of Kirk, McCoy, Uhura, and Scotty in more detail. Maybe have it end with Mirror Spock disregarding Kirk's advice about reforming the Empire as an interesting way of presenting a moral relativist argument. After all, why should the Terran Empire be exempt from the Prime Directive?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.