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Appreciating the uniquely 1960s genres/tropes in TOS

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The only point in the episode that didn't make sense was that the Berserker came from outside the Milky Way and yet needed planets for fuel, now if it came from the Andromeda galaxy it would take millennia for it to reach us, so how did it survive that long journey without a source of energy?
There are several galaxies closer than Andromeda. The Canis Major Galaxy is a thousand times closer.
Why did you feel the need to add "civilized countries"?
Do you feel that all countries are civilized?
 
Countries who derive many aspects of their current culture from the same sources, and therefore have common references such as the Bible from which they take given names, metaphors, experiences, etc...
 
There are several galaxies closer than Andromeda. The Canis Major Galaxy is a thousand times closer.Do you feel that all countries are civilized?

Canis Major is a dwarf galaxy with less than a billion stars where as Andromeda is the closest spiral galaxy to us! For years I've read that Andromeda is the closest and now they're saying it isn't, so I'm guessing at another Mandela effect wave again!
JB
 
Re Doomsday Machine: Maybe all that time between galaxies is why the darned thing was so hungry!
But actually "it came from beyond the galaxy" is a trope used many times in Trek and other SF of the period, even (as in this case) where it's not necessary. It could have easily come from several thousand light years away and still be scary. I think writers really had a tough time dealing with the actual distances involved.
 
Was Chekov a Russian because of Sputnik or because of the cold war and they liked the idea of having one of them as a good guy? Which would make sense because it almost connects to having a Klingon as a good guy on "TNG" when they had been baddies up until then.

Jason
 
Was Chekov a Russian because of Sputnik or because of the cold war and they liked the idea of having one of them as a good guy?

I'm of the belief that Chekov was Russian because Roddenberry wanted to copy the success of The Man from UNCLE's Illya Kuryakin (David McCallum), who was immensely popular with young female viewers and was nicknamed "the Blond Beatle" because of it and because of his moptop haircut. The modern myth is that Star Trek did something groundbreaking by portraying a Russian as a good guy, but in fact, McCallum debuted as Illya three full years before Chekov showed up.
 
But actually "it came from beyond the galaxy" is a trope used many times in Trek and other SF of the period, even (as in this case) where it's not necessary. It could have easily come from several thousand light years away and still be scary. I think writers really had a tough time dealing with the actual distances involved.

Yes. And that problem hasn't entirely gone away. The movie Interstellar (2014) does the extra-galactic bit too. I suspect they didn't want to be seen as following too closely in the footsteps of Deep Space Nine and Contact.

But I will say, Interstellar is extremely good and worth your time. The whole thing's fx were done with physical models, and it looks fantastic. Amazing spacecraft work.
 
The movie Interstellar (2014)...The whole thing's fx were done with physical models, and it looks fantastic. Amazing spacecraft work.
Not the "whole thing". Nolan used models and practicals wherever possible but there's a megaton of CGI in the film, notably the black hole.
 
Canis Major is a dwarf galaxy with less than a billion stars where as Andromeda is the closest spiral galaxy to us!
Of the twenty odd galaxies closest to us, Andromeda is the first one you come to that's larger than our own.
 
Of the twenty odd galaxies closest to us, Andromeda is the first one you come to that's larger than our own.

Although we're no longer as sure of that, since some research has indicated that our galaxy may be larger than we thought. It's kinda hard to tell from the inside.
 
Not the "whole thing". Nolan used models and practicals wherever possible but there's a megaton of CGI in the film, notably the black hole.

Okay, I meant the spacecraft were physical models. That's remarkable for a big-budget film in 2014, and they looked amazing.
 
60s sci-fi seemed to have this fascination with telepaths or "espers", and that humanity has this unlocked hidden gene for telepathy/empathy. I love in Where No Man Has Gone Before where Spock and Dehner are like "Yeah, totally, humans can be psychics"
 
60s sci-fi seemed to have this fascination with telepaths or "espers", and that humanity has this unlocked hidden gene for telepathy/empathy. I love in Where No Man Has Gone Before where Spock and Dehner are like "Yeah, totally, humans can be psychics"
It was a real-life fascination too. At the time there had been scientific attempts to study such phenomena. If ESP had turned out to be real, and reliable, then there could have been interesting implications for Cold War espionage.

Kor
 
60s sci-fi seemed to have this fascination with telepaths or "espers", and that humanity has this unlocked hidden gene for telepathy/empathy.

The '50s too -- see for instance Alfred Bester's The Demolished Man, about a future society where telepathy has become common, or Arthur C. Clarke's Childhood's End, involving themes of rapid human mental evolution similar to "Where No Man Has Gone Before." As a rule, trends in film and TV science fiction tend to lag a decade or two behind prose SF.
 
^ Oh yes, I knew about Childhood's End but it slipped my mind. I was also thinking of the many, many Twilight Zone and Outer Limits episodes dealing with psychics, telepaths, and empaths.
 
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