I've always had a soft spot for
Spock's Brain. The news of it being the "worst Star Trek episode ever" reached me way before I got to see it so when I finally did I guess I was in the right mindset to find the bad bits
entertainingly bad, and notice a couple of good ones too.
The B-movie opening of Bones explaining his brain was missing is wonderfully shlocky... there's a line there that "humans can survive indefinitely without a brain" which makes me regret Spock wasn't awake for that to retort to.
It's followed by a nice sequence on the bridge where they try to figure out where his brain was taken with people walking around the bridge and pointing things at the main viewer and everyone chiming in with their thoughts which was probably done to stall for time since the plot was rather thin but was still a welcome crew-working-together moment.
There's some nice bits on the surface too, Chekov's betraying his Russian winter roots with describing the planet's icy conditions as "livable," Kirk does his best Han Solo impression and shots Luma first before she has a chance to go for the bracelet, and I find Scotty's fainting moment pretty funny.
Robospock is an extremely silly way to give Spock some screentime, but I guess people would have been very disappointed had he spent the entire episode that has his name in the title off screen.
I am surprised and a bit disappointed that his disembodied brain didn't start betting quatloos on Morg fights though.
There's a lot of padding for time here and exploring the Morg/Eymorg schism could have compensated for that, but considering the bits of their backstory we do get are mildly sexist it's probably for the best they didn't go into more details there...
Overall, not bad. I wouldn't go so far as
good, but nowhere near the worst ever.
