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Spoilers Star Trek: The Old School Re-Exemanied

Do we know the reason he took his name off of the episode?

Mea culpa: I originally sourced Wikipedia for the Lee Cronin credit on Space Seed, however, IMDB has it as "Teleplay by Gene Coon." This also fit my recollection that Coon didn't start using the "Lee Cronin" until after he left the series midway second season I believe. Then it was for legal reasons because he was signed to It Takes A Thief as producer and technically was supposed to be exclusive.
 
Who cares how it looks at least he wouldn't be caught by surprise! Better yet, have his back to the other wall so not only is he facing the door he's guarding but he's got an extra second or two to react. :lol:
The guards always seem to have their backs to the door on TOS. When they're on the bridge I suppose they are looking for trouble on the bridge not from the lift.
Maye the guards are looking out for people trying to help Khan and wasn't the door supposed to be locked?
 
Yeah, there were a lot of strange positions on the part of security personnel in Star Trek. Paging Mr. Kyle in City on the Edge of Forever, which after Space Seed is the most egregious example. Hey, there's two ways off the ship; let's lock the door to one of them, post extra security, or at least not have the transporter chief so busy doing SOMETHING OR OTHER that he doesn't even look up when the doors open and close behind him. Duh! :ack::thumbdown:
 
Hey, there's two ways off the ship; let's lock the door to one of them, post extra security, or at least not have the transporter chief so busy doing SOMETHING OR OTHER that he doesn't even look up when the doors open and close behind him. Duh!
I assume the two ways off the ship is shuttlecraft and transporter. Lock the door means lock the shuttlebay doors. We see a indication that command from the bridge can override local controls for the shuttlebay doors in the Doomsday Machine when Sulu detects the doors opening then Spock orders him to close them, alas too late. So, why can't the transporter system be shutdown via command from the bridge? :shrug:

Back to your two examples, I don't think either episode portrays security procedures to prevent someone getting off the ship. McCoy is loose, running mad around the ship. Kirk didn't think he was coherent enough and desired to escape off the ship. Kirk ordered a search. Bad Kirk decision, not bad security execution. First, Kirk didn't order a shutdown of the transporters or guards to protect them. Kyle's inattention in the transporter room should not be held against him. In many other episodes, there are two people crewing the transporter, one officer/chief and one technician. Kyle was working alone at the time, so, the technician was probably lurking around in the area and Kyle was expecting it was him coming in to assist him.

For Khan, he had a layer of security around him, i.e. a locked door (they under estimated Khan's physical strength) and one security guard (got surprised - he was lax on duty with his back to the door and confident that Khan couldn't open it.) The guard seemed to be more concerned with someone breaking into Khan's room than Khan breaking out of it. Why only one guard? Again, bad Kirk decision; he under estimated Khan, a genetic "superman", even after McCoy's report of Khan's physical capabilities. Anyway, the security guard failed in his duty, and if Khan didn't kill him, he should be court-martialed. :thumbdown:
 
I have now completed the first season of The Original Series. All involved had every right to take pride in the job they had done as it was a truly magnificent body of work. Another thread is this forum asks "Does ST: Discovery affect how we look at The Original Series?" My answer was "Yes," but so does seeing these episodes at their original full runtime. Judging by quality alone it is hard to believe this series was not a smash hit in the general ratings.

"Operation: Annihilate!" (S1E29) was a solid episode. One part that always confused me was when Captain Kirk seemed to blame McCoy initially for Spock's blindness when they pressured McCoy into it. I never understood why they didn't wait for autopsy results before experimenting on Spock - 5 minutes wasn't going to make a difference.

The excellence of "City on the Edge of Forever" (S1 E28) still holds up (I don't care what Ellison had to say about it). Joan Collins was interviewed this past Sunday on CBS Sunday Morning. When the interviewer mentioned her part in this episode she chuckled derisively - I don't get why. It was a compelling story and the production value was very good.

The infamous "Alternative Factor" (S1E27) was a good enough episode. Maybe my least favorite of S1. Robert Brown did a good job all things considered. I think even if Barrymore had shown up on time and willing this episode would still have been mediocre. The problem was in the story. It was way too thin.
 
Was it not a case that tptb wanted action and scary aliens and fights to how star trek evovled
 
"The Menagerie, Parts I & II" (S1E11&12)
....A bit of questionable editing. Spock was unanimously found "guilty" just prior to final act of part II which means there was no reason to stay convened. Then they come back with Spock speaking as if he his still offering his explanation, why? For everything they know the court-martial is over and Spock should be in the brig, So what am I missing?

....Well... at the end of Part 1, Mendez said, "This court is in recess."
That meant that it was going to continue later.

Kor

Yes it reconvened and recessed a few more times after that and then came the scene Doc Mugatu mentioned, when Spock was voted guilty,and then the court martial continued like nothing happened which was what Doc Mugatu asked about.

I think that this thread might have the answer: https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/time-in-the-menagerie.299536/
 
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Joan Collins was interviewed this past Sunday on CBS Sunday Morning. When the interviewer mentioned her part in this episode she chuckled derisively - I don't get why. It was a compelling story and the production value was very good.

Collins has appeared in more than a hundred films and television shows going back seven decades. "The City on the Edge of Forever" was a week-long guest role she did relatively early in her career, yet she's asked about it constantly. That has to be tiring after a while.
 
Collins has appeared in more than a hundred films and television shows going back seven decades. "The City on the Edge of Forever" was a week-long guest role she did relatively early in her career, yet she's asked about it constantly. That has to be tiring after a while.
Quite.
 
Did she actually have a fling with the Shat at the time or is that bunk? :eek:
JB
Hey I thought it would have been mentioned on your fave toupee forums.
I read somewhere (probably here) that they were having an affair but Collins called it off when she spied him in his dressing room without his hair
 
My thought while watching The Savage Curtain: I liked Kirk's blond hair at the beginning of the series more than his brown hair at the end of the series.
 
"The Menagerie, Parts I & II" (S1E11&12)

Cannot help but appreciate how well "The Cage" elements looked. Very cinematic. Noticed Captain Pike also used the term "engage" when warping to their next destination. I wonder if Patrick Stewart saw "The Cage" and picked up on Jeffrey Hunter's word usage or was it just coincidence? I know opinions differ, however, I thought Majel Barrett was a fine choice to portray the original "Number One."

I've always felt that it was all part of the "rejected use" amalgam that became TNG - Captain PIKE-ard as a more cerebral character; His brash XO William T Ri-Kirk-Decker and his telepathic sexualized former flame Ilia Troi, unemotional but curious science officer Xon-Data, the saucer separation, etc.... or like what if Kirk was Pike's XO on TOS....
 
A great episode apart from the leering Spock asking Rand if she maybe actually enjoyed Evil Kirk's advances.
One of my Top 5
(The Enemy Within)

Little Girls grew on me over the years, very good show
"Mudds Women" is just a duffer all round

Could it have been a comment intending to highlight Spock's knowledge of her unrequited cruch on Kirk, and not the standard interpretation?
 
Whether Rand had an unrequited love for Kirk is irrelevant, Spock was being wholly inappropriate in his comments to her.
 
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