Tholian Web is great. Kirk floating around in interspace playing peeping Tom is cool!

I think it can be summed up in one word... humor. Season 3 didn't have nearly as humor intertwined in the dialogue like either of the previous seasons. It took itself TOO seriously.
At least, that's my theory.
If “brain, brain- what IS brain?!” Isn’t humor, I don’t know what is.
I realize it wasn’t supposed to be funny, although thats part of what makes it funny.
That myth was refuted by @Harvey a while back. Check it out here.It was my understanding, and I don't remember where I heard this, that "Spock's Brain" was written to be a comedy episode, but the director didn't get the memo on that... so, he shot it as a straight drama. Hence, the general horribleness...
If “brain, brain- what IS brain?!” Isn’t humor, I don’t know what is.
I realize it wasn’t supposed to be funny, although thats part of what makes it funny.
True, 1 out of 24 episodes (4%). As contrast, Season 2 had 7 of its 26 episodes (27%), and Season 1 had 10 of its 29 episodes (34%).The glaring obvious difference is that nothing is shot on location anymore. I think there are only episode that were actually filmed outside and everything else is on sets.
Also, Scotty's new hair-do and Kirk's growing sideburns.![]()
Even if Fred Freiberger and Arthur Singer loved the series, they were hired guns. They were guys hired to grind out episodes for the minimized budget and schedule.
"If you want something done right ..."
I agree that the show was darker and had less humor but I don't think S3 was overwhelmingly gloomy or humorless or anything.
I always thought the less humor in the third season was just because of the scripts. But now, after just re-watching the entire season and reading about the making of it, there's obviously more to it than that. Try to put yourself in the actors' (and producers') shoes during that third season, and figure what must've been going through their minds:
* Gene Roddenberry essentially checked out. Gene Coon and D.C. Fontana, both beloved, also gone.
* Bad timeslot
* A network that, if it didn't actively "hate" the show, was certainly doing nothing to keep it going
* A studio that had little regard for the show and was focused strictly on the bottom line
* New directors, some of whom weren't very good
* No idea (from anybody, really) that the show was ultimately destined for a cult following
* Science fiction TV shows in general still not taken very seriously
* Reduced budget, reduced shooting schedules, almost no on-location filming
With all that and more, is it any wonder there's an air of austerity to the third season episodes?
And VannaStill the third season has a lot going for it apart from that great Klingon ship and music!
JB
*("lovely" originally italicized not bolded)And when the writers start giving you material, or the producers start giving you material, that doesn't give you the opportunity to get your creative juices going, and you complain to him, and he tells you to just go out and do it -- "I know what I'm doing and this is going to work." Then you have a total impasse. Death sets in. That's death.
For example:
...when we were doing the script, maybe one of our worst ever, with the kids in the third season, "And the Children Shall Lead," I thought it was terrible--terrible...So I went to Fred Freiberger and said, "Well, we've got some problems with the script." He said, "This script going to be what 'Miri' should have been."
Well "Miri" was a lovely story, lovely* story, beautifully told and beautifully played. And we had all loved "Miri" as an episode. And he was saying that "Miri" was a piece of trash...There's no communication.
That's when death starts to set in.
You are correct:Just thought I'd point out that the exterior scenes of Kirk in "All Our Yesterdays" were indeed shot outdoors.
Correction: Season 3 had 2 out of 24 episodes (8%).True, 1 out of 24 episodes (4%). As contrast, Season 2 had 7 of its 26 episodes (27%), and Season 1 had 10 of its 29 episodes (34%).
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