If you've seen The Menagerie, you've basically seen The Cage.
There are some surprising moments cut from "The Menagerie." Like when Spock tries to take the ship and bug out on Pike. But okay, if you've seen one version, you've seen them all.

If you've seen The Menagerie, you've basically seen The Cage.
Like when Spock tries to take the ship and bug out on Pike.
But okay, if you've seen one version, you've seen them all.
If you've seen The Menagerie, you've basically seen The Cage.
Internet is full of know-it-all dicks that look to create debate where none need exist. You don't have to be one. Post better, please. Thanks in advance.
I disagree. Yes, the basic story of The Cage is still there. There are some scenes that were cut for The Menagerie.If you've seen The Menagerie, you've basically seen The Cage.
The Cage framed by the current Enterprise scenes changes the basic flow.
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Nitpicing about the difference between 'The Menagerie' and 'The Cage' versions aside, as someone who started watching TOS during its initial broadcast, it was quite something to see Cage in its entirety almost twenty years later.
The footage of Pike and Vina at the end of "The Menagerie" had been used to tell a completely different story in "The Cage." Therefore, it's a case of seen one, not entirely seen the other.
It's interrupted by Kirk et al's scenes.How so?
It's interrupted by Kirk et al's scenes.
Mostly for the commercial breaks. You must have a word from the sponsors ($$$), after all. (I believe the Cage was originally shot with no commercial breaks. Please correct me if I'm wrong.) Once back from the commercial, we get a quick summary/update and/or voice-over to explain what we the audience has seen so far or are seeing now. I feel that this enhanced the Menagerie storyline (even at the expense of the Cage). YMMVIt's interrupted by Kirk et al's scenes.
I bought the pay-per-view premier on Oct 18, 1986. It was the hybrid color-b&w version, and having seen "The Menagerie" all my life, it was amazing. Just to see material I hadn't memorized like the Pledge of Allegiance was a big deal, but the restored scenes were a bigger deal than that. What a night.
Mostly for the commercial breaks. You must have a word from the sponsors ($$$), after all. (I believe the Cage was originally shot with no commercial breaks. Please correct me if I'm wrong.) Once back from the commercial, we get a quick summary/update and/or voice-over to explain what we the audience has seen so far or are seeing now. I feel that this enhanced the Menagerie storyline (even at the expense of the Cage). YMMV.
Here's something that will really cook your noodle.I was kind of waiting for someone to bring up this "difference". Hold on, hear me out.
The events in "The Cage" happen and at the end, Vina gets an illusory Pike, cool. All's well that ends well. Even the Talosians seem to let go the idea of breeding humans because of our psychology but in Vina's case, that should not be problematic at all.
Now at the end of "The Menagarie", Vina gets the real Pike after beaming down in his chair. A Pike now only too happy to be "an animal in a cage" given the extreme alternative of being a robot in a chair that the real world presents him.
(Even as a kid, I understood that "The Cage" ended with the same scene but with a totally fake Pike in both body and mind)
"The Menagerie" is absolutely brilliant. The conflict between reality and paradise. Pike's crisis between duty and freedom as a mirror to Kirk's crisis between duty and loyalty to Spock.
It really makes the Kirk era 2-parter so much stronger than the pilot imo. So much stronger that I can see no benefit that watching the pilot has against watching "The Menagerie".
What basic flow is interrupted? I can grant that the complexity of Vina's being given a fake Pike in body and mind is needed to augment Vina's being given a fake Pike in body but REAL in mind would make "The Cage" necessary in re-watches (and I do. I really do), but "The Menagerie" gives the fullest experience.
Heck, when I do re-watch "The Cage" I actually just feel "mentally itchy" for the Kirk 2-parter that fully deals with all these themes much more satisfactorily.
All of this jmo but yes, "The Cage" is basically summed up fully in the 2 parter and expanded upon much more superior. Essentially, if you have seen "The Menagerie" you have seen "The Cage" and you have been granted extra insights that the pilot did not/could not.
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