I take it Dagger is not well regarded?
Perhaps he intended to brainwash Kirk to forget what happened on Tantalus and send him back to the ship?
Unfortunately, I am forced to share in your theory; disturbing as it is.My theory of Dr. Adams is that he was perfectly content to be dictator on Tantalus. Small pond, but he was the absolute boss and would obviously have sexual access to the inmates he controlled. Not a bad little fiefdom.
The way I see it, while Adams may enjoy torturing Kirk in the chair, he will have no choice but to eventually kill Kirk and Noel; and then, try to explain their deaths as accidental - as I don't see how he can possibly allow either one to return to the ship and risk possible exposure.
Agreed; though Dr. Adams does try some reverse psychology as a ruse to get Van Gelder back - though McCoy immediately sees right through it - when he asks Kirk if the Enterprise will be passing-by a superior facility to that of Dr. Adams on Tantalus V while en-route to their next duty; so that Van Gelder can get "the best possible care." - How fitting that a Shrink should employ reverse-psychology as a tool in their crimes.... (Plus, as an interesting corollary, Adams never explicitly asked Kirk for Van Gelder to be returned - another loose end...
So Adams must have been assuming that he could kill two Starfleet officers, get away with it, AND get Van Gelder back.
I know that S1 episodes had far less of an integrated, sweeping version of Federation and Starfleet than either S2 or S3, but even in the somewhat looser, frontier-like atmosphere of S1..., I don't think Adams engineers all that without triggering a full investigation, and one by a force much larger than two, and thus harder for him to neutralize.
The more I think about it, the more I think Adams should have let Van Gelder go if he wanted to keep his whole production going. Kirk wasn't even disposed to investigate until maneuvered into it by McCoy.
I guess what you point to also serves the old adage that all criminals eventually make a mistake; and often, in underestimating the full capacities of - and impending fall-out brought on by - those they have wronged.
Yes, and I really liked how you describe the "somewhat looser, frontier-like atmosphere of S1" - my personal favorite feel for Star Trek stories.
Right on. I think what the writer was going for here is that Adams had enough sanity and rationality to seem competent and normal on the surface - particularly given his environment - but when unraveled, his long-term plans don't really make much sense. And that's not a failure of writing: it's a failure inherent to Adams.
Thanks! Yeah, that atmosphere - which I would say ends somewhere around "A Taste of Armageddon" - is definitely a huge point in early S1's favor. (As I've said before, "A Taste of Armageddon" is close to when the very long-by-today's-standards S1 starts to morph into S2.) "Conscience of the King" features it very well too. I am not a huge S1 adherent - not early S1 anyway - because Scotty, my favorite character, was not yet a regular and there are too many episodes without him, and because the Enterprise is not fully fleshed out yet, nor are the characters. However, Kirk and Shatner are absolutely outstanding in almost every moment of S1, and there's none of that heh-heh-heh in S2 (which, regardless of that flaw, is my favorite) that TPTB felt they had to incorporate.
On the contrary - I think it's very highly-regarded around these parts and in general by the series' fans. The Helen Noel character and many other aspects of the episode are almost universally praised, I would say.
Adams explained his motivation to Kirk In a scene that was left on the cutting room floor It's reconstructed in Lost Scenes.
Not much I can't completely agree with regarding your opinions in the ...snipped... sections of your post; with exception of the above.... James Gregory is too smarmy for me....
Adams explained his motivation to Kirk In a scene that was left on the cutting room floor It's reconstructed in Lost Scenes.
Keeping in mind that depending on his mental illness he may not be focusing fully ahead, I would imagine that he would attempt to sell his device as being a "miracle cure" for improving mental focus, agility and memory. Basically becoming a salesman that would allow him to take it off of Tantalus to demonstrate the superiority of his invention.Also agreed; however, once that goal has been achieved, where and how can Dr. Adams possibly take his plan for expanded control and his plug-in chair further than the limitations of the confines of the penal-colony itself?
Maybe. We don't know. Since in the Federation rehabilitation is the goal then Adams might have further reach than initially suspected. Again, multiple colonies who need his help. So he branches out, "helps" more people, expands his influence, gains fame and notoriety. Don't mistake "power and control" as merely political ambition. Control over people, any person, can be just as satisfying as political capital.That's why I am failing to see where and how Adams can possibly take things to a greater end-goal, given the limitations imposed by his situation and tools; which limits the amount of agency the Dr. Adams' character has.
I can certainly agree with that. Although as unprofessional as she is at times, she does rise to the occasion when she needs to crawl through the ventilation system and find the power supply, and doesn't shy away from killing in the line of duty (none of which was in her job description).My opinion of Helen Noel is very much in the minority. The actress is extremely appealing, but I can't say the same for the character.
hen she needs to crawl through the ventilation system and find the power supply,
<Chico Marx>You can't fool me! There ain't no sanity clause!</Chico Marx>So she crawled through the space chimney like Santa Claus?The analogy continues...
And yet it's a common enough trope to have a page on TVTropes.Perhaps Adams was just a stone cold sociopath.Difficult to say the least, as I believe that any mental health professional of his ‘rank’ would be required to be counselled themselves by a peer. . . .
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