Yes, it was. When they took the unused portion of that great overhead-bridge shot and inserted it into The Lights of Zetar two years later, I remember thinking, "Whaaat? They can't steal director Robert Gist's work like that ..."Side note: The Galileo Seven was one of the most beautifully filmed episodes.![]()
Yes, it was. When they took the unused portion of that great overhead-bridge shot and inserted it into The Lights of Zetar two years later, I remember thinking, "Whaaat? They can't steal director Robert Gist's work like that ..."
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Wish that Gist had returned to helm more episodes.
I wish the same could be said for the: "Sulu seated at the Helm, looking back over his shoulder at the Captain" shot <--- They OVERUSED that one.I'm pretty sure the clapboard for this overhead shot would have had "Stock" written on it. It was made with the intention of re-using it. But then (I'd say) it was so striking and memorable that they didn't feel right putting it into episodes much.
This is what I have always interpreted McCoy to mean.I presume that while Spock has most certainly been in the position of command before (going all the way back to The Cage after all!), this is the first time that he's been isolated from the usual command structure of the ship with only a small number of crew and cut off from all the usual resources, in a desperate survival situation.
I could be wrong![]()
Same here for years but then if you use that criteria then there would be very few times anyone in Starfleet could get command experience. I mean Spock was in charge of the Enterprise so many times when Kirk had disappeared or captured. Kirk was off the ship for 3 months - so that wouldn't be regarded as command experience for Spock because he still had his regular officers? I mean in Galileo he still had McCoy and Scotty so that probably shouldn't count either.This is what I have always interpreted McCoy to mean.
If McCoy hadn't made that remark and someone asked me what was Spock's first command. I would say that time the Talosians kidnapped Pike and Number One. Not the Galileo 7. Or maybe when Trelane kidnapped Kirk or when Kirk was split in two. Just off the top of my head here.
Now that I think about it, was McCoy at Spock's trial in Menagerie? He may simply not have known better.
Amazing the knots people will twist themselves into to say that Spock's first command wasn't his first command.
But one Yeoman Third Class, and all of a sudden, the Enterprise has a full complement of enlisted crewmen...![]()
^^^There are FOUR lights!
^^^
You're about 100 years too early for that reference...![]()
But... Books aren't Canon. /em ducksConsidering it was ripped off from 1984, I think it's timely...![]()
I presume that while Spock has most certainly been in the position of command before (going all the way back to The Cage after all!), this is the first time that he's been isolated from the usual command structure of the ship with only a small number of crew and cut off from all the usual resources, in a desperate survival situation.
I could be wrong![]()
Is there a difference between temporarily becoming the "acting captain" when Pike or Kirk is away and obtaining "first command"?
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