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Star Trek TOS Re-Watch

It was an idea he played around with for years. I read that he actually came up with the idea for The Man From Earth in the early '60s, so that was before he wrote "Requiem."

Kor
Has anyone read (or heard of) the 1953 story "Whatever Happened to Corporal Cuckoo" by Gerald Kersh? It is similar to Bixby's idea of an immortal individual. However, unlike Flint the title character does not grow in sophistication as the centuries go on but instead remains an unsophisticated soldier.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whatever_Happened_to_Corporal_Cuckoo?
 
"The Way to Eden" by Arthur Heinemann, based on a story by Heinemann and D. C. Fontana (using the pen name "Michael Richards").

Enterprise is pursues the righteously liberated space cruiser Aurora. In trying to escape a tractor beam, the Aurora overloads its engines and its six passengers are beamed aboard the Enterprise. The group includes Irina Galliulin, Chekov's ex, and is led by Dr. Sevrin, a noted electronics, acoustics, and communications scientist. The group calls Kirk a "Herbert" (and I adore Spock's discomfort explaining the term), but Spock reaches and the group let him lead them to Sickbay for checking out. Sevrin says they are seeking the planet Eden, which Kirk says is a myth.

SPOCK: There are many who are uncomfortable with what we have created. It is almost a biological rebellion. A profound revulsion against the planned communities, the programming, the sterilised, artfully balanced atmospheres. They hunger for an Eden where spring comes.
KIRK: All do. The cave is deep in our memory.
SPOCK: Yes, that is true, Captain.
KIRK: But we don't steal space cruisers and act like irresponsible children. What makes you so sympathetic toward them?
SPOCK: It is not sympathy so much as curiosity, Captain. A wish to understand. They regard themselves as aliens in their own worlds, a condition with which I am somewhat familiar.

I have a soft spot for this episode. I have a lot of Hippie in me. Part of me very much longs for an Eden.

Pavel and Irina obviously parted in a bummer. Each says the other left.

Sevrin turns out to be a carrier for a nasty virus. "Our aseptic, sterilised civilisations produced it." However, he tells Spock that Eden will cleanse him. Spock concludes (I'm not sure how) that Sevrin in insane. Sevrin is in denial, definitely, totally RFK Jr. about his condition, but I didn't see nuts at this point. They quarantine Sevrin and Spock promises to help find Eden if he'll convince the rest of the group to behave. Various members of the group rap with young crewmembers, trying to get them on their side.

Irina visits Chekov and learns about Auxiliary Control. Adam, the musician, visits Spock and checks out his Vulcan lyre. He asks permission to put on a concert and also asks Spock to jam with them. During the music, one of the group frees Sevrin from quarantine. The group take over Auxiliary Control and take the ship to the planet Spock found. Then they disable the crew with an ultrasonic jam and liberate a shuttle.

Kirk manages to shut off the sonics and he, Spock, McCoy, and Chekov beam down. The planet is very beautiful. However, the plants are full of acid (and not the fun kind) and burn. They find Adam dead from eating a poisonous fruit. Sevrin and the others are in the shuttlecraft, all with burns on their feet. Kirk says they must leave, but Sevrin runs, bites into one of the fruits, and dies.

Back on the ship, Irina and Chekov say goodbye.

SPOCK: Miss Galliulin. It is my sincere wish that you do not give up your search for Eden. I have no doubt but that you will find it, or make it yourselves.

I feel sorry for the space hippies. It makes sense that some people would want a less technological life - that's how you get colonists. They did some bad things under Sevrin's influence, but they just wanted a place that felt good to them. Eden may have been a fantasy, but having idealism isn't a bad thing.

Shoutouts to Skip Homeier as Sevrin, Mary Linda Rapelye as Irina, and Charles Napier as Adam (who I am far more used to seeing as a cop or military man!). All gave good performances and Napier had a pleasant singing voice.

I know this ep isn't well liked and is often made fun of, but I felt like the writers were really trying to understand the younger generation and they made me feel sympathy. I wish I knew why the prop department went with an egg with an infinity symbol as their logo though! :)
 
"The Way to Eden," I like it. Hardly the bottom of the barrel.

Sevrin in sickbay and in the brig with Spock visiting, those are outstanding scenes for any episode.

The scene when they alter the circuits in auxiliary control while Adam sings "Headin' Out to Eden," it's beautiful, melancholy, and outstanding.

Very quotable episode, even for Herberts. Nice multilayered last line, "We reach, Mr. Spock."

Love it!
 
Has anyone read (or heard of) the 1953 story "Whatever Happened to Corporal Cuckoo" by Gerald Kersh? It is similar to Bixby's idea of an immortal individual. However, unlike Flint the title character does not grow in sophistication as the centuries go on but instead remains an unsophisticated soldier.
I read a number of Kersh's stories when I was younger, but not that one. Good to know there's someone else out there who has heard of him. He wrote interesting, offbeat short fiction.

"The Way to Eden," I like it. Hardly the bottom of the barrel.
Not the bottom, but close. YMMV, as they say.
 
And just how do you fake your own birth, anyway?
Identity theft. If Flint wanted to be seen as 30 when he was really 1000, he'd get documentation on a baby who died about 30 years ago and take that name. Then forge some papers to create his education and whatnot.

Historically, infant mortality rates were enormous for most of Flint's life. If he was a decent forger, the rest was a piece of cake.

Edit: I didn't read on after your question, and @Commander Troi had beaten me to it.
 
I always wanted to hear some sort of explanation for Flint's immortality. It's simply hand-waved away as "instant tissue regeneration coupled with some perfect form of biological renewal." For me, that puts the episode into the realm of fantasy rather than science fiction.
Flint: "In the late 20th century I had these special Metal Claws..." ;)
 
Maybe Flint's "tissue regeneration" included the ability to change his appearance. Or he was really good at disguises, like Sherlock Holmes. I believe there is at least one visual depiction of Da Vinci as an elderly man confirmed to be from his lifetime, and there are photographs of Brahms at different stages of his life. And they and Flint obviously don't all look like the same person. I'm not sure what the history is of the busts, paintings mosaics etc. of Alexander the Great. It seems that Alexander's biography would be hard to fake. But the surviving written sources about Alexander are from after his lifetime, aren't they? So who knows?

Kor
 
"THE THOLIAN WEB" is one of my favorites of all of TOS. Great episode!

And the Tholians were truly alien. Even their choice of weaponry was unique. (And makes sense, given their multi-legged, somewhat spiderlike appearance.) That is a species I'd love to see more of.

Absolute classic episode that is well above a fair amount of season 1's entries (2, too).

But they had to wear space suits, beam over, then Kirk exclaims how the mutineers are still aboard. But wouldn't they be dead when the episode's opening doesn't go into details about why they're wearing spacesuits? (There's enough inference to suggest environmental trouble as to why they put them on, but none of them remove their encumbrances after Kirk orders Spock to use internal sensors to find them. Plus enough circumstantial evidence to suggest that the mutineers might have donned similar suits.)

That's enough nitpicking from me now :D. The Tholians are supreme in design; just a tad of a head, leading to the expanded media citing them as arachnid-like.

Most of Chekov's ADR screaming works, but the one moment where Chekov's mouth is in full view and it doesn't change shape to match the "AAaaaaAaaAAAWWWawwwawawaw!" is way too telling. A shame as the fisheye lens is used to great effect.

The setup and followthrough of the mystery are so nicely done. Plus, Scotty poking a jibe over the Klingon gas when he'd be the only other person to understand how quantity of a substance can make all the difference -- but his field is engineering, not medical, and the scene simply works as it stands.

The incidental music is sparse, and definitely needs no enhancing. The use of the dialogue and suspense of the situation easily keep the audience glued in if they're tuned in.

The visual effects are sublime (I can't watch the CGI for this one and for TOS I generally watch with CGI for about 75 of the episodes, the original f/x just nail it perfectly.)

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:luvlove: :luvlove: :luvlove: :luvlove: :luvlove:
 
Absolute classic episode that is well above a fair amount of season 1's entries (2, too).

But they had to wear space suits, beam over, then Kirk exclaims how the mutineers are still aboard. But wouldn't they be dead when the episode's opening doesn't go into details about why they're wearing spacesuits? (There's enough inference to suggest environmental trouble as to why they put them on, but none of them remove their encumbrances after Kirk orders Spock to use internal sensors to find them. Plus enough circumstantial evidence to suggest that the mutineers might have donned similar suits.)

That's enough nitpicking from me now :D. The Tholians are supreme in design; just a tad of a head, leading to the expanded media citing them as arachnid-like.

Most of Chekov's ADR screaming works, but the one moment where Chekov's mouth is in full view and it doesn't change shape to match the "AAaaaaAaaAAAWWWawwwawawaw!" is way too telling. A shame as the fisheye lens is used to great effect.

The setup and followthrough of the mystery are so nicely done. Plus, Scotty poking a jibe over the Klingon gas when he'd be the only other person to understand how quantity of a substance can make all the difference -- but his field is engineering, not medical, and the scene simply works as it stands.

The incidental music is sparse, and definitely needs no enhancing. The use of the dialogue and suspense of the situation easily keep the audience glued in if they're tuned in.

The visual effects are sublime (I can't watch the CGI for this one and for TOS I generally watch with CGI for about 75 of the episodes, the original f/x just nail it perfectly.)

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:luvlove: :luvlove: :luvlove: :luvlove: :luvlove:
do you think the guys at id software were inspired by the Loskene scene when they came up with the "fireblu" texture?
 
Interesting premise RE: Flint

Hate the rest of it though. in all previous episodes, a woman has never had Kirk smitten to the point where his 'love' for the USS Enterprise doesn't snap him out of it.

What is it that finally incapacitates Kirk to the point Spock has to do a Mind Meld and mess with Kirk's memory to fix Kirk?

A high end Sex Doll. :rofl::barf:
My headcanon is that Flint altered Kirk's emotions to make Kirk fall in love with Rayna as part of his teaching Rayna about love.
 
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