I've considered that Flint IS a Highlander Immortal. He fled Earth to escape the Gathering.I tend to go with the Highlander explanation - he took over identities from babies who died.
I've considered that Flint IS a Highlander Immortal. He fled Earth to escape the Gathering.I tend to go with the Highlander explanation - he took over identities from babies who died.
I have long assumed Flint manipulated/influenced Kirk in some unseen way to make him behave so uncharacteristically stupid.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.
I just assumed that Kirk was coming down with the plague that was burning through the Enterprise and thus wasn't thinking straightMy headcanon is that Flint altered Kirk's emotions to make Kirk fall in love with Rayna as part of his teaching Rayna about love.
That could work. And it would have taken was one line of dialogue to establish that.I just assumed that Kirk was coming down with the plague that was burning through the Enterprise and thus wasn't thinking straight![]()
That could work. And it would have taken was one line of dialogue to establish that.
True enough. But at least it’s a bare bones rationalization. The real problem with some of these third season episodes is the lack of a decent final rewrite or edit to fix obvious flaws.That would be worse, IMHO. Because now not only is he futzing around while his crew is dying but now he doesn't even care that HE'S dying. And more to the point Spock and McCoy wouldn't seem very interested either!
Sorry, I didn't state my position clearly; I think the entire landing party has the plague! But they are the Enterprise's last hope, so options are limitedThat would be worse, IMHO. Because now not only is he futzing around while his crew is dying but now he doesn't even care that HE'S dying. And more to the point Spock and McCoy wouldn't seem very interested either!
I remember Kirk being quite stupid in this one too. But upon rewatching it, I don't think it was that bad. Kirk flirts with Rayna during the waiting time for the cure to be refined and developed. There's no much else he could do until then, but the rest of the time he seems focused on the illness. It's worse at the end, when McCoy already has the cure and yet he doesn't beam up immediately.I have long assumed Flint manipulated/influenced Kirk in some unseen way to make him behave so uncharacteristically stupid.
This is a little bit like saying John Robinson and Don West should "Just kill Smith." At least, I've seen somebody say that. And they can't, if you put yourself in their place.Here is one and it’s an episode I really like, “Where No Man Has Gone Before.” When Dehner temporarily weakens Mitchell it has already been established Kirk has to kill Mitchell to stop him. But instead of using the phaser rifle he brought along for that very reason Kirk opts to fist-fight with Mitchell. Was he thinking he could beat Mitchell into submission? At one point he is about to pummel Mitchell’s head with a a boulder until Mitchell stops him.
It was dumb on Kirk’s part. It would have been far smarter, and cleaner, for Kirk to kill Mitchell with the phaser rifle when he had the chance. But just maybe Kirk hadn’t yet reached that desperation point yet to really do what had to be done? That works as a rationalization in an otherwise very good episode on so many levels. But, of course, a western style fist fight is more familiarly dramatic than vaporizing someone with a raygun.
This is a little bit like saying John Robinson and Don West should "Just kill Smith." At least, I've seen somebody say that. And they can't, if you put yourself in their place.
If Kirk reports back to Headquarters that he shot Mitchell dead the moment Mitchell was rendered helpless, there would be some questions. There just aren't any precedents for this situation, where a bad guy is unarmed and powerless, but you absolutely must kill him anyway.
It's asking Kirk not only to have moral certainty in the midst of a crisis, which he kind of does, having now adopted Spock's opinion, but also to take a human life cold, with no running start. So when Mitchell is momentary powerless and Kirk starts beating him up, you can ask "What's the plan?"— but there is no plan, because Kirk is caught between knowing Mitchell has to die and not being an ice-cold trigger man on his best friend.
This is not my recollection.It happens again in “Turnabout Intruder.” This time Kirk is behaving irrationally and obviously out of character (due to Janice Lester’s consciousness swap) in such a way that both Spock and McCoy should have noted it immediately, but don’t until Kirk (stuck in Lester’s body) brings the issue to the fore.
Yeah, McCoy at least was highly suspicious and requested a full medical exam on Kirk. When the brain-waves turned out to be identical to those of "real Kirk", McCoy had to accept (begrudgingly) that he was the same man.This is not my recollection.
And I call bullshit on this, story wise. McCoy has shown enough times not trusting technology that he had to know something was still wrong. There is absolutely no way Lester/Kirk could have passed this examination.Yeah, McCoy at least was highly suspicious and requested a full medical exam on Kirk. When the brain-waves turned out to be identical to those of "real Kirk", McCoy had to accept (begrudgingly) that he was the same man.
Not the hardest thing to fix either. Gary could be so far gone at this point that even though his eyes aren't silver, "normal" Gary isn't really there. So instead of Kirk going directly to the punches, he turns to run toward the rifle, but Gary grabs him. Now it's a fight as Gary tries to preserve his own life until his strength returns. Since Gary is actually fighting back pretty hard and not saying "Jim wait, it's me!" or "Do it!" this could actually work.Here is one and it’s an episode I really like, “Where No Man Has Gone Before.” When Dehner temporarily weakens Mitchell it has already been established Kirk has to kill Mitchell to stop him. But instead of using the phaser rifle he brought along for that very reason Kirk opts to fist-fight with Mitchell. Was he thinking he could beat Mitchell into submission? At one point he is about to pummel Mitchell’s head with a a boulder until Mitchell stops him.
It was dumb on Kirk’s part. It would have been far smarter, and cleaner, for Kirk to kill Mitchell with the phaser rifle when he had the chance. But just maybe Kirk hadn’t yet reached that desperation point yet to really do what had to be done? That works as a rationalization in an otherwise very good episode on so many levels. But, of course, a western style fist fight is more familiarly dramatic than vaporizing someone with a raygun.
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