Now can we stay on topic and talk about STC instead of meandering to non-relevant matters?
"Come Not Between The Dragons" - 3/5
Stardate 6257.4 - An alien seeking refuge aboard the Enterprise brings disruption amongst the crew in its wake.
My brain is a bit all over the place with this one. On the face of it this isn't bad...but then it isn't really stellar either. When you really look at it this feels like a collection of ideas from other episodes both TOS and post TOS.
Production wise this is rather impressive and it's not hard to believe TOS could have pulled off something almost exactly like this albeit with a bit more time and a wee bit more money. I really like the design of the alien Usti. What TOS mightn't have been able to do they could have worked around to achieve much the same end.
The energy waves causing the crew to basically lose any real measure of self-control in an increasing fog of suspicion, anger and resentment strikes me very much like the virus in "The Naked Time" where those infected lost inhibition and self-control. What bothered me with this is that Kirk and Spock's usual impressive self-discipline totally evaporates so quickly and rendering them essentially useless. To that end neither Kirk, Spock or McCoy or even Scotty is instrumental in resolving the problem at hand. They are completely sidelined so that solving the problem falls to the newcomer, McKennah, and the guest star of the week, Eliza (so to speak). That seems very much like a Mary Sue story to me and a very unlikely scenario to have found in TOS.
At the risk of touching a nerve here this is very much the women save the day here while the men can't control themselves. Seriously, does anyone here really believe this story would have been resolved this way in TOS? Imagine Shatner and Nimoy realizing Kirk and Spock do nothing of consequence in this story to resolve the problem... Uh, yeah... And Kirk is a bit too self-aware of his ability to giving a "rousing speech" here--it didn't ring true as something Shatner's Kirk would have ever said.
One could make the argument it was Uhura, Chapel and the women of the Enterprise who save the day in TAS' "The Lorelei Signal," but if STC isn't acknowledging TAS then they can't use that as a precedent.
To that end this once again this feels like a TNG story painted over as TOS. Maybe Mignogna and company should have really been doing the eighth year of the
1701D's voyage rather than the TOS
E's fifth year.
One other thing that peeves me in this episode is a reference at the beginning of the episode where we learn the
Lexington has been lost. This reference ties into an ongoing plot thread throughout the STC episodes suggesting there is something seriously wrong with a lot of the
Constitution-class starships and they're dropping off like flies one-by-one. In TOS loss of starships was easily attributed to some outside catastrophe rather than some inherent design defect. But it's not hard to see what STC is trying to do here because they are trying to tie into that reference in the novelization of TMP that the
Enterprise was the only starship to return from its deep space voyage. Once again they're trying to set the stage for TMP which TOS wouldn't and couldn't have ever done.
The subject matter of this story is essentially about domestic violence. It's a worthwhile subject to address, but I'm not so sure it's something TOS would have tackled back in the day, at least not so overtly.
Part of me feels I might be being overly harsh with this and maybe it deserves a higher rating like 4/5. There are parts of this I quite like and I want to really like it, but there are simply too many buzzers going off to keep me from thinking it's anything more than just okay.
End note: I quite like how they make the Enterprise look in STC. It is light years better than what CBS did in TOS-R. Also I cannot fault STC for their episode titles—they are very TOS like.