Like the film, aka "Grumpy Old Men In Space"Khan was very 2 dimensional.
Like the film, aka "Grumpy Old Men In Space"Khan was very 2 dimensional.
After disposing of all laws of physics and Trek canon.We tend to think of Khan as a legendary villain now, but I believe that came from TWOK and not from "Space Seed." By the time of TWOK, Montalban was indeed a pretty well-known and well-respected actor, but not because of Khan. As I recall, Harve Bennett had the original idea to use Khan and came to it simply from his watching of the 79 TOS episodes and feeling like Khan was a good character but also that the episode ended with Kirk wondering what would happen to them in the years down the road and Bennett thought that was a good springboard for the movie.
Kirk continued to hunt the Horta with the intention of killing it even after he knew that it was intelligent - and pretty certainly native to the planetoid where the miners were interlopers.It depends on their intelligence.
Anyone who knew The Original Series, knew its enlightened premise of peaceful resolution of conflict rather than narcissism of defeating evil aliens, as when Kirk saved the Hortas from being murdered by humans...
Her mother's maiden name. Were she and Janet cousins?
I was 9 years old, so I didn’t even know who Khan was. But even at 9, and never having seen Space Seed, I could completely understand what was going on with just the tiny bit of backstory the movie provided.
Not at all. The power to create illusions was their weakness, and the Talosians wanted to avoid others falling prey to it by learning the same.Meh, Star Trek disposed of the laws of physics in the first five minutes of "The Cage."
Kirk continued to hunt the Horta with the intention of killing it even after he knew that it was intelligent - and pretty certainly native to the planetoid where the miners were interlopers.
It's nice that he had a personal change of heart, but the mission Starfleet sent him on was one of sheer colonialism: Get ore production back up to speed by any means necessary.
Not at all. The power to create illusions was their weakness, and the Talosians wanted to avoid others falling prey to it by learning the same.
They thought it was hunting humans, not that it was a mother defending her children.
This was an unprecedented shift in science fiction.
I'm sorry???I have a solution for how Kirk is not the worst asshole and women, all of them, can eat crow for shouting that nugget from the roof tops.
I'm sorry???
Seventy?Any man who has more than 70 lovers per year for their entire adult life may not be a genuine or sincere person at heart, so it is the highest duty of every good natured soul to warn their friends and colleagues about wheresoever such a fickle emotional predator looms, waiting to pounce.
Seventy?
It also makes Jesus cry.FTL travel violates the laws of physics.
Who do you think God sends to clean up the mess?It also makes Jesus cry.
This was an unprecedented shift in science fiction.
Exactly not enough.Nothing of the kind. How much sf of the 50s and 60s have you actually read?
Checkoff was not in the Space Seed.
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