If it's past references you're looking for, By Any Other Name contained a brief reference to A Taste of Armageddon.
It also refers, obliquely, to "Where No Man Has Gone Before." Also, "I Mudd" is obviously a sequel to "Mudd's Women."
If it's past references you're looking for, By Any Other Name contained a brief reference to A Taste of Armageddon.
I totally agree Retrograde. Having this as the last episode felt like a stab in my back and left a bad taste in my mouth for years. I felt the same way years later after reading some of Ray Bradbury's comments about women, after having loved his stuff practically my whole life.I hated Turnabout Intruder. It would have been horrible anywhere in the series, and to use it at the end was just a betrayal. There was an awful lot of tension/ambiguity about women in Star Trek; for this episode to have the last word... it still makes me furious. Luckily it doesn't really seem like a finale, as has been pointed out.
Thanks for sharing the You Tube clip. Lots of belly laughs, but also lots of spot-on observations. Please tell me this guy has one of these up for every episode?
Did they know this was going to be the last episode when it was being written/shot?
A "turnabout" was a fairly well-known science fiction trope at the time, following a 1931 novel of the same name (ie. two characters experience a "body swap") and there have been many, many remakes of that trope, eg. "Freaky Friday", "Vice Versa", "18 Again", and so on. (Thorne Smith's comedic novel, in which a husband and wife switch bodies, was also a movie - and later inspired a short-lived TV series that starred Sharon Gless and John Schuck.)What does "Turnabout Intruder" reference? It's an odd title and I don't get it's meaning.
No one could have predicted that "Turnabout Intruder" would be pre-empted, either. It didn't end up being shown the week after "All Our Yesterdays", as planned. News coverage of the death of former president Dwight D. Eisenhower replaced it, and it didn't air until the final batch of scheduled Season Three reruns.They should have ended the series with "All Our Yesterdays", which I also saw last night and thought to be far superior.
If it's past references you're looking for, By Any Other Name contained a brief reference to A Taste of Armageddon.
KIRK: What happened to your ship?
ROJAN: There is an energy barrier at the rim of your galaxy.
KIRK: Yes, I know. We've been there.
If it's past references you're looking for, By Any Other Name contained a brief reference to A Taste of Armageddon.
Wasn't there also a reference to Where No Man Has Gone Before in By Any Other Name?
I seem to remember Rojan mentioning the energy barrier at the edge of the galaxy and Kirk saying, "we've been there before".
This actual makes sense if you think about it. Janice isn't pretending to be Kirk, she pretending to be the person she thinks Kirk is. I figure what happen between Kirk and Janice is basically the same as what happen between Riker and Troi. Riker made the decision to put his career ahead of his relationship with Troi.Lester does such a pitifully poor job of concealing her real identity when she's in Kirk's body
If it's past references you're looking for, By Any Other Name contained a brief reference to A Taste of Armageddon.
Wasn't there also a reference to Where No Man Has Gone Before in By Any Other Name?
If it's past references you're looking for, By Any Other Name contained a brief reference to A Taste of Armageddon.
It also refers, obliquely, to "Where No Man Has Gone Before." Also, "I Mudd" is obviously a sequel to "Mudd's Women."
I seem to remember Rojan mentioning the energy barrier at the edge of the galaxy and Kirk saying, "we've been there before".
The actors became aware of Star Trek's cancellation during the filming of the episode and that it would be the last episode. Shatner had already been told that HE would be directing the last episode, and it really pissed him off that it wasn't. "
And there was a lot of beauty on display too. I still think Janice Lester was the best looking guest woman the series has ever had, and Nurse Chapel has never looked better than she did as a brunette here.
It is the first episode of TOS I can recall referencing any past adventures (The Menagerie excepted, as The Cage hadn't aired at the time). As well as Spock, Sulu and Chekov make reference to the General order from The Menagerie that allows a death penalty. All the referencing really stood out.
Chekov did misremember the General Order though. he called it number four and in The Menagerie, Kirk calls it number seven.
If it's past references you're looking for, By Any Other Name contained a brief reference to A Taste of Armageddon.
So wait, he was angry because he had to direct it, or that it wasn't he last?
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.