Inside Star Trek p. 139 said:HERB: ...(Several years later, the Writer's Guild ruled that scriptwriters must be given the opportunity to do their own first rewrite and, if they chose not to do so, specifically forbare producers from rewriting a script without first consulting the writer.)
"City on the Edge" is not just a great Star Trek episode. It is one of the great pieces of television ever produced. Very few scripts ever written, shot, and broadcast have achieved so deep an introspective of three main characters simultaneously.
And think about it. It achieves this brilliance as both a sci-fi script and as a plot with perhaps the least special FX of any Trek show, or perhaps no more FX than a Twilight Zone episode. For a great deal of the show it's two guys in plaid and blue jeans sharing an apartment together. This is the same series where a doomsday weapon consumes inhabited planets, where a galactic food storehouse is overrun by millions of fuzzy blobs, where aliens with an attitude trap starships in spider webs made of Buckyball spheres. And what's the climactic scene of this episode? It happens when a guy is taking his girlfriend to a movie.
All of the great consequences which we are faced with in this script, are things that the actors and the dialogue lead us to believe in our minds. And they do this without tricks, and while exposing the bare naked humanity (sorry, Spock) of the three main characters.
I happen to believe this script could not have been as great as it was had either Harlan Ellison or Gene Roddenberry conceived and produced it on his own. Rather, it was the culmination of a dichotomy: Ellison's rather extreme human commentary brought to Earth by Roddenberry's practical nature and understanding of identifiable human characters.
DF "Stone Knives and Bearskins" Scott
QFT^^^Not at all. Come on, Todd, even though you may reasonably not like Ellison's original, it was in no way, form or fashion as clumsy and ill-thought out as the aired version of "Spock's Brain."
Sir Rhosis
And it bears repeating that not everyone thinks that all the changes made were an improvement. It's also worth remembering that we have never seen the last draft Ellison turned in, so it's impossible to judge how far "off" it was at that point.
Clearly Kirk and Spock took the time to change out of their stolen clothes and back into their uniforms.![]()
Or, after Kirk and Spock successfully changed the timeline back to its “normal” course, the Guardian could have simply snatched them up and magically changed their clothes. Hey, if it worked in The Time Tunnel . . .. . . I suppose we are supposed to think that after Keeler's death, Kirk and Spock returned to that basement and changed their clothes and then returned to the street corner in front of a door with a now infamous boxing poster; where they were able to run back through the Guardian.
^^^Gateway?
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