Does the daughter remind anyone else of Sally Field?
I never got what the episode was going for when Spock discovered that the Lawgivers' staffs were hollow tubes...I think a story point might have been lost somewhere.
Meanwhile, back on the Enterprise, they deliberately angled one shot so that we'd be seeing up Uhura's mini as she walked past the camera.
Ah, the first reference to the Prime Directive--they couldn't have known the can of worms that they'd be opening for future generations of Trek.
I always thought that was for a controlled release of their primal urges, that sort of thing...was there no explanation to that effect in the episode? I hadn't noticed.The Festival is just there, and then forgotten with no explanation of its purpose.
Yet this isn't the last time that the Enterprise will be following up on the fate of a ship that was lost that long ago, or at least decades ago in some cases. Space is big, and warp drives have improved somewhat since then. I've long pictured the era 100 years before Kirk as having been one in which spacefaring humanity's reach exceeded its grasp...probing far into the unknown with a few too many expeditions never returning. Starfleet waited until they had a better foothold in those regions of space to go out to some of these far-flung places again and follow up on the various lost expeditions.the Enterprise is searching for a ship that crashed 100 years ago. 100 years? That's a really slow response time to an emergency.
To clarify my own position on the episode...I don't think it's one of the best episodes, or a personal favorite. But on the broader level, I just think that it clicks as "this is Star Trek".And despite of all that, the episode somehow actually... works.
The atmosphere, the weirdness and the mystery do manage to sell it.
Or they were all drawing inspiration from another source.This episode was obviously an inspiration for The Purge film series(which I haven't seen, any good?), but another thing that I just realized is that Ladru was probably a partial inspiration for A.L.I.E. on The 100, with the computer that deletes free will to "save" people angle, though The 100 did it slightly differently (and better).
I've long pictured the era 100 years before Kirk as having been one in which spacefaring humanity's reach exceeded its grasp...probing far into the unknown with a few too many expeditions never returning. Starfleet waited until they had a better foothold in those regions of space to go out to some of these far-flung places again and follow up on the various lost expeditions.
There is a lot that seems to have gotten lost somewhere in this episode.
Like Sulu gets absorbed just with the pointing of the hollow tube, but the others need to be led to a special machine.
The Festival is just there, and then forgotten with no explanation of its purpose.
Landru controls everyone, but some are immune, but Landru somehow doesn't know that it doesn't control some people and who those people are?
Even the original motivation that got them there, the Enterprise is searching for a ship that crashed 100 years ago. 100 years? That's a really slow response time to an emergency.
And then they leave a planet full of people who haven't known free will for 6000 years and just hope everything will turn out all right with a small away team guiding them?
It's not a particularly well written episode overall, granted the first half is pretty great and weird and creepy but then it slows down into just repeating "What is Landru? Where is Landru? Take me to Landru!" for 20 minutes with basically nothing happening except the Enterprise falling down from orbit yet again.
The speech that kills the computer is also a bit incoherent, and then it boils down to "you're evil, kill yourself" with barely any proper arguments to support it or any attempt by the computer to defend its point.
Oh no, oh no, no.... It's great that they set up the situation, then leave it to soak in and have us connect the dots.
Festival is also a necessary safety valve for repressed emotion in general
It could have used some more time to be built up through more argument, because who's ever persuaded of anything so fast... but the argument we see is substantial. A Cliff Notes version of the perfect one they didn't have time for.
Is it? It might be harmful to individual components of the Body, as we perceive things...but the Body is the whole society, and from Landru's perspective, the Festival may be doing exactly what it intends.Also, the Festival is clearly harmful to "the Body"
Is it? It might be harmful to individual components of the Body, as we perceive things...but the Body is the whole society, and from Landru's perspective, the Festival may be doing exactly what it intends.
February 13 – American researchers discover the Madrid Codices by Leonardo da Vinci in the National Library of Spain.
February 15 – The Soviet Union announces that it has sent troops near the Chinese border.
February 18 – New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison claims he will solve the John F. Kennedy assassination, and that a conspiracy was planned in New Orleans.
MeTV said:The Enterprise picks up a crew of genetic supermen from the 20th century, and their leader, Khan, plans to create a new empire.
Is it? It might be harmful to individual components of the Body, as we perceive things...but the Body is the whole society, and from Landru's perspective, the Festival may be doing exactly what it intends.
The question is what Landru thinks of it. You can't impose our values on an alien computer.Mass rape and rioting ARE harmful to the Body, times twelve.
That seems to presume that Kirk even brought the Festival into his argument with Landru, which he didn't. I was specifically responding to @dodge , who brought up that point:They're truth-telling, not trying to appeal to him/it on its/his level.
Also, the Festival is clearly harmful to "the Body" which goes against the prime directive. But Kirk doesn't even bother mentioning it...
The question is what Landru thinks of it. You can't impose our values on an alien computer.
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