If that is true, I hope the fake vomit ate their brain.Maybe the trekkies stole them over the years![]()

If that is true, I hope the fake vomit ate their brain.Maybe the trekkies stole them over the years![]()
I loved this one as a kid. Chapel - the bio researcher - should have been given some more science dialogue though instead of just handing out slides for the less qualified old country doctor to examine.Yeah, it's impossible not to shout at the screen considering how many times McCoy says he's tried everything and the overlong scene of them all pondering "what does a star do" until Kirk notices a conveniently twinkling light...
As for the episode, a review could be summed up with: interesting premise, crappy execution.
Giant disassembled space brain is interesting in theory, but they don't really develop it in any way. It seems intelligent, yet no attempt to communicate with it was made. Its motivation is unclear, all we really know is it goes in a straight path(why, where are they going?) and destroys civilizations(why destroy them completely if the goal is to just move on?)
Kirk also speculates it came from another galaxy, which is based on absolutely nothing(how would it even get through the barrier if it did come from outside)
By the way, does the title "Operation -- Annihilate!" refer to space brain annihilating civilizations, or to Kirk's possibly facing the decision to annihilate the entire planet to eradicate the threat?
Kirk's family dying seems a wholly unnecessary thread, because that basically went nowhere. Kirk seemed more concerned about Spock's short-lived blindness(I guess Geordi's visor technology hadn't been invented yet?) than his brother dying, episode even ending on a jokey note...
The whole Spock going blind was contrived and pointless as well, as was the discussion on possibly having to destroy Deneva... essentially every point that the episode raises is given the barest minimum of lip service before it's forgotten or reversed and instead an inordinate amount of time is spent in figuring out it's the light that kills them.
In trying to do too much, having a monster of the week, an emotional core and a moral dilemma, it ends up not doing enough on any of those fronts...
(It's also worth noting that apparently they still use incandescent floodlamps and electrical conduit in the 23rd century.)
Chapel - the bio researcher
It seems to me that we get some moments through season 1 in which we are being asked to consider that McCoy might be a flawed or irresponsible doctor. The first moment was in Man Trap, where he's reminiscing pleasantly about the old days with Nancy, with a man on the table next to him, who's just died. In Court Martial, he's drinking in the middle of the day in Sickbay. Interesting.
SCOTT: Does it make a good mix with Scotch?
MCCOY: It should.
SCOTT: I'll let you know.
I don't know how the inclusion of Kirk's brother needed to go anywhere other than where it did. Kirk's brother died... that's where it goes. If they'd spent air time proving to us he's to be cared about, by developing the character, showing us he's a nice guy, having him play with the kids, work on a hobby... that takes time away from developing the alienness, mystery, and threat.
Kirk's realization that light was their weakness showed they had been taking a much more "dramatic" weakness for granted, and that's what people do, we assume what's benign for us is benign period.
I cannot imagine that happening. Except we ARE on TrekBBS, of course.Well, dodge, I just think you've massively exaggerated the size and importance of these flaws. You could end up demolishing all of Star Trek that way, bit by bit.
Well, dodge, I just think you've massively exaggerated the size and importance of these flaws. You could end up demolishing all of Star Trek that way, bit by bit.
I'm sad that I missed out on this re-watch.
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