MeTV said:The Enterprise must stop an ancient doomsday weapon that is capable of destroying entire worlds, and has already totaled one Constellation-class cruiser.
His muttered curse when he has to get back in the Jefferies tube is classic.Kirk: Scotty, can you set the ship's impulse engines to overload?
Scott: Aye, the shape that thing's in, it's hard to keep it from blowin'.
Watched this one with the enhanced effects, as the shots of the Constellation always seemed cheap to me.
Plus we get a great little bit of music that is rarely heard again!
MeTV said:When a landing party disappears and one man is beamed up dead, Kirk and Spock investigate and meet a pair of aliens who seem capable of performing magic.
The flaw in the aliens' perception of what they've learned about Earth is also reminiscent of "Squire"; an initial landing party that got into trouble and included Sulu is reminiscent of "Return of the Archons" and I think "Squire," IIRC; and Kirk taking advantage of an alien who's learning the sensations of being in the form of a human female by seizing the opportunity to play Bond is something we'll see again in "By Any Other Name."Overall, it's a bit of a mess of things we've seen before, it's got the weird aliens who manipulate matter and energy of The Squire combined with mistaking the subconscious for real of Shore Leave, the Enterprise stuck in orbit trying to break free of... well about 20 previous episodes
Spock said:Don't let her touch the wand, Captain.
It feels a bit padded to me; and good observation on the second point. It was hard to take these generic Halloween trappings seriously as things that were supposed to be truly and universally frightening. Are these things really part of the "twilight world of consciousness"? They seem pretty culture-specific. Kirk and crew wouldn't have knowledge of these specific symbols if they hadn't been exposed to them in their conscious lives. I could have sworn there was a contradictory beat in there somewhere in which Spock or McCoy questions whether these are things that really frighten humans...but if so, I missed it this time around.Kat Austen said:I didn't find it as slow and plodding as I remembered it, but I'd say the biggest mistake of this episode was trying to play it straight.
DeSalle is a good continuity nod, at least. I like the idea that there's at least one senior officer aboard that we don't usually see on the "day shift." And he gives us the "credits to navy beans" reference, a linchpin in arguments that they were using a form of currency in this period. (We also learn something of the Enterprise's pre-replicator manufacturing capabilities in this era.)The fact that Uhura wasn't left in charge of the Enterprise is made worse by DeSalle being extremely boring and bland.
An appropriate episode for his fright wig...a reminder that this is is the first episode of the season production-wise, and therefore Chekov's first filmed appearance.In the end, the only truly horrifying thing about this episode is Chekov's hair.![]()
And he gives us the "credits to navy beans" reference, a linchpin in arguments that they were using a form of currency in this period.
It's TOS. There's money. (I did just notice that in Generations Kirk says he sold his house.)People say "bet your ass" all the time, I doubt any one of them actually has a donkey.![]()
(I did just notice that in Generations Kirk says he sold his house.)
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