If you keep up with these Flash references, we're gonna have to start a drinking game.
If you keep up with these Flash references, we're gonna have to start a drinking game.
I want you to go think about what you've done.Are you implying there's an XS of them? I'd say it's quite the Reverse!![]()
I want you to go think about what you've done.
Voyager's Blink of an eye is a very different story. For one thing, we're talking about an evolving society while the scalosians seem to be set on their ways.
"The Empath", Episode 67, December 6th
Tonight's Episode: I sense there may be a Betazoid joke hidden somewhere in the title.
The Empath: There are a few episodes like this that while I don't revisit them often I know they're trying hard. And they make me wonder what a fourth or fifth season of Star Trek might have really looked like. I know somethings in season Three actually moved BACK to Roddenberry's ideas: A more formal, more "professional" atmosphere between the crew. Less humor. But the shows themselves sometimes pushed further from the original "Forbidden Planet" space opera that First season dove into. I wonder if that trend would have continued.
I'm sure it's not an original thought that if we had gotten more TOS we might not have gotten the movies, TNG, and all that followed. But TOS would not have been as crystallized as it ended up being since it was fairly containable.
What?I agree. It was about time that they take a hiatus. More TOS would have likely killed the franchise for good.
What?
TOS had barely enough episodes to go into syndication and syndication is what is claimed made Star Trek popular (although I've seen some evidence it was fairly popular at the time).
Another season and I can only see it being more popular in syndication.
The movies were bought (largely) about the success of Star Wars but also the success of TOS in syndication.
Speaking of reuse, the intro with Scotty in the command chair seems to be stock footage with his log entry overdubbed.
but it feels like a half-hour concept stretched out to an hour
Ugh.For that matter why wasn't Starfleet saving some civilizations? This was prior to the "let them all die" version of the TNG Prime Directive and they clearly had time to save some people since they set up a research station and had it working long enough for people there to get bored out of their minds, disappear and gather months of dust in their abandoned workplace.
I am speaking of the quality of the episodes, toward the end of season 3, it just wasn't there. I don't see how a fourth season would have made things better.
I guess I should have said pre-use, because the shot was from the very next episode. It seems The Empath was saving money even before it aired...
In production order they're five episodes apart, but in episode order they air back to back, and the same shot is in the intro sequence both times so I wonder if people at the time thought they were tuning in to a rerun.
Yep, the last 10 minutes somehow manage to be both a particular slog and a super vague infodump at the same time. Nobody even mentioned any civilizations in danger before, and now suddenly there's a bunch of them, but there can be only one? And I know we're supposed to root for Gem, but if she fails, that means another civilization gets saved, right? And we don't get any info on those suckers that Kirk basically screwed out of survival with a passionate speech.
For that matter why wasn't Starfleet saving some civilizations? This was prior to the "let them all die" version of the TNG Prime Directive and they clearly had time to save some people since they set up a research station and had it working long enough for people there to get bored out of their minds, disappear and gather months of dust in their abandoned workplace.
Those are the sort of questions I'd usually let slide if the episode wasn't dragging on for to long to let my mind wander about them, and to notice some super-obvious things like the titular Empath not even being an actual empath.
The Enterprise stuff also feels superfluous, Scotty gets to command again which is nice, but has an uneventful turn in the big chair, basically just outwaiting the storm. And the coda with waxing poetic about how fantastically great Gem is and gosh darn she's the best being ever is super weird.
I don't actually mind the episode that much as the above paragraphs suggest, it actually starts of rather good, there's a nice mystery there, I like the minimalist surreal sets, and it moves along quite decently but somewhere along the halfpoint it just slows down and disintegrates into underdeveloped cliches leaving a somewhat sour aftertaste.
By the way, what's the official canon reason that Kirk gets tortured shirtless but McCoy doesn't?![]()
Even the Vions are powerless to resist Kirk's manly chest and biceps.By the way, what's the official canon reason that Kirk gets tortured shirtless but McCoy doesn't?![]()
Gaaaaaaaaah! MISTER Spock!!!!!!!!!Dr Spock
Gaaaaaaaaah! MISTER Spock!!!!!!!!!
Sorry, I had a bad flashback. When I was a kid my mother had the habit (which used to really annoy me) of calling Mr. Spock Dr. Spock, probably due to the popularity of Dr. Benjamin Spock.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.