Out of the three BBC banned episodes I'd say I liked The Empath the most! Miri had one screening back in 1970 and I've always liked that one anyway!
JB
JB
I actually meant "Dr" Spock because Spock seemed to be acting like a medical doctor at the end of this episode. Is there no end to this man's talents?![]()
No, he is Super Spock. You really do get the feeling that if the need arose, he could replace Kirk in command, or Scotty in charge of engineering or McCoy in charge of Sickbay.I actually meant "Dr" Spock because Spock seemed to be acting like a medical doctor at the end of this episode. Is there no end to this man's talents?![]()
You really do get the feeling that if the need arose, he could replace Kirk in command
H&I said:On a planet doomed to destruction, Kirk, Spock & McCoy become involved with two aliens who use them as laboratory animals in a bizarre series of tests on an alien empath who may be the savior of her planet.
I'd say that's a fair assessment.but it feels like a half-hour concept stretched out to an hour and the premise doesn't hang together.
Yeah, that was very out of nowhere.Nobody even mentioned any civilizations in danger before, and now suddenly there's a bunch of them, but there can be only one?
Now that assumes that Kirk is somehow more responsible for the Vians' choice than the Vians are.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.![]()
There's no indication prior to the Vians' exposition that Starfleet or the Federation knew anything about these civilizations. Supporting this is how our heroes are completely unfamiliar with Gem's race. How there could be multiple civilization-bearing planets in the star system and they wouldn't know is a good question, and a massive hole in the story.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.
She feels their pain. That's empathy.like the titular Empath not even being an actual empath.![]()
She feels their pain. That's empathy.
Maybe Wolfman and Perez were just cribbing from Trek
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Even the second try at it is nonsense, because it would require more than a shared nervous system to repair damage at an accelerated rate in the subject. Oh, well.
I loved the line Kirk used to scold the Vians:
"You don't understand what it is to live. Love and compassion are dead in you. You're nothing but intellect." It was to the point and effective, and one of the more memorable lines from the series, at least for me.
At the end of the episode, it was interesting that Scotty told the story of the pearl, which is a parable from the Bible. Apparently, Scotty reads more than just tech journals. He was not up on Milton either, but he knew about that Bible passage.
Please tell me it's not Cash Markman's bogus "Star Trek was a secret hit" nonsense.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).
There's no new episode this week, the show will return next week when we can look forward to some Klingons using Romulan design ships.![]()
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