And would have been a much more fitting end for the series than Turnabout Intruder was.
There's no mention of Atoz preparing Kirk in the script and I think this is an error of omission. This scene, and the ones supporting it, were in the first draft and didn't change much throughout the revisions. However, as initially conceived, the Atavachron didn't "prepare" anyone for time travel -- it was simply a time travel device that could open two-way doors. The preparation feature of the machine wasn't added until the final draft and, IMHO, they forgot to update the scene and show Atoz preparing Kirk.
Towards the end of an initial first draft, after the real Atoz accidentally dies via electrocution, Zarabeth asks Kirk why he (Atoz) did irrational things because "he was a good man -- and a wise man." Kirk responds that he thinks it was because Atoz was no longer sane, and Zarabeth replies to him, looking at Atoz: "He'd been alone too long."One of the most interesting things to me about AOY - which for my money is a top 20 entry at least complete with one of the best titles in Star Trek - is that Atoz doesn't seem to realize that KSM don't belong on Sarpeidon at all, let alone in its past. Necessary to heighten the mystery and further the plot, but somewhat odd for someone who is so otherwise fastidious.
Spock reverts to his primitive self from 5000 years earlier but McCoy stays exactly exactly the same. The phaser doesn't work because they're in the past but the medical scanner works no problem. The entire episode is pretty much the first example of fanfiction. Written by a woman who finds a technicality so that Spock can be a passionate character and literally have his hands around the throat of anybody who might get between him and his woman.
But Spock hasn't been prepared so why does he revert to his time appropriate ancient Vulcan self?
Wasn't it also the M5 and Gary Seven's PC?The Atavachron was one of the coolest Trek computers.
Wasn't it also the M5 and Gary Seven's PC?
No, it's Spock in the original outlines and in all of the script drafts.Wasn't Sulu supposed to be in the Spock role originally?
I think so, too.The 'prepare' thing was just a device to make sure they couldn't bring Zarabeth back.
Trek trivia: Zor Kahn the Tyrant doesn't appear until the first draft. Prior to that, in the revised story outline, Zarabeth's last name was... zor Kahn.Zor Khan was a despot from a previous time period of Sarpeidon as Spock remembered reading about him in the library but I doubt he was in control of the population just before the coming Beta Niobe apocalypse!
JB
From the initial story outline:2. It always bugged me that the Atavachron didn't have more security. I mean, we know a ruthless dictator was in charge of it at one point.
Inside the library, Kirk and the magistrate are battling with Mr. Atoz, who still seems to be everywhere at once. Mr. Atoz is not only the attendant of the machine but its self-defense mechanism, created and recreated by the machine continuously from moment to moment. No sooner is Mr. Atoz knocked down or locked up than he reappears in another place to prevent any tampering with the machine.
Spock reverts to his primitive self from 5000 years earlier but McCoy stays exactly exactly the same. The phaser doesn't work because they're in the past but the medical scanner works no problem. The entire episode is pretty much the first example of fanfiction. Written by a woman who finds a technicality so that Spock can be a passionate character and literally have his hands around the throat of anybody who might get between him and his woman.
But Spock hasn't been prepared so why does he revert to his time appropriate ancient Vulcan self?
Spock doesn't "revert to his primitive self". He becomes emotionally akin to the Vulcans that existed at that ancient time. This is pre-Surak so they don't have the mental logical carapace. Given that the Vulcan mind-community extends countless light years into space (viz. The Immunity Syndrome), it is not inconceivable that Spock ends up on the primitive bandwagon.
Humans 5,000 years ago are essentially humans now. And McCoy is already emotional, as Spock delights in pointing out.
As for why the phaser doesn't work, all we know is that it doesn't. It might have been the cold (and before "Enemy Within" is brought up, Sulu et. al. only use the campfire setting of the phaser once, early on. Why not when it's getting colder?)
Finally, this episode is not fanfiction. It is canon. Jean Lisette Aroeste got paid to write it. And it's one of the best episodes of the series, so I'm glad she did. The fact that a woman wrote it does not make it less than canon somehow.
Aroeste also wrote "Is there in Truth no Beauty", which I suppose you'd also call "fanfiction" since Spock gets to display emotions there, too. That's also one of my favorite episodes of Season 3.
Anyway, please let me know if I am reading to much into what you wrote, but I found it offensive as is, and that's why I'm a little hot under the collar.
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