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Does McCoy really break the fourth wall in "Babel"?

plynch

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Reading that very fine book, ST 365, I was stunned at reading the page about McCoy breaking the fourth wall at the end of the ep ("Well whaddya know, I finally got the last word!"). The book asserts he is talking directly to the audience.

I NEVER took it that way. I thought it was just a close up, but that his words were audible to the others in sickbay.

Have you understood it as the one time an actor in TOS speaks directly to us? Seriously, said, "What!?" when I read that page. But I can see how one could take it that way.
 
I thought they deliberately flirted with it, yeah. It was definitely a joke commenting on the show's format - not unlike Picard's remark at the end of that episode about "Moriarity" in which he suggested that perhaps they were all "part of a simulation running in a box on someone's table." :lol:
 
I just took it as talking to himself and happening to look in the direction of the camera that, to him, wasn't there. It was staged so that it gave the broad impression of the actor talking to the audience, but it's not like his eyes actually focused on the camera; he was just looking approximately toward it.
 
Well, he's not looking specifically at any other character. He's addressing the room in general, or talking to himself with the intent that others should hear.
 
I do have a script here somewhere, but how accurate are the stage directions at
http://www.chakoteya.net/StarTrek/44.htm ?

KIRK: Doctor McCoy, I believe you're enjoying all this.

SPOCK: Indeed, Captain. I've never seen him look so happy.

MCCOY: Shut up. (to Kirk) Shh. Shh! (to camera) Well, what do you know? I finally got the last word.
 
It wasn't uncommon for the lovely doc to be talking to himself. despite what "history" records it as, I think he's talking to Amanda. :D
 
I've always thought of it as a "Broadway moment." I've known some interesting characters in my time and a few people who actually do that in "real" life, so that TOS scene has never bothered me.

It certainly never bothered me anymore than Kirk's proclamation in "Tomorrow Is Yesterday" that a 200 year prison lock-up, "... ought to be just about right."
 
I've always thought of it as a "Broadway moment."

Or, in Shakespearean terms, an aside. Although an aside is basically the equivalent of a comic-book thought balloon -- it's not something the other characters are supposed to hear.
 
I've always thought of it as a "Broadway moment."

Or, in Shakespearean terms, an aside. Although an aside is basically the equivalent of a comic-book thought balloon -- it's not something the other characters are supposed to hear.

That would be the only aside in Star Trek, then, right?

Hey - that could be fun: what lines could be taken as asides?

"I shall quicken my pace"?
 
It certainly never bothered me anymore than Kirk's proclamation in "Tomorrow Is Yesterday" that a 200 year prison lock-up, "... ought to be just about right."

Now, THAT was breaking the fourth wall...
Since the time frame of Trek wasn't really established yet it doesn't quite work as a statement to the audience. Works as a self-referential joke for Kirk, since he knows hes from the future.
 
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