Hope burns brightI prefer The Menagerie myself as it has the current crew and a mystery of what exactly happened to the crew of the older Enterprise. In the end it seems to be wrapped up quite easily with only Vina's fate and her loneliness for us to wander about! But it does seem to offer up more than just another voyage and the like at first and Pike is then mentioned again in Mirror, Mirror!
JB
PS.I doubt the Talosians could even breed a new race of humans from the two crippled bodies of Pike and Vina, I think they genuinely cared for Pike as Spock said and they would give him the freedom to travel wherever his mind would take him!
I thought the commander of the Star base was a Commodore Joseph Mendez where Fleet Captain Christopher Pike wad atI prefer The Cage, but I think they did a commendable job with The Menagerie. The Menagerie has some good Spock/Kirk moments, but I have a few issues with it.
Three minor things first:
- I think that the threat of a court martial provides enough dramatic tension without adding the death penalty angle.
-The fake admiral twist seems gratuitous.
- The "all charges have been dropped" dialog seems a bit pat.
Two more serious issues:
- The Talosians are shown to be too powerful. You can't help but wonder why they didn't use their powers to find a less dramatic way of getting Pike to their planet.
- After watching The Cage as a standalone episode, I actually like Pike and don't like the idea of him being seriously maimed and left to live out his life in a fantasy world.
It was duty to a friend and former commander to see that Pike was to have his dreams to be real for him and Pike dream was to be undamage and free so Spock help him go were that could happen with help from the Talosians and their wish to helpWhen I was a kid the Menagerie was a favorite episode and although I still enjoy it a great deal it has many problems for me. Spock pretty much commits mutiny and is simply forgiven and his behavior certainly wasn't logical.
It was duty to a friend and former commander to see that Pike was to have his dreams to be real for him and Pike dream was to be undamage and free so Spock help him go were that could happen with help from the Talosians and their wish to help
I thought the commander of the Star base was a Commodore Joseph Mendez where Fleet Captain Christopher Pike wad at
That brings up another point. The Cage and therefore the Menagerie both depict the Talotians as cruel bad guys to put it simply, but now we're supposed to believe they're benevolent? That is a bit of a stretch.
Yeah, those are good points.Well we do have that one moment were one of them says" Is our deaths not sufficent" I think when Pike is yelling at them while escaping. They could be cruel but I think with that line and the fact that they are willing to help Vina shows they aren't all bad. Plus they had 10 years or so to reflect on their actions from the pilot though you would think they might change their outfits at least once over 10 years.
Jason
Dreams become reality and the true reality becomes a bad dreamSomehow The Talosians made mental contact with Spock after they discovered the fate of Captain Pike. Knowing that he wouldn't and now couldn't help them reclaim the surface of their planet with his progeny (not that Vina looked capable of that anyway) they offered him a life with them freed of his physical difficulties and to live the rest of his days in a 'normal' human life!
JB
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