I just rewatched this episode for the first time in a very long time, and I say this is one GREAT FREAKING EPISODE.
I think they build up the threat nicely at the beginning. What? There something out there powerful enough to destroy not only whole planets, but entire solar systems? Scary. Then we see the Constellation. Whatever this thing is, it's powerful enough to wreck a starship! Scarier. Now we have to worry about our heroes. Then we meet Decker. Windom's performance depicting extreme horror about the machine builds the tension even more. Then, it appears!!!! It's chasing the Enterprise, and it's gaining!!!! It's first appearance is so bad ass. I freaking LOVE this episode. I was always partial to stories with ultra-powerful bad-guys that the heroes have to use their wits to defeat, and this one delivers with all-out action and drama from start to finish. Oh, yeah, Star Trek at its best.
I just rewatched this episode for the first time in a very long time, and I say this is one GREAT FREAKING EPISODE.
I think they build up the threat nicely at the beginning. What? There something out there powerful enough to destroy not only whole planets, but entire solar systems? Scary. Then we see the Constellation. Whatever this thing is, it's powerful enough to wreck a starship! Scarier. Now we have to worry about our heroes. Then we meet Decker. Windom's performance depicting extreme horror about the machine builds the tension even more. Then, it appears!!!! It's chasing the Enterprise, and it's gaining!!!! It's first appearance is so bad ass. I freaking LOVE this episode. I was always partial to stories with ultra-powerful bad-guys that the heroes have to use their wits to defeat, and this one delivers with all-out action and drama from start to finish. Oh, yeah, Star Trek at its best.
Notice how when people try to use this episode as the basis for two movies, it's not as well liked? Curious, that.![]()
Say what?
Say what?
Oops, sorry, what I should have said was when the two recent movies use what happened in the TV series in the movies (you know, all of the devastation and such that would happen in episodes) people despise it. And that's the curious thing.
Say what?
Oops, sorry, what I should have said was when the two recent movies use what happened in the TV series in the movies (you know, all of the devastation and such that would happen in episodes) people despise it. And that's the curious thing.
Can you give an example?
The main difference is that The Doomsday Machine was well written.Oops, sorry, what I should have said was when the two recent movies use what happened in the TV series in the movies (you know, all of the devastation and such that would happen in episodes) people despise it. And that's the curious thing.
^Do I have to? It's pretty obvious.
^Do I have to? It's pretty obvious.
Humor me, I have no idea what you are trying to say.
It's my all-time favorite TOS episode, but I do have to admit that the design of the planet killer is a bit knuckleheaded -- if you can destroy it by ramming a bomb down it's maw, maybe you should, I dunno, provide some kind of mechanism to CLOSE that maw when it's not eating. Leaving a wide-open port that can lead to the thing's destruction seems like a pretty big design flaw. Heck, that thermal exhaust port on the Death Star was only two meters wide.![]()
Well, I have two trains of thought on this aspect.It's my all-time favorite TOS episode, but I do have to admit that the design of the planet killer is a bit knuckleheaded -- if you can destroy it by ramming a bomb down it's maw, maybe you should, I dunno, provide some kind of mechanism to CLOSE that maw when it's not eating. Leaving a wide-open port that can lead to the thing's destruction seems like a pretty big design flaw. Heck, that thermal exhaust port on the Death Star was only two meters wide.![]()
Actually, I like your line of reasoning and agree!Maybe the "Genie" (TM) door opener got jammed a million or so years ago.
Seriously, we have little idea what that thing experienced since its activation. It may have possessed all sorts of features that were lost by the time Decker arrived on the scene. It could have had a set of hatches that sealed tight when not firing anti-proton beams or injesting planetary chucks looking not unlike a set of nasty "jaws".
Hmm? Eh, I'm just blowing smoke outa' my ass...umptions.
Sincerely,
Bill
Could be. Of course, it could be that the explosion of the Constellation was just the straw that broke the camel's back. Who knows how long that thing had been bumping around between planets, moons, and other tasty chunks of matter. Maybe it had already undergone millions of years of damage and Kirk was lucky.I think that's a fair point. I'd also somewhat counter it with that anything approaching that maw was most likely to be rendered inert by the beams. I'm wondering what would have happened if the device did suck in the Enterprise? The antimatter was being suppressed, but would there have been a warp engine explosion inside if it got in there? That probably would have been bigger than the impuse engine explosion, right? That may have stopped it then, but it was trying to eat the Enterprise.
My silly notion is that the machine detects what would harm it before bringing it in, that the antimatter dampening would prevent that warp explosion and the Constellation was so damaged that it didn't register as more than some tasty debris and it didn't detect the impulse engine overload because it wasn't in it's programing.
I fundamentally disagree with the premise of this thread.
Kor
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