I don't like the ending of Space Seed and how Marla McGivers is tossed aside to go live with her captor Khan after some Stockholm syndrome type situation.
Ah well, seems like I had a different opinion than you the last time I watched it."Stockholm Syndrome" would imply that Khan held her captive against her will and that never happened. It happened later to Kirk and Co. but in every previous encounter with Khan she had a chance to leave (Hell, he basically threw her out and she ASKED to stay).
She was attracted to/enamored with him from the moment she saw him on the sleeper ship.
The definition of Stockholm Syndrome does not fit the situation. McGivers was not a hostage.Ah well, seems like I had a different opinion than you the last time I watched it.
No, but rewatching it I feel like she was manipulated by Khan through seducing her and then threats of violence and then using reverse psychology on her telling her to get lost so she falls under his sway. I don't what you call that. Then she's part of the takeover which fails and then has a crap choice of a court martial or freedom with Khan. I think Kirk should have sent her to a psychiatrist/psychologist whichever one is appropriate here.The definition of Stockholm Syndrome does not fit the situation. McGivers was not a hostage.
Gene beliefs were all over the place during the course of his life. He was (iirc) raised Southern Baptist, and the various forms of Christianity was the religion of the shows intended audience.Don't forget Gene (a non-believer) wrote this, so I doubt he would promote Christianity.
The flyaround of the refit Enterprise was a barefaced, unapologetic set piece. It was spaceship porn. Maybe it seemed like 10 minutes to you, but I loved all four minutes and forty-five seconds of it.
Funny because the scrapped "early" version of the Enterprise cue is shorter than the one that ended up in the film. It seems like they extended the sequence late in the game.
The drydock is excessive. I've said it before...too much time is spent seeing too much of the ship through the dock before the big reveal, and all the cuts after that are slightly too long, plus you have the silly shot of the hexagonal light...who cares about the light?
I mean the second he sat down in the chair if he did I don't remember if he sat in the captain's chair in that episode but if he did he would have known it's not the same chair. Same thing with his bed or the sounds of the ship ...
Because now more than ever I need a show that offers me hope, with someone picked on for years, who does not exact vengeance. The world is shitty enough, I need a positive role model.Alternate ending:
The episode already had some dark elements, so why not end on a bleak note? End things with the Platonians being stripped of their powers, and with Alexander gaining them. Up to this point Alexander has been a very sympathetic character, but as the episode concludes let's have a few moments of foreboding letting us know that the worm may have turned and that the Platonian's Elysium may soon become Tartarus, lorded over by a diminutive Hades.
So do you guys like how it ended?
The original draft of Operation Annihilate would beg to differWell . . . yeah! The moment between Kirk and Alexander at the end is wonderful. As to whether or not Kirk should have had Scotty level the planet with phasers the moment they came back on board, well . . . not really in the spirit of Star Trek.
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