A great many people here seem to think that Vina's looks are what the Talosians considered "right" for humans, to the best of their knowledge. Why? Neither Vina nor the Talosians ever suggest such a thing.
Of course, such a premise is fundamentally flawed. Looks derive from proper reconstruction, not vice versa. If the reconstruction fails, then looks won't help: if the skull can't be put together without squeezing the damaged brain to pulp, then fashioning a pretty face onto the skull is impossible, and indeed fatal for the victim.
What Vina looked like is actually pretty irrelevant anyway: Talosians could make her look like an Orion dancer or possibly a sixteen-legged dragon if they so wished. What is interesting is whether Vina was still fertile after all that damage!
It seems more probable that Vina was simply dead. There's no story requirement for her having been alive at any point: her function was to lure in Pike, then to lure out Pike without hard feelings. Single captives sounded fine
as far Talosian plans went - their other captives appeared single all.
Ultimately, we should listen to Boyce here. Whatever the Talosians did, they won. By definition. If we thought otherwise, that's only because the Talosians wanted us to. There's no mechanism that would entice the Talosians to choosing losing. And indeed "The Menagerie" explicates that Pike lost: his attempt a quarantining the planet came to nought, and everything was as before.
(I fear the difference between TOS writing and STD writing would be the latter explicating that the heroes lost, and thinking it "edgy". TOS left us to draw the conclusions ourselves. But "concluding" a TOS adventure or reference logically might well be what this "event" is all about.)
Timo Saloniemi
Of course, such a premise is fundamentally flawed. Looks derive from proper reconstruction, not vice versa. If the reconstruction fails, then looks won't help: if the skull can't be put together without squeezing the damaged brain to pulp, then fashioning a pretty face onto the skull is impossible, and indeed fatal for the victim.
What Vina looked like is actually pretty irrelevant anyway: Talosians could make her look like an Orion dancer or possibly a sixteen-legged dragon if they so wished. What is interesting is whether Vina was still fertile after all that damage!
It seems more probable that Vina was simply dead. There's no story requirement for her having been alive at any point: her function was to lure in Pike, then to lure out Pike without hard feelings. Single captives sounded fine
as far Talosian plans went - their other captives appeared single all.
Ultimately, we should listen to Boyce here. Whatever the Talosians did, they won. By definition. If we thought otherwise, that's only because the Talosians wanted us to. There's no mechanism that would entice the Talosians to choosing losing. And indeed "The Menagerie" explicates that Pike lost: his attempt a quarantining the planet came to nought, and everything was as before.
(I fear the difference between TOS writing and STD writing would be the latter explicating that the heroes lost, and thinking it "edgy". TOS left us to draw the conclusions ourselves. But "concluding" a TOS adventure or reference logically might well be what this "event" is all about.)
Timo Saloniemi