Good for them. I'll have the cookies baked In an hour or so.Except not really.
He was in one failed pilot, and one reconstituted episode.
Greenwood and Mount have both occupied the character longer, and better.
Meanwhile, Hunter. Is. Pike. Period.
Good for them. I'll have the cookies baked In an hour or so.Except not really.
He was in one failed pilot, and one reconstituted episode.
Greenwood and Mount have both occupied the character longer, and better.
Good for them. I'll have the cookies baked In an hour or so.

Meanwhile, Hunter. Is. Pike. Period.
For me he is. You can keep JJ-Pike and Disco-Pike.Nice? I guess?
Except he isn't.
Except not really.
He was in one failed pilot, and one reconstituted episode.
Greenwood and Mount have both occupied the character longer, and better.
Nope.Sigh.
There is only one Christopher Pike. This guy:![]()
A mannequin in a floaty-chair only half counts, and I refuse to acknowledge a couple of post JJ-trek pretenders just because the real thing never got a chance at his own series. I'm not that desperate to see him recast.
Jeffery Hunter was Pike. Period. End of Story. Accept no substitutes.
Anson mount does a much better job.Sigh.
There is only one Christopher Pike. This guy:![]()
A mannequin in a floaty-chair only half counts, and I refuse to acknowledge a couple of post JJ-trek pretenders just because the real thing never got a chance at his own series. I'm not that desperate to see him recast.
Jeffery Hunter was Pike. Period. End of Story. Accept no substitutes.
Hunter's Pike was depressed, grim and sexist. While I appreciate "The Cage" being integral to Trek's beginnings, Hunter's version is easily the weakest of the three. Not much charisma as a result of the depression and a lot of extremely dated cringe regarding the sexism. That has not aged well.
"The Cage" is an amazing piece of television for its time, and clearly a roadmap to the rest of the franchise with echoes that reach through all incarnations and into the present day, but in these aspects it's aged even worse than TOS itself.A mannequin in a floaty-chair only half counts, and I refuse to acknowledge a couple of post JJ-trek pretenders just because the real thing never got a chance at his own series. I'm not that desperate to see him recast.
Jeffery Hunter was Pike. Period. End of Story. Accept no substitutes.
While I like both Greenwood and Mount's portrayals, they both seem a little more folksy/earthy than how I always envisioned Pike based on Hunter in The Cage.

I'm a huge fan of Captain Pike and Jeffery Hunter, but I will agree to disagree on this point.Sigh.
There is only one Christopher Pike. This guy:![]()
A mannequin in a floaty-chair only half counts, and I refuse to acknowledge a couple of post JJ-trek pretenders just because the real thing never got a chance at his own series. I'm not that desperate to see him recast.
Jeffery Hunter was Pike. Period. End of Story. Accept no substitutes.
Well, I always thought of him as more of a tough-as-nails rancher, than an easygoing farmer.Yeah the thing to really remember about The Cage is that it presents a 'moment in time' for Pike... we didn't really get to see much of Pike the confident commander, or his folksy personality outside of the being back on the farm in Mojave and the line "now you're sounding like my doctor, bartender" (delivered with warmth and a beautiful little smile by Hunter). Otherwise all we see is a man on his guard from the world, emotionally broken and somewhat detached, the main image of him with a scowl and brooding. It leaves a false impression of the character as a whole. I feel like Anson Mount does a fantastic job of taking up Hunter's portrayal of the character but fleshing out the humanity of him. This is the Pike I would have hoped we would have gotten a chance to see, if Hunter had continued in the role.![]()
Since I have met people who can be both, depending on the situation, I think that Pike fits that just fine.Well, I always thought of him as more of a tough-as-nails rancher, than an easygoing farmer.
Kor
Yes, Greenwood was great in that avuncular, paternal role, but he didn't make any sense as Pike. Pike was established as being a near contemporary of Kirk, not Kirk's dad.As far as Bruce Greenwood goes, and I am a huge fan of the Abrams films, his version felt flat to me. Almost more of how I envisioned Robert April.
Yes, Greenwood was great in that avuncular, paternal role, but he didn't make any sense as Pike. Pike was established as being a near contemporary of Kirk, not Kirk's dad.
Anson Mount is just perfect and is killing it as Pike. But at the same time I can buy him as the same guy as Hunter played. Pike in The Cage is clearly depressed and morose, and I can completely believe he grew into Mount's version of the character.
Jeffrey Hunter conveyed everything I needed to know about Captain Pike, and I can imagine the great adventures he had along with his crew of the Starship Enterprise. He's an interesting character and I would like to close the book on him. Greenwood was planted as the Obiwan Kenobi role for Chris Pine's JJ Kirk; the mentor to teach Kirk something... but I wish I knew what it was? Mount is only there on Disco just to make their character Burnham look better, the latter versions of Pike were positioned to support the lead actor and not make an impression they would have their own series. Objectives were different from "The Cage" to JJTrek and Disco.Here at the Trek BBS, it tends to be prefered that a post contain substantive topic/opinion/debate so as to start off a discussion, rather than simply dropping a video.
That being said, I'll contribute that I've always been fascinated by Trek's original pilot episode and particularly the captain who wasn't, so every opportunity we've had to flesh out Captain Pike into a more fully rounded character has been very welcome to me![]()
Mount is only there on Disco just to make their character Burnham look better...
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