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I’m watching The Original Series again

Re: The Naked Time

"The Naked Time" is a great episode, but it has two features that rate it high on the goofy factor, both featuring Joe Tormolen:

-Tormolen removing the glove of his containment suit to scratch his nose & forgetting to put it back on. :rolleyes: The fact that he could reach up into his hood was also rather absurd. Worst. Containment Suits. EVER.

The shower curtain fabic was a neat texture, but there's a good reason why these suits were never seen again. Really, the whole teaser would have been a LOT more believable if Spock & Tormolen were unaware of any possible infection (like Daniels in "The Enemy Within") and the creators just omitted the containment suits altogether.

-Tormolen stabbing himself to death with a butter knife. :guffaw: Does anyone know if this one was a demand of Standards & Practices?

Despite these things, I found Tormolen to be a rather interesting character - the astronaut who has doubts if man belongs in space, but keeps signing up for another tour of duty. Have any of the Trek novels or comics ever picked up on these intriguing traits and shown us what a pre-"Naked Time" Tormolen was like?
 
Re: The Naked Time

Posted by JonnyQuest037:
-Tormolen removing the glove of his containment suit to scratch his nose & forgetting to put it back on. :rolleyes: The fact that he could reach up into his hood was also rather absurd. Worst. Containment Suits. EVER.
Point of order: it's not established that these are containment suits, or are supposed to have any particular powers of environmental protection. In fact, Spock signalling for decontamination after they beam up -- and getting it from the extra transporter cycle -- indicates they're not containment suits. The most reasonable guess is they're life support gear, since we do know the station life support were switched off.

It would've been interesting to see more Joe Tormolen types; it really fit the Original Show's sense of humanity trying but not confident in being able to understand the universe.
 
Re: The Naked Time

Posted by Nebusj:

Point of order: it's not established that these are containment suits, or are supposed to have any particular powers of environmental protection. In fact, Spock signalling for decontamination after they beam up -- and getting it from the extra transporter cycle -- indicates they're not containment suits. The most reasonable guess is they're life support gear, since we do know the station life support were switched off.

Life support gear with open hoods and apparently no oxygen supply? :wtf: :wtf: :wtf:
 
Charlie X

The science vessel S.S Antares’ rendezvous with the Enterprise is brief, serving only to deliver an unusual passenger before the Captain and Navigator beat a hasty retreat, offering effusive praise of Charles Evans. Charlie has survived since the age of three, alone after a crash on the barren planet of Thasus, with only a ship’s computer for company. The computer has been instrumental in teaching him English and how to survive, but the boy’s education in terms of social interaction has been sorely lacking. The Enterprise will take him to a colony where he has relatives that can take care of him, but until then, it falls to the Enterprise crew in general, and Kirk in particular to give Charlie an education in what it means to be human. It isn’t easy with a seventeen year old boy, suffering from excessive hormones and who becomes instantly infatuated with Yeoman Rand. But the Enterprise is in greater danger than anyone realises. When the Antares calls to offer a desperate warning, Charlie overhears and the ship is destroyed in a freak accident. Soon Charlie is entertaining the crew with magic tricks, and producing gifts for Rand, then someone makes Charlie mad, and Charlie makes him disappear.

Roddenberry revisits the premise for The Cage for this episode. A spaceship crashes on a seemingly barren world; there is only one survivor who manages to prosper despite the lack of sustenance, mostly down to the presence of an all-powerful alien race that possess substantial mental powers. While the premise is the same, the way the story develops is markedly different though, despite an almost word for word repeat of an exchange from The Cage, this time between McCoy and Spock, with Spock remarking on the lack of resources on barren Thasus pointing to the existence of an advanced race, while McCoy argues for the strength and ingenuity of the human race.

From this point on the story is markedly different though, it doesn’t focus on the aliens, or indeed the Captain, but on Charlie’s tragedy. It is a tragedy despite the initial comic feel to the episode, and that comic feel and the sensibilities of sixties television do much to date this episode. Charlie is in essence a tabula rasa; he has been tutored by computer, and raised by distant and uninvolved aliens. While he knows the language and can communicate with his rescuers, he has no knowledge of the social graces that we learn through experience, or how to handle the emotions that he is now experiencing through interacting with the Enterprise crew. Yet the crew, Rand and Kirk especially almost expect him to instinctively know right from wrong, they tiptoe around issues, are lost for words. Kirk has to give one of those comedy birds and bees speeches that were so prevalent in sixties and seventies television. McCoy foists Charlie off on Kirk saying that Charlie needs a father figure, but ironically since McCoy is the closest that the Enterprise has to a psychologist (and as fandom would have it, the only father among the main cast), he should have been seeing to Charlie’s rehabilitation, not Kirk. That Charlie’s eventual display of powers was inevitable is unarguable, but I have to wonder how much the story as it played out in this drama actually exacerbated and hastened the problem. I suppose that it is a blessing in disguise, that Charlie’s powers were revealed before they got to Colony 5. As it is, that aspect of the story is the bit that hasn’t aged well.

But it doesn’t lessen the emotional impact of the finale. Charlie’s pleas to the crew, to let him stay, his protestations that he couldn’t even touch the Thasians, are delivered so effectively and movingly by actor Robert Walker, that despite the audio blooper, it never fails to bring a lump to my throat.

Notable minutiae in this episode include the Spock (still smiling) and Uhura jam session, the mention of UESPA headquarters (although the inference is that it’s the Antares which is under their command and not the Enterprise), the 3D chess match, and the fact that the Enterprise crew are preparing to celebrate Thanksgiving, implying a loosely allied Earth and a predominantly US crew on the ship, or that the US went on an imperialistic rampage and conquered the Earth, or the Enterprise is actually a US ship and not an Earth ship, or the Enterprise crew are observing a quaint tradition for a laugh. Actually it could be one of a hundred things, but what is inarguable is that it is November in space.
 
Re: Charlie X

Posted by The Laughing Vulcan:
the Enterprise crew are preparing to celebrate Thanksgiving

with Gene Roddenberry as the uncredited Voice of Chef.

implying a loosely allied Earth and a predominantly US crew on the ship, or that the US went on an imperialistic rampage and conquered the Earth, or the Enterprise is actually a US ship and not an Earth ship, or the Enterprise crew are observing a quaint tradition for a laugh.

Or that Thanksgiving was broadened to be a more planetwide celebration by the 23rd century.
 
Re: Charlie X

Posted by The Laughing Vulcan:
But it doesn’t lessen the emotional impact of the finale. Charlie’s pleas to the crew, to let him stay, his protestations that he couldn’t even touch the Thasians, are delivered so effectively and movingly by actor Robert Walker, that despite the audio blooper, it never fails to bring a lump to my throat.

What's the audio blooper? I thought the echo on Charlie's final plea to "Stay" seemed intentional & added a nice eerie touch.
 
Re: Charlie X

What's the audio blooper?

As he makes his pleas to the Enterprise crew, the camera cuts away to the Thasian and you hear a random, out of place "When I came aboard" that makes no sense in what he is saying.

It's also recognisably the same line from before looped back in.


Proviso: They may have fixed it on the DVDs, I'm still watching on video :o
 
Re: Charlie X

I tried to watch this episode the other day. I got about 20 minutes in. I really don't like this one. The rec room scene is awful ("Charlie's our new dar-LING! Our dar-LING! Our dar-LING!") and I just found it to be a slow moving, painful episode to sit though. For some reason this seems to be a fan favorite, but I always considered it a dud, same with Mudd's Women.
 
Balance Of Terror

Crisis in the Neutral Zone! The border has been breached and Earth Outposts have been destroyed. Hardly the ideal time to be conducting a wedding, but certain traditions mustn’t be denied. However, Kirk’s desire to conduct the marriage of Phaser technicians Tomlinson and Martine is thwarted when Outpost 4 comes under attack. The images intercepted from the assailed station reveal the shocking truth. The Romulans have returned after a hundred years of wary ceasefire following a brutal and bloody war fought with primitive weapons, a hundred years in which the Neutral Zone has remained silent, and no one has ever seen a Romulan in the flesh. Feelings still run high among certain members of the Enterprise crew, most notably Navigator Styles, who lost family in the war. The Romulans are armed with a devastating plasma weapon now, and shielded by a practical invisibility device. They are testing the border as a prelude to war, and it is imperative that Kirk stops them to remind them of the steely resolve that opposes them. Despite the advanced technology of both sides, the immense powers opposing each other, this battle is one of wits, and the wiliest commander will prevail. And while politics and the spectre of Praetorial edict govern the actions of the Romulan commander, suspicion and bigotry rear their ugly heads on the Enterprise when Spock manages to decode a Romulan transmission and get their first look at a Romulan, who looks oddly like Spock’s father.

After nearly forty years, Balance Of Terror is still one of the finest hours of drama Trek has ever produced. This episode is rich in back-story and world building, creating the rich culture of the Romulans and the memory of the Earth-Romulan war a century prior. At its heart, this is a classic World War II story told in a future vernacular, destroyer versus U-Boat, honourable and wily commanders, mutual respect and the tense cat and mouse game played between the two. There is still time to address the illogic of bigotry, and show that one’s enemy is more often than not more similar than dissimilar to oneself, despite propaganda and rumour to the contrary.

But perhaps too much remains intact from the World War II source, with the Romulan vessel even cramped and claustrophobic like a submarine, its imperfect Invisibility Screen still allowing for detection by the Enterprise sensors if not targeting. In its hunt for the Romulan vessel, the Enterprise lays down a field of phaser fire, interstellar depth charges hoping to get lucky, operates in silent running to minimise its own detection, and has phaser banks that require manning to work, a worrying lack of automation on a faster than light vessel. The Romulans attempt to escape by jettisoning debris from a disposal tube, and are limited to Impulse power yet manage to elude a Warp capable vessel. Perhaps the only nod to the astronomical setting is the Enterprise’s attempt to detect the Romulans by the effect their invisible ship has on the particles of a cometary coma they pass through.

What I love about this episode is the revelation that even in an area that had been explored a century prior, the Enterprise is three hours away in terms of communication. These people were really out there, on the frontier. It makes a difference when compared to later Treks and illogically the prequel Enterprise, where Starfleet is only a video call away. Once again, Kirk’s self doubt is explored, a Captain whose actions will determine the fate of millions, could possibly lead to war, and once again it’s McCoy who comes to the rescue with one of the most poignant lines spoken in Trek regarding the uniqueness of the individual. Rand is once again the weak point of the episode, needing a hug from her Captain in the middle of a tense moment. It’s also stunning to see the effect that the revelation of the Romulans’ appearance has on the Enterprise crew. Although they have apparently worked with Spock for months, even years, the suspicion towards him isn’t confined to Stiles alone. It’s worth noting the look even Sulu gives Spock when the big reveal occurs. Given current events, it remarkably realistic as to how public perceptions of ethic minorities can alter at the drop of a hat.

But for world building, this episode and its sequel The Enterprise Incident are peerless. Two episodes that managed to create a race that tantalised and inspired. The Romulans are quite obviously based on the Romans, not least in name. They are a martial culture, geared to conquest and furthering the ambitions of the Praetor. Yet Mark Lenard’s portrayal of the honourable Romulan Commander, heir to a military tradition and wise if constrained by his duty, did much to give this species dimension beyond their brief appearances on Star Trek. It’s no wonder that they inspired so much literature and conjecture by fans and authors after the original series had ended. It’s no wonder that the Romulans of old are the favourite race of many a Trek fan. It makes what happened to them after 1987 all the more heinous. There was a time early on that I despised The Next Generation for what it did to the Romulans and the Klingons, and not just in terms of corrugated foreheads. It’s easy now for me to enjoy the later series, although I do tend to think of them as taking place in alternate realities to The Original Series. I also mourn those Klingons and Romulans of old, whose likes will never be seen again.

The Balance Of Terror is an excellent piece of drama that by far outweighs its foibles. Brilliant characters and perfectly paced tension make this an hour of television that is a joy to lose oneself in time after time.
 
What Are Little Girls Made Of?

It has been five years since nurse Christine Chapel last saw her fiancé. Dr Roger Korby, eminent scientist vanished on the desolate world of Exo III, researching the ruins of the ancient civilisation there, hoping for some insight into medicine. Chapel joined Starfleet in an effort to keep her hopes alive, but two previous expeditions have failed to find evidence of Korby’s survival. Now the Enterprise is paying Exo III a visit, a last attempt to locate the missing Doctor and his team, and Spock’s reticence when asked about the odds of survival speaks volumes. Then comes a transmission that puts a smile on everyone’s faces. Korby is alive, and he invites Kirk to beam down to evaluate his research. Curiously he stipulates that the Captain must beam down alone, though revises that invitation to include Christine when he learns of her presence on the ship. When they aren’t met on the planet, Kirk orders two security men to beam down in addition. Unfortunately they are wearing red. Korby attempts to explain away their deaths down to the treacherous nature of the caverns, but when he reveals the nature of his research, it becomes apparent that he isn’t being totally forthright. His plan to revolutionise medicine involves replacing human bodies with machines, using a process left behind by the planet’s ‘old ones’ to create androids. His means of demonstrating his ideas also leave much to be desired, when he creates an android replica of Kirk. While Christine watches in horror at what five years of isolation have done to her fiancé, Kirk realises the truth of the situation lie in the memories of the last of the original androids, a behemoth named Ruk.

My introduction to the Original Series was a belated one, and came by an odd path. While I had seen a few episodes as a child, my appreciation was that of a four year old. I was enchanted by the primary colours and scared by the aliens, caring little for the stories. My first true appreciation for Trek was through the first two films, and after that, I began buying novels and books, eager for more Trek. I first truly appreciated the original series episodes when I read the James Blish adaptations (The series was no longer being televised at that point). And I saw the stories in my mind’s eye, in 2.35:1 widescreen with movie era special effects. What Are Little Girl’s Made Of? took place in a desolate arctic wasteland, with deep echoing chasms. The underground caves were truly cavernous, and the alien technology that sustained this was truly alien, gargantuan and impressive. The android creation sequence was truly something spectacular I can tell you. In my mind’s eye that is.

Naturally, when I truly began to watch the television series in earnest post 1987, it came as something of a culture shock to be presented with the sixties television series. But of all the episodes, it was this one that shattered my illusions the most. Aside from a single stock footage moment at the outset, it was wholly studio bound, and the sets were nothing like my imaginings. It was all so small. The alien technology, far from being ‘alien’ was controlled by a couple of rheostats, the creation of an android, far from being wondrous was accomplished with a pile of clumsily crafted papier-mâché placed on a vaguely sparkly turntable. To this date, I hold an irrational dislike for this episode in particular for that very reason, despite the fact that it shared production values with the rest of the series. This was the one that disappointed me most.

Not that the story doesn’t lack for problems, in fact it really only has the one problem, and that is Nurse Chapel herself. I can understand the model of sixties television, that the hero had to solve all, be the focus of the story, and let’s face it, Kirk was always going to save the day. But this is Chapel’s story. It’s her reunion with Korby that should be at the heart of the story, it is she whose reaction we should see as the tragedy unfolds, as she learns what has happened to her fiancé and how his values have been warped. For God’s sake woman, you haven’t seen this man in five years, and he greets you by holding you and your Captain captive, announces a hair-brained scheme to export immortality through the universe, and has no qualms over the deaths of innocents. Add to that he’s created a fembot of his very own, and all we get, other than a little jealousy is a woman who passively observes events, barely passing comment. She should have been yelling and screaming at the man, at the monster he had become, but she had all the passion, the emotion of a limp fish. Perhaps a throwaway line can explain some of that, in that Chapel was once a student of Korby. If he’s one of those typical Hollywood dirty old men professors, who chooses to bed his more attractive pupils, then he may have preferred his conquests to be submissive.

It’s still a blot on an otherwise interesting story, especially if like me, you’ve been a fan of the Terminator. A society creates a race of machines to serve it, and those machines turn on their creators to wipe out their illogic. Replace Ruk with Arnie, and you’re almost there. There are no time travel shenanigans to deal with here, but Korby’s plan to use android bodies as a means to immortality amounts to much of the same thing, a war against organic life forms through the galaxy. Kirk sets a precedent or two, outwitting a machine through instinct and intellect alone, or when that fails, making out with it. Which is where I pause to take a moment and say. Oh my god! Andrea. Sherry Jackson as the provocatively clad fembot has the power to get any pulse racing.

Roger Korby’s central conceit was that he could transfer the soul from a person to a machine, to achieve immortality, and yet in the final, tragic analysis he is proved wrong, when his replicated android self cannot exceed its programming. I wonder just how much of its plan was Korby’s and how much was Ruk’s, for that is the ultimate irony of What Are Little Girls Made Of. Where the Korby android was a pale reflection of the original man, it was Ruk and his peers who so long ago had outgrown their programming and destroyed their organic forbears, and in the end it was Andrea who had outgrown her programming and began to experience attraction and even love. By their tragic and destructive acts, they had proved Korby right when his own replicant had failed to do so.

It’s astounding to see how much original Trek relied on tragedy and melodrama to elicit emotion from its audience. Barely 9 episodes in, and we’ve seen the tragic figures of Vina, Gary Mitchell, Nancy Crater, and Charlie Evans. We’ve seen Kirk, Spock and Chapel tormented by a virus, Kirk literally split into light and dark, and Angela Martine’s wedding tragically cut short. While Star Trek’s stories had a quite unprecedented degree of intelligence, they are so appealing generally because they touch the more fundamental emotions in us all.
 
Re: Charlie X

Posted by ssosmcin:
I tried to watch this episode the other day. I got about 20 minutes in. I really don't like this one. The rec room scene is awful ("Charlie's our new dar-LING! Our dar-LING! Our dar-LING!") and I just found it to be a slow moving, painful episode to sit though. For some reason this seems to be a fan favorite, but I always considered it a dud, same with Mudd's Women.
Agreed 100%. In fact, it's even worse than "Mudd's Women", because it lacks the redeeming presense of Harry Mudd.

That rec room scene is soooo baaaad - both the song, and the card trick sequence...

--PhilipX
 
Re: Charlie X

I really liked the Rec Room scene, even though Spock being there looked soooo out of character. Uhura has a good singing voice. :D
 
Re: Charlie X

Re charlie? I thought this was WALGMO!

NEway. The eppie for me was a little like a carnivale ride.
Like a house of horrors flick with ruk as the monster and Korby as an unwitting frankenstein. with w twist that Korby is the real monster.
Too bad his Robo-gal-friday got toasted too. too hot! :angel:

NEway.. I really liked the "Mind your own business, Mr. Spock. I'm sick of your half-breed interference! Do you hear!?," bit.

:vulcan:
 
Dagger Of The Mind

A routine cargo exchange becomes something more ominous when the Enterprise leaves the Tantalus Penal Colony. It becomes apparent that the crate beamed up from the prison contained an escaped prisoner, and soon a manhunt is on through the corridors of the starship. But the escaped prisoner is more than he seems, Dr Simon Van Gelder, former associate director of the colony is a tortured, haunted man, suffering from a feverish mania and a desire to get away from Tantalus, but with no memory of why. Contacting Tantalus, Dr Tristan Adams, head of the colony gives all the right answers, but McCoy’s suspicions prompt Kirk to launch an investigation. Kirk is reluctant though, being a fan of Adams’ work with criminals, and having seen the stellar results in other penal institutions. Kirk beams down to Tantalus with ship’s psychologist, Dr Helen Noel, with whom he shared an ‘incident’ at the ship’s Christmas party. Adams meets them and shows them around the facility, briefly dwelling on the neural neutraliser, the experimental device that had such a disastrous effect on Van Gelder. While Kirk decides to sneak back alone to take a closer look at the machine, Spock attempts a Vulcan technique to reveal Van Gelder’s clouded thoughts.

Dagger Of The Mind is not one of Trek’s finest hours. It’s only redeeming feature is that it introduced one of the fundamental trademarks of the franchise, The Vulcan Mind Meld, but the story itself is filled with illogic and inconsistencies, annoyances in plot and some sheer silliness. The trouble is that the story is utterly, utterly generic. There was a time in the sixties that brainwashing stories featuring mind-sucking machines operated by evil geniuses were two a penny. This same story with a few variations could have been done by the likes of The Men From U.N.C.L.E, Mission Impossible, Thunderbirds, The Prisoner and a dozen other sixties action serials, where our hero would be faced with mental torture at the hands of a megalomaniacal villain. I think the most recent was the Randall & Hopkirk remake that at least injected the plot with the absurdity it deserved.

I’m willing to overlook the Enterprise transporter operator and machinery not noticing that there was a human beaming up hidden inside the crate, and the fact that the ship had no internal sensors to aid tracking the escaped prisoner. The show was still in its early days, and certain ideas were yet to be set. But the human responses to the situation were mind-bogglingly stupid. There is a suspicion of a criminal act at a penal facility, yet the head of the facility remains in charge, and casually invites Kirk to investigate. Kirk obliges by beaming down a minimal party of just two, himself and a psychiatrist. Mistake number 1: He should have shut the facility down, removed Adams from his position, and beamed down a whole bunch of security to take control of the facility and investigate.

The machine that is causing all the trouble, the neural neutraliser is introduced by Adams, and Kirk decides that it requires further investigation, he does this by sneaking back and trying it on himself. Mistake Number 2: Is this any more obvious? Kirk is a moron. You don’t stick your fingers in a power socket to see if you’ll get a shock. A machine that left a man a blubbering wreck, and he has to try it out for a laugh. And Mistake number 3, he lets that Captain stalking woman Noel operate the machine. This so-called psychiatrist decides to experiment by implanting a romantic fantasy of her own into the Captain’s mind. The consummate professional!

Then there is the generic brainwashing trademark, Lethe with a blank stare and a monotone, “I love my work”, also Spock’s look at Kirk whenever he sees the Captain with a babe of the week as if to say, “You sly dog”. Additionally, the low budget hurts this episode; two rooms and a dentist’s chair do not make a penal colony.

But the question that haunts me is what was Adams’ motivation in all this, what was the wrongdoing that he had to hide by tormenting Van Gelder, and torturing Kirk. That aspect of the character is never explored. As far as I could tell, the device was being used as a rehabilitation tool, as it was used throughout the Federation according to Noel. What was the difference between this machine and all the others, what was the difference in how Adams was using it? None of that is ever explained.

A disappointment of an episode.
 
Re: Dagger Of The Mind

Far be it for me to stand up for this episode which I don't particularly care for albeit it due to reason totally different than yours. These being how I can't stand Helen Noel and for some of the more intense moments with Dr Van Gelder ;-)

However, in no other episode has the Enterprise been able to scan and differentiate between different humans. Surely once Van Gelder has left the transporter room then he is indistinguishable from any other human, at least by the computer.

Also I've always thought this episode to be amongst the most expensive looking episodes. We have the dentists chair room, the outer control room, the corridor, the room where Kirk beams down to, the guest quarters, the aircon ducts and the generator room just off the top of my head. In fact I can't think of any episode with many more sets than this one (not including parallel world episodes)!

As for the blank stares, I think this is looking at it from 40 years in the future. It can't have been so cliched in 1966.
 
Re: Dagger Of The Mind

Posted by Dunsall:

However, in no other episode has the Enterprise been able to scan and differentiate between different humans. Surely once Van Gelder has left the transporter room then he is indistinguishable from any other human, at least by the computer.

True, I'm thinking of Let This Be Your Last Battlefield, where Spock kept track of the half and half people as they chased each other through the corridors, and the fact that Finney had used his knowledge of the ship to conceal himself when everyone thought he was dead. It just seems implausible to me that Van Gelder, crazed and lacking judgement, managed to elude a shipload of security, casually got into a turbolift and make it all the way to the bridge, where he karate chops the security guard and has to be subdued by the Captain and a timely nerve pinch from Spock. But hey it's television right? :D

Also I've always thought this episode to be amongst the most expensive looking episodes. We have the dentists chair room, the outer control room, the corridor, the room where Kirk beams down to, the guest quarters, the aircon ducts and the generator room just off the top of my head. In fact I can't think of any episode with many more sets than this one (not including parallel world episodes)!

I think what I find small and unimpressive about this, despite the variety of sets that you mentioned, is that Tantalus is supposed to be a penal colony. We see Van Gelder, we see Adams, we see Lethe and a couple of technicians and random people wandering a corridor. But of people that we can positively identify as inmates, we only see the one. The poor chap who was getting his brain toasted in the neutraliser. Yet we get an idea of the size of the facility from the reuse of the Delta Vega matte painting.

I think that I would have bought the idea better if we saw more of the prison population.
 
Re: Dagger Of The Mind

Hey Laughing Vulcan, I really appreciate and enjoy your analyses of these TOS episodes. You're definitely making me view them in ways I hadn't considered before. Thanks.

It's absolutely fascinating to watch these episodes today. They are so primitive on so many levels, and yet there is no denying the collective genius behind the creation of so many of the star trek concepts, sets, and scripts.

I think your most fascinating observation is that Kirk-Spock-McCoy-Scotty established their characters and achieved their interpersonal chemistry almost immediately. It took TNG until season 3 for this to occur, and other trek series (as well as other TV series) always take many, many episodes for the characters to hit their stride and mesh.

I'm looking forward to reading more of your episode by episode analyses. Thanks again:)
 
Re: Dagger Of The Mind

Your welcome scottydog :D

I find that as I am watching the episodes again after several years, I'm appreciating them in a whole new way. Also, my disillusionment with the final years of Trek has made me far more critical of what I watch. (When I was younger, I loved Star Trek because it was Star Trek, and would brook no criticism).

Now I find that, while weaknesses are all the more apparent, I can also appreciate the strengths of the stories more. I'm glad that my thoughts are worthwhile to you, and hopefully to others (even if they completely disagree with me ;)). It's nice to know that I'm not typing away in vain. :D
 
Re: Dagger Of The Mind

Posted by The Laughing Vulcan:
Your welcome scottydog :D

I find that as I am watching the episodes again after several years, I'm appreciating them in a whole new way. Also, my disillusionment with the final years of Trek has made me far more critical of what I watch. (When I was younger, I loved Star Trek because it was Star Trek, and would brook no criticism).

Now I find that, while weaknesses are all the more apparent, I can also appreciate the strengths of the stories more. I'm glad that my thoughts are worthwhile to you, and hopefully to others (even if they completely disagree with me ;)). It's nice to know that I'm not typing away in vain. :D

You aren't. I watched these shows back when i was but a wee lad in the 60's, and watching them over the years hasn't dulled them for me, but i see them in new light now,and your observations are refreshing
 
Miri

Hundreds of light years from Earth, the Enterprise picks up an old Earth type distress call. They find a world, identical to Earth in every respect, except for the absence of intelligent life. The world seems abandoned, the empty cities similar to those of the mid twentieth century. The landing party are stunned by the resemblance, and then are attacked by a wizened, crazed creature that wants a battered toy abandoned in the street. This creature then dies of some odd illness. The landing party investigates further, and they find a young girl hiding in a building. Miri tells them of how the ‘grups’ went crazy and started attacking each other and the children, and how after they died the children were left alone to fend for themselves. She initially fears the new adults, thinking they will behave similarly, but is soon charmed by Kirk, on whom she develops a crush. It’s a brief idyll though; as the landing party find that they are infected with the same disease that killed the creature from before. As McCoy races against time to find a cure, the other surviving children decide to play a game with the landing party, one that could have lethal consequences.

Star Trek very quickly took a stance on the betterment of humanity, stating that it should come from within rather than without, and the idea of improving the species using medical or other external means would lead to disaster, hence the regular tirades against genetic engineering and similar ideas. Of course this was a reaction to the depredations of the Second World War, where Nazi ideals led to the slaughter of millions. Miri was the first such polemic and at the time seemed a most apt warning. Yet now, when we are on the boundaries of a new science, this episode seems positively archaic, and coming from a wholly different shade of the political spectrum. When the debates now centre on subjects like stem cell research and genuine genetic engineering, Miri takes an almost reactionary position.

The disease is the result of a longevity experiment gone wrong, a virus engineered to grant immortality. Putting aside the incongruity of a virus that has a hundred percent infection rate, or indeed the sheer absurdity of a planet that is the exact duplicate of Earth, this episode is a psychiatrist's dream. The pursuit of eternal youth, the desire to remain in a childhood innocence, the fear of growing up, of puberty, made all the more real by a disease that causes psychosis and death the minute puberty strikes, all these aspects speak to the heart of Western culture, and are motifs that get repeated again and again in various shows and literature. In that respect, Miri is excellent in pointing out these irrational fears and desires of our modern culture, the fallacy that an extended infancy is at all desirable.

But in execution Miri becomes difficult to watch, not least because the culture of children that is portrayed here is one that is an adult’s perception of childhood rather than anything approaching the real thing. The children’s own language of ‘grups, onlies and foolies’ sound horribly forced and unnatural. The need for TV children to chant is beyond me, and the actor playing Jahn looks forty rather than fourteen. Kirk tries to charm Miri, and even gently flirts with her to gain her confidence. I don’t know how this was received in 1966, but today it seems horribly misjudged. And once again, the weak point of the writing is Rand, who promptly gets jealous of Miri, and tries flirting with the Captain, yet again.

I’d like to know what happened to the redshirts, who apparently vanished halfway through the episode, only to reappear five minutes from the end. I’d like to know how children’s clothes survive for hundreds of years, and to that matter, how the Enterprise shows up exactly when the children’s food is beginning to run out. Above all, I’d like to know what poor little “Bonk Bonk!” did to Shatner, to warrant being thrown around the studio like that.

A nice concept, but the execution doesn’t live up to the idea.
 
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