I've been watching the remastered TOS episodes on Blu-ray, catching up with some old favourites and seeing some eps I have somehow missed in the past. This weekend was a treat as I watched 'A Taste of Armageddon', which I remember affecting me very powerfully as a child, and still remained great. Also saw 'Devil in the Dark', which I've seen a few times and it was as good as ever.
However the real surprise was 'This Side of Paradise'. I think I had seen the start of this one but turned it off when everyone started getting all 'loved up', thinking it was just a planet-based reprise of 'The Naked Time'. How wrong I was! Rewatching it this weekend, I really was quite stunned by how much I loved this episode, and how deeply it affected me. I think it might actually be one of my favourite episodes so far. Reasons I loved it:
* The allegory could be read many ways. This is central to good Trek I think. Did the spores represent drug use? Communism? Laziness? Love? Contentment? All of the above. I read this on multiple levels.
* It wasn't judgmental. Although Kirk is eventually proven to be 'right', I thought the episode was extremely even-handed about how it treated the people under the spore's influence. They were happy. The episode never disputed this, or tried to inject some kind of evil influence- they were just happy, content. I think there was even a point where one of the colonists said: "What do you have to offer on the other side?" to Kirk, and he had no answer! Very impressive, very Trekkian. There was a very real dichotomy in action, between happiness/inaction and discontent/action, and it was deeply explored, not just tossed off the cuff. A really intriguing premise that I really loved.
* Kirk's rant at Spock to make him angry. Classic stuff! Not only highly amusing but also somewhat profound, that Kirk has to hurt his best friend to bring him back. And then! When Spock realizes he has to be just as cruel to to Leila, and Kirk offers to do it for him, and he declines, realizing he must do it himself. Wonderful, subtle acting on all parts.
* Kirk's really sad log entry where he describes himself as 'marooned' on his own ship. This really affected me to see Kirk so powerless- it's a rare state of events on Trek.
I think when I was younger I would have hated this episode, but now I see it as Trek doing what it does best- telling powerful stories through analogy. I must admit I wasn't particularly surprised when I read some online views that didn't exactly rate it as a classic, but I actually do think it should be up there with the best of Trek. This was a wonderful discovery to me, I've been watching Trek for 20 years at least, I've seen every TNG, DS9 and VOY at least twice, some episodes many more times than that. To find a new episode that really hit home like that, well, it was, and is, a real joy that I'm actually really excited about- I feel like I have touched a little bit of that fervor that must have driven fans to keep talking about Trek and keeping it alive after it ended in the 60's. With episodes like this, how could they not?
However the real surprise was 'This Side of Paradise'. I think I had seen the start of this one but turned it off when everyone started getting all 'loved up', thinking it was just a planet-based reprise of 'The Naked Time'. How wrong I was! Rewatching it this weekend, I really was quite stunned by how much I loved this episode, and how deeply it affected me. I think it might actually be one of my favourite episodes so far. Reasons I loved it:
* The allegory could be read many ways. This is central to good Trek I think. Did the spores represent drug use? Communism? Laziness? Love? Contentment? All of the above. I read this on multiple levels.
* It wasn't judgmental. Although Kirk is eventually proven to be 'right', I thought the episode was extremely even-handed about how it treated the people under the spore's influence. They were happy. The episode never disputed this, or tried to inject some kind of evil influence- they were just happy, content. I think there was even a point where one of the colonists said: "What do you have to offer on the other side?" to Kirk, and he had no answer! Very impressive, very Trekkian. There was a very real dichotomy in action, between happiness/inaction and discontent/action, and it was deeply explored, not just tossed off the cuff. A really intriguing premise that I really loved.
* Kirk's rant at Spock to make him angry. Classic stuff! Not only highly amusing but also somewhat profound, that Kirk has to hurt his best friend to bring him back. And then! When Spock realizes he has to be just as cruel to to Leila, and Kirk offers to do it for him, and he declines, realizing he must do it himself. Wonderful, subtle acting on all parts.
* Kirk's really sad log entry where he describes himself as 'marooned' on his own ship. This really affected me to see Kirk so powerless- it's a rare state of events on Trek.
I think when I was younger I would have hated this episode, but now I see it as Trek doing what it does best- telling powerful stories through analogy. I must admit I wasn't particularly surprised when I read some online views that didn't exactly rate it as a classic, but I actually do think it should be up there with the best of Trek. This was a wonderful discovery to me, I've been watching Trek for 20 years at least, I've seen every TNG, DS9 and VOY at least twice, some episodes many more times than that. To find a new episode that really hit home like that, well, it was, and is, a real joy that I'm actually really excited about- I feel like I have touched a little bit of that fervor that must have driven fans to keep talking about Trek and keeping it alive after it ended in the 60's. With episodes like this, how could they not?