AND SHOUTING!!!!!Spock's look and smiles
AND SHOUTING!!!!!Spock's look and smiles
You're probably right about Blakes7 but I'll forgive any episode with Avon and Villa in it. I'm just not as hyper-critical of it is as I am of TOS for some reason.Blakes 7 has many bad episodes, Commish! The first series is almost fault free but series 2 had Gambit and Keeper which were bad while series 4 had Assassin, Stardrive, Animals and especially Orbit! As for Firefly I've only ever seen it the once so can't really comment!
JB
AND SHOUTING!!!!!
It's a mischaracterization to say the airing order was done "carelessly". The Production order is the shooting order but not every episode had the same post production process or duration. For instance, Corbomite was the first production episode, but being effects heavy it wasn't available to be aired as one of the first. The show was so tight in the first season they were constantly at risk of missing airdates, and sometimes NBC aired the episode they did because it was the only one available.
It's a mischaracterization to say the airing order was done "carelessly". The Production order is the shooting order but not every episode had the same post production process or duration. For instance, Corbomite was the first production episode, but being effects heavy it wasn't available to be aired as one of the first. The show was so tight in the first season they were constantly at risk of missing airdates, and sometimes NBC aired the episode they did because it was the only one available.
That's a good point, although I'm sure that doesn't explain, for instance, not showing "Where No Man Has Gone Before" (which, being the second pilot, would surely have been completed well before work on any other episodes was done, yes?) until three episodes in. And the network chose to show "The Man Trap" first over the production team's favored choice of the more character-centered "The Naked Time" because they wanted the bug-eyed-monster. It wasn't just random or just because there was no option. But when I said "careless" I really meant specifically with respect to internal continuity and character development, which simply weren't a great concern in light of the other issues mentioned. Perhaps I should have said "indifferent"? Airdate order had its reasoning at the time, true, but it really comes off a jumbled mess today, IMO.Finally, the premiere episode of each season was carefully considered. "The Man Trap" was selected because it was the only completed show emphasizing the program's "strange new worlds" that were so important to NBC; "Amok Time" and "Spock's Brain" were selected because they could be heavily promoted around Leonard Nimoy, the show's breakout star. You can quibble with this logic, but there was a logic behind these decisions (and plenty of memos that still exist explaining that logic).
That's a good point, although I'm sure that doesn't explain, for instance, not showing "Where No Man Has Gone Before" (which, being the second pilot, would surely have been completed well before work on any other episodes was done, yes?) until three episodes in.
And the network chose to show "The Man Trap" first over the production team's favored choice of the more character-centered "The Naked Time" because they wanted the bug-eyed-monster. It wasn't just random or just because there was no option.
But when I said "careless" I really meant specifically with respect to internal continuity and character development, which simply weren't a great concern in light of the other issues mentioned. Perhaps I should have said "indifferent"? Airdate order had its reasoning at the time, true, but it really comes off a jumbled mess today, IMO.
I wouldn't necessarily have picked it as an opener, either, but I don't think it's a bad introduction to the characters at all, actually. Their behavior in it isn't actually aberrant. It's merely exaggerated. Who they are underneath their facades of professionalism is revealed by the virus. The deep fears and desires they express aren't an artificial product of it, but merely exposed by it. This is what Kirk and Spock and Chapel and Sulu and all the others are really like. And because of the situation you can see it illustrated clearly. We find out more about them as characters in that episode than in almost any other. Rather than requiring the context of how they usually act to understand, this story provides context for understanding how they usually act."The Naked Time" would have made a terrible first episide, because you need to have spent some time getting to know the characters in their normal state for the full force of their aberrant behavior to land with full force. This was a problem for TNG's (admittedly bad) "The Naked Now" even as the 2nd episode.
The phaser rifle only appears in "Where No Man Has Gone Before" (and some publicity stills).
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