The Man Trap
So many people in the corridors! The Enterprise is a crowded busy place! [ . . . ]
Fun to see Rand interact with other crewmembers. [. . .]
I wonder how Crater can tell the creature when it’s in any form. [. . .]
And now that I think about it, how does a creature subsist on just salt?
I have to agree! Also, I never noticed this before (I love rewatches!) but FakeNancy almost does the finger-on-face thing to McCoy, just before she heads out and entices Darnell away. Great foreshadowing from the actress! The creature must have been ravenous, but clever enough to suppress that urge in order to avoid raising too much suspicionReally the stupidest thing the creature could do is kill the first guy. They could have received a bunch of salt from the Enterprise and then the Enterprise would have left. It really can’t control itself when it’s hungry.
The biggest giveaway is that when in human form the salt-creature gnaws on a knuckle almost constantly. Maybe the real Nancy never did that?I figured Crater knew behavioural tics and could recognize them. I don't know how he gained that practice, though, unless the salt vampire was doing one-creature costume plays for him
And now we have Kirk espousing words like an old gumshoe, with:SCOTT: Motive power? Beats me what makes it go.
KIRK: I'll buy speculation.
SCOTT: I'd sell it if I had any.
Followed by:“We're all aware of the need for salt on a hot and arid planet like this, Professor, but it's a mystery, and I don't like mysteries. They give me a bellyache and I've got a beauty right now”
“Remember my instructions, Lieutenant. Keep a tight fix on us. If we let out a yell I want an armed party down there before the echo dies.”
I can't tell if you're joking or not but "The Unreal McCoy" was the working title for this episode, as well as the name James Blish gave to his novelisation.First off, why is this episode referred to as "The Unreal McCoy?" I have a reference guide with the correct title and The Unreal McCoy in parentheses.
This is why I am really looking forward to revisiting the first half of Season OneI'm with everyone else on the banter seen among Rand, Sulu, and Uhura. I would love to see more "lower decks' style episodes featuring the junior officers. Or more relaxed, off duty moments.
First off, why is this episode referred to as "The Unreal McCoy?" I have a reference guide with the correct title and The Unreal McCoy in parentheses.
This salt creature, does it absorb memories from its victims? Nah, that doesn't make sense. It must read memories from those around it. It only knew about Nancy what McCoy remembered about Nancy, like the nickname plumb. The salt creature probably didn't know anything about Nancy that McCoy or Crater knew. Interesting camouflage how it appeared differently to whomever was looking at it.
the episode has Rand's best dialogue in her scene with Sulu
I can't tell if you're joking or not but "The Unreal McCoy" was the working title for this episode, as well as the name James Blish gave to his novelisation.
I can't tell if you're joking or not but "The Unreal McCoy" was the working title for this episode, as well as the name James Blish gave to his novelisation.
OK thanks. I wonder where I got the working title notion from?I believe that's Blish's title. George Clayton Johnson called one version of the story "Damsel with a Dulcimer," but every other version that I can remember seeing called it "The Man Trap."
Yup. "HE'S the real spook" is one of my favorites.
That was to prevent Crater from telling them how to identify it in whatever form it assumes.Couldn't even resist killing Crater at the end.
I prefer the foreshadowing of her psychiatric qualifications ready for her appearance in Dagger of the Mind: "Suppose he's going space happy, or something ?"
Does Sulu double as botanist? Just a hobby? Was he off duty?
Yeah, Chekov seems interested in life sciences and ecology (also reflected in TWoK) but Sulu should have been more astro sciences. In Shore Leave though, Sulu's analysis clearly shows his interest in botany is quite technical.Maybe Sulu should have been a relief science officer instead of Chekov. In "Where No Man Has Gone Before", he's apparently the head of astrosciences.
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