With a nod to R.U.R., besides.Because the story was yet another take on Forbidden Planet?![]()
Kirk: "A very old and lonely man. And a young and lonely man. We put on a pretty poor show, didn't we? If only I could forget."
McCoy: "Well, I guess that's all. I can tell Jim later or you can. Considering his opponent's longevity, truly an eternal triangle. You wouldn't understand that, would you, Spock? You see, I feel sorrier for you than I do for him because you'll never know the things that love can drive a man to. The ecstasies, the miseries, the broken rules, the desperate chances, the glorious failures, the glorious victories. All of these things you'll never know simply because the word love isn't written into your book."
McCoy: " I do wish he could forget her."
One might argue that Kirk did not fall in love with Rayna, nor did he get his priorities mixed in any other way.
The sequence of events is roughly this:
-Landing party arrives to perform a crucial mission.
-Invincible robot overwhelms and stops them.
-Master to the robot invites them to tea and crumpets, the Sicilian way.
-Master promises to help with the mission, introduces the Babe.
-Landing party agrees to let Master do what Master wants, basically at gunpoint - but Master also has a point in saying he can get the mission done faster.
-Inexplicably, Master then stalls and cheats; landing party doesn't understand why.
-Spock wants to study the Master's collections to get to the bottom of this.
-Kirk dismisses Spock's approach and instead homes in on the Babe.
-Kirk's approach is fully validated when it turns out that the reason for Master's stalling and cheating was the Babe.
-Kirk proceeds to exploit this angle to the fullest, killing the Babe, collapsing the Master's master plan and making him cooperate, or at least cease resisting. Spock's angle provides only incidental information and proves ineffective.
-All is well that ends well; Kirk goes back to his ship and has an emotional moment of reflection - about the Master, not the Babe!
Really, even though the audience at times is lured to thinking that Kirk is in love with the Babe and acting irrationally, in hindsight it merely is part of a clever con. Kirk shows no emotional attachment to Rayna Kapec after having completed the dirty work. All his sympathy is on the side of Flint the Immortal, as in this bit of monologue (italics mine):
Kirk: "A very old and lonely man. And a young and lonely man. We put on a pretty poor show, didn't we? If only I could forget."
McCoy's response to Spock is also all about Flint (and Jim) rather than Rayna (italics mine):
McCoy: "Well, I guess that's all. I can tell Jim later or you can. Considering his opponent's longevity, truly an eternal triangle. You wouldn't understand that, would you, Spock? You see, I feel sorrier for you than I do for him because you'll never know the things that love can drive a man to. The ecstasies, the miseries, the broken rules, the desperate chances, the glorious failures, the glorious victories. All of these things you'll never know simply because the word love isn't written into your book."
It is only McCoy's gender choice in the parting line that is out of line with the rest of the episode (italics mine):
McCoy: " I do wish he could forget her."
It really should be "him"...
Timo Saloniemi
I was always more amused and suprised by the fact that McCoy checks the Rayna android's PULSE after she short-circuits and collapses. McCoy checks her carotid artery.![]()
I was always more amused and suprised by the fact that McCoy checks the Rayna android's PULSE after she short-circuits and collapses. McCoy checks her carotid artery.![]()
Hmm, could have been a "bio-mechanical" model like the Ash and Bishop series from the "Alien" films, milky pneumatic fluids transporting needed chemicals throughout the chassis... Oh! Who am I kidding?! Eddie has the right idea; let's just laugh at the bad material!
With all its blatant weaknesses this episode still was very thought provoking for me.
With all its blatant weaknesses this episode still was very thought provoking for me.
That's one of the things that makes TOS such a good show; even the episodes that weren't on the same "epic masterpiece" level as some of the others still presented interesting ideas that challenged your mind. TOS was a venue for some of the best sci-fi writers of the time to come forth and put their own concepts on the table; in a way, TOS is a lot like those old anthology sci-fi books you could buy back in the day (or just check a used book store) which would include a bunch of short stories from different writers, each one unique but equally thought-provoking.
Sorry, I guess I went a little off-topic there, gushing about TOS...but I liked the point you made!![]()
It has the usual 3rd season faults...
I'd like to know just exactly what those "usual 3rd season faults" are.
The old Battlestar Galactica was cheesy.(like "THE OLD BATTLESTAR GALACTICA WAS CHEESY OMG")
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