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Revist of UNfavorite Episodes

Yeah you're right. I must have tuned out for a second...



I found it funnier on the page than on screen. I felt the dialog was funny enough without the pushing done by the cast. But, that's a matter of taste and mine skews away from broad comedy.
I think if they need to tone down Harry Mudd with his curled moustache he could have been tying damsels to a railway track.
 
Kirk reacting to Scotty belting Korax because the Enterprise was insulted but Kirk wasn't is amazing. Shatner is perfect here, starting with anger, going with pride and then crestfallen sheepishness. Doohan, who has a tendency to go very broad with Scotty at this stage of the series forward plays it just right.

Just wanted to say I thought your whole post was fantastic. I didn't agree with all of it (we part ways on the comedy a bit and I love all of The Voyage Home), but you presented your arguments well. And the above is really well-written and utterly nails it, with the minor nitpick that I don't think Jimmy D. went too broad with Scotty in all episodes from Tribbles forward. He did in some for sure.

The Kirk-Scotty scene after the bar brawl, which you excellently summarized above, is one of my favorite scenes in all of Star Trek, between my two favorite characters. The dialogue and acting are letter-perfect. I don't know how many takes it took them, but goodness, did Shatner and Doohan hit that out of the proverbial park. Nice call.
 
Just wanted to say I thought your whole post was fantastic. I didn't agree with all of it (we part ways on the comedy a bit and I love all of The Voyage Home), but you presented your arguments well. And the above is really well-written and utterly nails it, with the minor nitpick that I don't think Jimmy D. went too broad with Scotty in all episodes from Tribbles forward. He did in some for sure.

The Kirk-Scotty scene after the bar brawl, which you excellently summarized above, is one of my favorite scenes in all of Star Trek, between my two favorite characters. The dialogue and acting are letter-perfect. I don't know how many takes it took them, but goodness, did Shatner and Doohan hit that out of the proverbial park. Nice call.

I really appreciate you saying all that, thank you. I think that scene in tribbles and Scotty's "Jim!" in Mirror, Mirror are two fantastic moments for them. Regardless of Doohan's personal feelings (and who knows how he truly felt at that time), the chemistry between the actors was amazing.

I guess it could be argued that Doohan found the character at that stage and played him more emotional when provoked. He was quite good in Spectre of the Gun and was a joy in Elaan of Troyius now that I think about it. I prefer A Taste of Armageddon and Friday's Child Scotty. But yeah. characters evolve. Which is good, otherwise we'd have had 3 years of Shouty Spock.
 
Oh so back on my on topic, I sucked it up and watched "I, Mudd" last night. It had been years since I've seen it as I don't really like Star Trek as a full-on comedy and prefer the humor come from tension relieving character interactions. Or, at the very least, keep the character in character.

"I, Mudd" starts off promising. The McCoy / Spock banter is a gem and Spock seems particularly testy when he delivers the "beads and rattles" blow, which is really just great.

Then it starts to fall apart.

Marc Daniels proves again he's the wrong man for directing and staging fights as Norman's stunt double is painfully obvious. Worse is the editing when Norman shoves Scotty. Doohan hits the wall, slides down and stops. That needed to be cut a split second sooner. Then Doohan's own "Captain! He's here!" and slumps his head - and only his head. Like he's sneezing.

At first Kirk is amused at being "on a little trip" (and even Spock responds like it's just an interesting day at the office), then just a minute later he's annoyed. You're ship is being hijacked, Don'tcha think you should be a little more concerned.

This is not yet a comedy, mind you. But it's still unintentionally funny.

After Norman shuts himself off after he sets the ship on course, I get why nobody fires a phaser at him because they can't stop the ship without him. But both Uhura and Chekov nearly walk into him as if they don't expect him to be there after FOUR DAYS of his not moving. Ever put a trash can in the middle of the hallway? After a short time, you get used to it being there.

Why am I noticing all of this? Because I'm having a rotten time.

Finally they beam down and meet Mudd (who apparently asked for specific people by job title - why Chekov???). Carmel is no long the vaguely sinister drug dealer with a heart of gold. He's over the top and "Roger C'ing" all over the screen. Everyone plays it too broadly, overselling the comedy like borscht belt comedians. I only laughed three times: twice with Stella and once when Harry said "Spock you're going to love it here, they all think and talk exactly like you do." Those are genius. And CHARACTER bits.

Other than that. Ugh. I remember laughing as a kid, but after that, this one fell to the bottom of the list. I have gone on record saying that I don't hate any episode of this series, but this one really puts that claim to the test.

Rumor has it that this is what soured Roddenberry on Gene Coon. If it's true, I get it, because this is just awful.

"I, Mudd" and "A Piece of the Action" fall at the very bottom of the list for me. Well below the worst of the third season, honestly. At least "Tribbles" kept everyone in character, which is why I enjoy it. I know this is a favorite of a lot of fans and the cast, but holy jeez.... I need never watch this one again.
IDK. For me it has one of my favorite exchanges in all of Star Trek:
KIRK: All right, Harry, explain. How did you get here? We left you in custody after that affair on the Rigel mining planet.

MUDD: Yes, well, I organised a technical information service bringing modern industrial techniques to backward planets, making available certain valuable patents to struggling young civilisations throughout the galaxy.

KIRK: Did you pay royalties to the owners of those patents?

MUDD: Well, actually, Kirk, as a defender of the free enterprise system, I found myself in a rather ambiguous conflict as a matter of principle.

SPOCK: He did not pay royalties.

MUDD: Knowledge, sir, should be free to all.

KIRK: Who caught you?

MUDD: That, sir, is an outrageous assumption.

KIRK: Yes. Who caught you?

MUDD: I sold the Denebians all the rights to a Vulcan fuel synthesiser.

KIRK: And the Denebians contacted the Vulcans.

MUDD: How'd you know?

KIRK: That's what I would have done.

MUDD: It's typical police mentality. They've got no sense of humour. They arrested me.

MCCOY: Oh, I find that shocking.

MUDD: Worse than that. Do know what the penalty for fraud is on Deneb Five?

SPOCK: The guilty party has his choice. Death by electrocution, death by gas, death by phaser, death by hanging...

MUDD: The key word in your entire peroration, Mister Spock, was, death. Barbarians. Well, of course, I left.

KIRK: He broke jail.

MUDD: I borrowed transportation.

KIRK: He stole a spaceship.

MUDD: The patrol reacted in a hostile manner.

KIRK: They fired at him.

MUDD: They've no respect for private property. They damaged the bloody spaceship. Well, I got away, but I couldn't navigate, so I wandered out through unmapped space, and here I found Mudd.

SPOCK: You went to substantial risk and effort to bring a starship here. Logically, you must have a compelling motive.

MUDD: Spock, you're going to love it here. They all talk just the way you do.
^^^
Yeah at least for me that comedy bit worked very well and I thought everyone did a nice job with it. I laughed very hard the very first time I saw it. YMMV.
 
Didn’t David Gerrold have a hand in developing “I, Mudd?” That certainly gels with him also wanting to see more overt humour in Star Trek along with Gene Coon. The three comedy episodes seemed to have pushed Roddenberry to later decree to Frieberger that “Star Trek is not a comedy.”

And in the end I side with Roddenberry on this one. I much prefer the contextual humour rather than overtly playing it for laughs. It’s probably why I’m not a fan of TVH despite its popularity. With the exception of some moments TVH seemed modelled more along the lines of “A Piece Of The Action” with the crew being fish out of water. It certainly wasn’t a time travel story like “Tomorrow Is Yesterday,” “The City On The Edge Of Forever” or even “Assignment: Earth.”

The stakes in a story also matter. In “The Trouble With Tribbles” the stakes are relatively minor. In “A Piece Of The Action” the stakes are the landing party’s lives and getting off the planet in one piece. Fixing Iotian society is incidental given the damage was already done. But in “I, Mudd” the stakes are the lives of billions of human and humanoid lives in danger of being essentially enslaved by the androids.
 
Especially since it clearly disproves the belief that the Federation of the 23rd century doesn't use Money/Currency.

Unless Earth did a way with money but other planets in the federation did not. Tribbles leaned hard on "credits" in the next episode. Or they phased out money in the years between the series and The Voyage Home.

But honestly, the moment Kirk said "they still use money" I called shenanigans. McCoy had money in the previous film and the series talked about some kinda currency a few times.
 
I always found the comedy episodes hilarious in my opinion. "I, Mudd" it's silly but that's the point of the episode. You also can nitpick plenty of TOS episodes. The humor is one the things that makes it different from the later Star Trek shows. Sometimes they didn't took themselves too seriously and that's fine. "I, Mudd" works because it shows a great understanding of how the characters act, that's why is so funny.
 
Part of the issue with the comedy episodes, particularly “I, Mudd” and “A Piece Of The Action,” is that they catered to the mindset that became prevalent on shows like “Lost In Space,” “Voyage To The Bottom Of The Sea” and “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.” Whatever serious intent those shows might have once had was lost to cater to camp and absurdity. Roddenberry might well have saw something like that happening and he sure as hell didn’t want it on his series so he cut it off at the knees, which apparently put him at odds with Gene Coon who had green lighted those episodes.

Yeah, it showed Star Trek had the flexibility to do that kind of humour, but Roddenberry didn’t want it becoming a habit, so no more outright comedy.
 
Unless Earth did a way with money but other planets in the federation did not. Tribbles leaned hard on "credits" in the next episode. Or they phased out money in the years between the series and The Voyage Home.

But honestly, the moment Kirk said "they still use money" I called shenanigans. McCoy had money in the previous film and the series talked about some kinda currency a few times.
I'm thinking they're referring to physical money in the 20th century. Notes and coins. I actually think they are phasing out the use of cash in Australia since covid. Some shops here will only accept cards. So I think Scotty gets double his "pay" but its credit is in his bank account - he never sees the actual cash.
Even in the TNG era I saw Dr Crusher buying some material from an alien market so I think money had to exchange hands there. Still could have been credits though.
 
Especially since it clearly disproves the belief that the Federation of the 23rd century doesn't use Money/Currency.

Unless Earth did a way with money but other planets in the federation did not. Tribbles leaned hard on "credits" in the next episode. Or they phased out money in the years between the series and The Voyage Home.

But honestly, the moment Kirk said "they still use money" I called shenanigans. McCoy had money in the previous film and the series talked about some kinda currency a few times.

I'm thinking they're referring to physical money in the 20th century. Notes and coins. I actually think they are phasing out the use of cash in Australia since covid. Some shops here will only accept cards. So I think Scotty gets double his "pay" but its credit is in his bank account - he never sees the actual cash.
Even in the TNG era I saw Dr Crusher buying some material from an alien market so I think money had to exchange hands there. Still could have been credits though.

Folks...folks.........

R.d81dbab9306e0f618b08de031cfe71a3
 
Especially since it clearly disproves the belief that the Federation of the 23rd century doesn't use Money/Currency.

Oh goody: this again.

I'm thinking they're referring to physical money in the 20th century. Notes and coins. I actually think they are phasing out the use of cash in Australia since covid. Some shops here will only accept cards. So I think Scotty gets double his "pay" but its credit is in his bank account - he never sees the actual cash.
Even in the TNG era I saw Dr Crusher buying some material from an alien market so I think money had to exchange hands there. Still could have been credits though.

I still say they have credits for energy intensive expenditures like transporters and holodecks, and per diem for Starfleet officers who travel outside the Federation Iike Crusher in Farpoint or the DS9 crew, but otherwise we're moneyless.
 
I still say they have credits for energy intensive expenditures like transporters and holodecks, and per diem for Starfleet officers who travel outside the Federation Iike Crusher in Farpoint or the DS9 crew, but otherwise we're moneyless.

I suppose if you can have transporter beams and time travel, you can have a moneyless human civilization. But in real life, human nature demands that accounts be kept. We need a convenient way to store value, and a way to translate the values of disparate goods into a common medium so exchanges will make sense. And that's what money does.
 
I suppose if you can have transporter beams and time travel, you can have a moneyless human civilization. But in real life, human nature demands that accounts be kept. We need a convenient way to store value, and a way to translate the values of disparate goods into a common medium so exchanges will make sense. And that's what money does.

I'm hopeful we can grow out of that.
 
I suppose if you can have transporter beams and time travel, you can have a moneyless human civilization. But in real life, human nature demands that accounts be kept. We need a convenient way to store value, and a way to translate the values of disparate goods into a common medium so exchanges will make sense. And that's what money does.
A common means of exchange is very useful.
 
I suppose if you can have transporter beams and time travel, you can have a moneyless human civilization. But in real life, human nature demands that accounts be kept. We need a convenient way to store value, and a way to translate the values of disparate goods into a common medium so exchanges will make sense. And that's what money does.
Energy and fuel are not unlimited resources. You would have thought more species would trade those.
 
Roddenberry’s original vision for Star Trek was to keep the stories on the frontier and not get bogged down with fleshing out how things worked back on Earth and in known territory. The loose implication in TOS is that some sort of monetary system still existed only the familiar greed that went with it was a thing of the past, as evidenced by Kirk asserting that supposedly valuable jewels and rare stones meant nothing to them.

It was later in the films (TVH) and TNG it was asserted the Federation had a moneyless system. But that was contradicted right off in “Encounter At Farpoint.”

I assume that some sort of currency/exchange system does indeed exist to facilitate trade and dealings between member worlds and even non Federation worlds. The real distinction seems to be that generally the accumulation of personal wealth has become much less a thing as most people’s needs are easily met.
 
First off, I wish to compliment Ssosmcin on his post about Tribbles. Fantastic post! I agree that Tribbles is the best of the "comedy" episodes because the humor is situational and character driven.

I like ST:IV quite a lot, but the major flaw I see in it is not the light-hearted antics. This brings things back to the "unfavorite episode" subject, if you count the movies as further episodes. The overarching dilemma of ST:IV is like a bad Space 1999 episode. Some unknown thing, from some unknown place, for some unknown reason, menaces Moonbase Alpha. Then, 50 minutes later, for some unknown reason, just goes away!

This is the plot of ST:IV. It violates a cardinal rule of Trek: even if the crew isn't sure about the nature of the alien phenomenon they are encountering, we at least have some speculation from Spock about what it might all mean. In this case, all we get is "it's making humpback whale noises -- let's give it some humpback whales."

This has forced me to invent a plausible back story to explain the probe's actions:

At some faraway galactic university, the alien upper classmen have set the freshmen class on a "treasure hunt." Of course, the fun comes from the impossibility of getting several of the items on the list.

"Number six: Bring us a recording of humpback whales from planet earth" (snicker-snicker)
 
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