I supported their recent Kickstarter, and I'm glad I did.
I enjoyed this episode, a lot. Vic is wonderful as Kirk, as always, and I continue to be astonished at how well the Star Trek Continues folks capture the look and feel of the original. This episode was especially notable in that respect, for finding so many actresses who looked a lot like the originals and for recreating sets as disparate as Miramanee's tent and Edith's street.
I was amused at the way Spock dived into Kirk's head at one point, without either "my mind to your mind" or a by-your-leave. Yeah, after melding with the guy -- and saving his ass in several different ways -- with mind melds in "Spectre of the Gun," "The Paradise Syndrome," "Requiem for Methuselah," and "Turnabout Intruder," it probably IS true that the path into Kirk's mind is a well-worn one for Spock at this point. And he probably doesn't stand much on ceremony.I'd expect a little more asking permission, though, if only with a raised eyebrow from Spock and a nod from Kirk. (True, he didn't ask permission in "Requiem for Methuselah," but for one thing, he was goaded into that by McCoy, and for another thing, I always thought his actions at the end of that episode were a bit out of character, since Spock is usually portrayed as being scrupulously ethical.)
I especially enjoyed Kirk's interaction with his nameless daughter, near the end; it actually choked me up. Good job there.
With fan-made productions, I usually give it the "And the Children Shall Lead" test -- Is this episode better than "And the Children Shall Lead"? If so, it's a worthy addition to TOS. Admittedly, that's not a very high bar... but I WANT to love these productions.
So yeah, it's a lovely episode in many ways, and I think they did a great job with it. I do have some problems with it, though, and most of those problems stem from the script.
Vic writes the stories and/or the scripts for most of these. I appreciate the fact that he's pouring absolutely ENORMOUS amounts of time and energy into these productions, so I understand that he wants to tell his stories. Certainly if anyone has earned the right to do Star Trek the way HE wants to do it, Vic has. And yet, I think the already great Star Trek Continues episodes could be even better with better scripts.
The central premise of this episode is that Kirk feels a lot of guilt about the deaths of so many of the women he's loved, to the point of his breaking down when the combination of a concussion and an experimental drug shake him up.
Kirk suffers an enormous amount of psychological trauma in Season 1 of TOS alone, and by the time we get to the post-Season 3 era where STC takes place, he's accumulated truly staggering amounts of psychological trauma. (I'm a licensed psychologist in the real world, so this is the sort of thing I can speak to, not that I think it takes any kind of training or expertise to speak to this issue, given how MUCH we've seen happen to Kirk over the course of those 79 episodes.) So yeah, Kirk IS overdue for a breakdown. I've been assuming that huge strides have been made in the treatment for psychological trauma by the 23rd century, or Kirk would have broken down before this.
What I don't really buy is the combination of the women in his past and guilt. I could buy the combination of the women in Kirk's past and despair or loneliness or feeling like he's some sort of Typhoid Mary in love -- fall in love with me and be instantly marked for death.
Or I could buy the combination of guilt and the deaths of all the crew who've perished under his command during the several years of the mission that have passed so far. Or guilt and Kirk's being unable to save his brother Sam from the parasites on Deneva. Admittedly, guilt -- like most emotions -- isn't always rational, but Kirk's feeling guilt about the women in his life just didn't work for me.
The resolution of the problem also didn't work for me. Kirk spends two minutes talking to each woman, and now he's all better? That felt rushed to me. I thought they could have spent a bit less time on the setting up of the problem and a bit more on the solving of it.
I thought that Kirk should have been relieved of command long before he was. Either McCoy or Spock -- or both -- should have realized that when the captain hallucinates on the Bridge, the time for him to be relieved has come.
Having McKennah save the day by saying that it was KIRK who needed closure felt kinda obvious and trite to me. I mean, it's nice to have another female character in TOS, and it's nice to see the ship's counselor have something actually useful to contribute. The part of me that's a licensed psychologist wants to love this.But if you're going to make SPOCK wrong, it should be about something a little less obvious. "Vic's fiancée wanted a chance to save the day" is an understandable motive, but I wanted an in-universe reason, as well.
I also spent a lot of time wondering why Spock didn't just meld with Kirk and root around in his mind looking for the password. We know that he can find information that the recipient of the meld has trouble accessing, himself, from the meld in "Dagger of the Mind." Heck, we even know that he can find information that the recipient doesn't want him to find, from the meld with Valeris in TUC, so it should be possible for Spock to retrieve the information, even though Kirk has "forgotten" it. And even if they wanted for that not to be possible, I was surprised that Spock didn't even suggest it.
I was glad that Spock apologized for having changed Kirk's memory without his permission in "Requiem for Methuselah." I thought it was a little odd, though, that Kirk didn't seem at all angry or concerned about it, acting like "Yeah, you changed my memory without my permission, but what's a little mind-altering between friends?" I mean, yeah, these guys are close, so I believe that Kirk would be willing to forgive Spock, but I'd think he'd be a little sterner or angrier about it first. That part seemed a bit rushed.
I was willing to overlook the use of the holodeck, even thought there IS no holodeck in TOS and even though it's portrayed as being cool new technology in the first episode of TNG. For one thing, there is a holodeck in TAS; for another thing, I think a fan-made production should get a lot of latitude on sets, and using the holodeck allowed them to recreate just a snippet of the original sets, rather than having to recreate the whole expensive thing.
I didn't like Spock's saying "Captain on the Bridge" at the end of the episode. They never said that in any of the 79 episodes. Nick Meyer added that to a few of the movies, because he wasn't a Star Trek fan and understood it as "the Navy in space," so he added some militaristic touches that were deliberately left out of TOS. But not only was "Captain on the Bridge" never said in episodes of TOS, it was also NOT said in the movies helmed by either Roddenberry or Nimoy, the people who had enough experience with TOS to know where the military line should be drawn.
(The writer's bible for the original series included this set of questions and answers. (Material in italics is quoted directly from the guide.)
Speaking of the starship U. S. S. Enterprise, is it a completely military arrangement?
Semi-military but without being heavily authoritarian. For example, we will not be aware of "officers" and "enlisted men" categories. And we will avoid saluting and other annoying medieval leftovers. On the other hand, we do keep a flavor of Naval usage and terminology to help encourage believability and identification by the audience. After all, our own Navy today still retains remnants of Nelson and Drake.)
All in all, it was a fun episode and a worthy addition to TOS. I do wish, though, that Vic would get some help with the scripts. Robert J. Sawyer had a cameo in this one, and he's about as real of a science fiction writer as I can think of -- maybe he'd be willing to write you a script. Dave Galanter just published a wonderful TOS novel; maybe he'd be willing to help out. Strong as STC is, I think it'd be even stronger with someone in the Dorothy Fontana role, someone who could polish the scripts and make sure they fit TOS.
Very nice review. I think that's a prefect way to "measure" these episodes...if they are better than the weakest of the actual TOS episodes, then they are worthy! And, every one of these STC episodes has been thus far. You can't really expect more from a fan production and, quite honestly, these productions are extremely professional and effective anyway.
It took me a long time to accept it, but maybe this really IS the future of Star Trek. If it is, and it is as good as this (and some of the good episodes of Phase II), I can live with that.