In less deft hands, this script could have easily just been a farce - like the odious Profit and Lace from Deep Space Nine - or a meh snoozer like You Are Cordially Invited.
Fortunately, this episode is actually trying to do a great deal more than simply being a lighthearted Trek comedy involving a "body swap" of sorts and a wedding. It largely dispenses with the fish-out-of-water comedy aspects in its third act, pivoting to real emotional turmoil for Spock, Chapel, T'Pring, and Amanda. It touches on deep and universal aspects of relationships, both familial and romantic. It succeeds, astonishingly, at both being one of the better Trek comedies and being a decent character study.
I have a hard time thinking of anything wrong with this episode. The choice to have the noncorporeal aliens talk like customer service representatives was...a choice...but it helped add levity to an episode where first contact was not the driving force. I thought the charades scene itself was a bit painful to watch, but that's more because of my own personal bias against "cringe comedy" - the scene was effective at getting me to feel vicarious embarrassment, so it worked.
Fortunately, this episode is actually trying to do a great deal more than simply being a lighthearted Trek comedy involving a "body swap" of sorts and a wedding. It largely dispenses with the fish-out-of-water comedy aspects in its third act, pivoting to real emotional turmoil for Spock, Chapel, T'Pring, and Amanda. It touches on deep and universal aspects of relationships, both familial and romantic. It succeeds, astonishingly, at both being one of the better Trek comedies and being a decent character study.
I have a hard time thinking of anything wrong with this episode. The choice to have the noncorporeal aliens talk like customer service representatives was...a choice...but it helped add levity to an episode where first contact was not the driving force. I thought the charades scene itself was a bit painful to watch, but that's more because of my own personal bias against "cringe comedy" - the scene was effective at getting me to feel vicarious embarrassment, so it worked.