I was wondering one thing. Where is spock during this episode? Is he in his quarters? Is he in engineering? Because he's not on bridge or in holodeck.
Dancing in his quarters. Why? Does he have more important things to do?
I was wondering one thing. Where is spock during this episode? Is he in his quarters? Is he in engineering? Because he's not on bridge or in holodeck.
I believe the question is why he wasn't on the bridge during the episode's climax, a crisis so dire Ortegas was reinstated to duty despite being suspended last week. The "real world" reason is because we the audience are supposed to believe he really is in the holodeck with La'an, but it's not really addressed where he actually was in the episode.Dancing in his quarters. Why? Does he have more important things to do?
I believe the question is why he wasn't on the bridge during the episode's climax, a crisis so dire Ortegas was reinstated to duty despite being suspended last week. The "real world" reason is because we the audience are supposed to believe he really is in the holodeck with La'an, but it's not really addressed where he actually was in the episode.
I believe the question is why he wasn't on the bridge during the episode's climax, a crisis so dire Ortegas was reinstated to duty despite being suspended last week. The "real world" reason is because we the audience are supposed to believe he really is in the holodeck with La'an, but it's not really addressed where he actually was in the episode.
In retrospect, I assumed Spock was on the bridge all along, but the shots were framed in such a way as to exclude him, to keep the audience in belief that he was on the holodeck.
Scotty: So it can AI generate holodeck characters now? Because it could only copy the faces of pre-existing people back in my day.Now when Geordi and Scotty first go into the turbolift in "Relics(TNG)" the scene will hit a little differently.
Geordi: "Wait'll you see the holodeck!"
That was his stunt doubleJust checked, there is a wide shot as they dive away from the gamma ray burst, and Spock can be seen sitting at his station. Well, it's man in blue with short shiny black hair anyway.
Sulu: Appeared first as an Astrophysicist, then Botanist, then Helmsman and an experienced combat officer (per Spock) with an interest in Botany.But when Sulu first shows up on the Enterprise, he's an astrobotanist, not helm.
Well, rumor is the Board said they could do either Mission Impossible or STAR TREK - not both due to the financial strain it would cause - and their vote was for Mission Impossible because the TV series Man From U.N.C.L.E. was doing very well; James Bond films were very popular too - to the point other studios were doing Spy themed films such as In Like Flint and Matt Helm.She green lit the production. Herb Solow had a lot more to do with it. Lucy's involvement in Star Trek is greatly exaggerated.
Oh this episode was an absolutely scathing rebuttable of Hollywood productions if you know what to look for.Different topic, but didn’t it feel kind of ironic also when Uhura-as-the-agent talked about how their Trek stand-in show used science-fiction trappings to cleverly tell stories full of meaning and topical commentary that it was said during an episode of Trek that didn’t really have much to say about anything really? At least the Holodeck story felt that way to me.
I'd say a little of both.So we're the bloopers actual bloopers, or were they staged to be presented as bloopers? I felt like they were planned, written and acted to appear as bloopers. So to me they were clever but not funny .
One aspect of this that I think people are missing is the scenario was based upon a series of mystery books La'an read as a child.
Mystery is, by nature, a pretty formulaic genre (similar to romance), and not a "style" genre like SF or fantasy. And if she was also reading mysteries which were meant to appeal to young readers, I wouldn't expect too deep of a story.
Nancy Drew? Seems more Miss Marple or Jessica Fletcher.I think that may be the most damning critique.
"Adult woman wants Nancy Drew series to be DEEP, EPIC, and SERIOUS."
I loved how Bellows tipped his hat to the fan theory that Jessica Fletcher was a serial killer on Murder She Wrote with his suggestion that Amelia Moon was actually the killer.Nancy Drew? Seems more Miss Marple or Jessica Fletcher.
From what I gather scenes with Peck and Chong give off some sort of "energy." A spark or something.Having slept on it, I'm truly baffled by the La'an/Spock thing now. Last nght after my initial viewing I was so focused on the unintentionally-depressing nostalgia aspect that the new romance just sort of washed over me, but wtf? It doesn't feel natural for either character, and it's been given no time at all to develop naturally or breathe.
Anyone got any behind the scenes info on this? Was it just the hobby horse of one of the writers? It feels absurd in how abruptly its been introduced.
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