Well, he sent a couple a crewmembers to the Cornfield. The Thasians just brought them back.When he's on the Antares. Not when he's on the Enterprise.
Well, he sent a couple a crewmembers to the Cornfield. The Thasians just brought them back.When he's on the Antares. Not when he's on the Enterprise.
Well, he sent a couple a crewmembers to the Cornfield. The Thasians just brought them back.
Well, Dan Hollis didn't end up in the cornfield after all. Anthony sent him to NASA mission control in 1968, changed his name to Cromwell and, for sadistic reasons known only to himself, made sure hearing Perry Como got Cromwell violently ill.
Well, Dan Hollis didn't end up in the cornfield after all. Anthony sent him to NASA mission control in 1968, changed his name to Cromwell and, for sadistic reasons known only to himself, made sure hearing Perry Como got Cromwell violently ill.
Same actor played Hollis on TZ and Mission Control guy on “Assignment Earth”. The former wanted to play a Perry Como record butA little help here?
So Charlie, there's the short story, the Twilight Zone episode and Charlie X. From the story I think I remember that the superbeing could read minds and they had to be very careful about their thoughts based on to what awful things happened to others, and that the narrator wasn't certain that the rest of the world hadn't been destroyed. I don't think Charlie could read minds on the Enterprise and I'm not sure he had the power to destroy a world but did he destroy the Antares from light years away or did he leave the Antares with the damage already set up?When he's on the Antares. Not when he's on the Enterprise.
Did Charlie ever make a follow-up appearance in the novels? I vaguely recall something possibly from the DC Comics run. In comparison to prose novels, comics do tend toward somewhat more outlandish/sensationalistic situations (that's why I like them).
Kor
It also isn't clear if Evans made the "warped baffle plate" on the Antares vanish before he left that ship, or later as an attempt to prevent Antares from warning Enterprise.
My interpretation is he does it later, on the bridge when the Anatares contact the Enterprise to try and warn them.
Emotionally, they all get very "naked". Also it's not that Spock solves the problem per se; Mr Scott mentions that there's no known formula for mixing matter and antimatter cold, but Spock recalls that scientists in the Federation have published a theoretical formula. It's just that the formula has never been actually tested in the real world.I'm always impressed that McCoy solves the infection problem, and Spock solves the engine restart problem (in his head no less) in literally 20 minutes. I mean damn.
I'm also always disappointed that, despite the title, no one actually gets naked in this episode.
Yes, that is an interesting thing about it.You'll get no photos from me. Much of this episode (which is arguably the most tension-filled of the 78) plays out in real-time, HIGH NOON-style.
And then he apologizes! I love that whole scene.Plus, it gets us (arguably) Shatner's best/most sympathetic emoting which comes close to matching Nimoy's. It's the episode which inspired thousands of fanzines. Plus again, Uhura gets to yell BACK at Kirky, even if he blows her head off 15 minutes later at the intercom.![]()
And then he apologizes! I love that whole scene.
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