Good point. However, we do see Kirk's frustration ramp up and up and up throughout the episode.He apologizes in the first scene but later when he screams at her from the briefing room, that goes unremarked. But I'm sure she understood.
Good point. However, we do see Kirk's frustration ramp up and up and up throughout the episode.He apologizes in the first scene but later when he screams at her from the briefing room, that goes unremarked. But I'm sure she understood.
Well, Life Got In The Way again, but I'm back.
The Naked Time by John D. F. Black
I love first season! It's all so new and fresh.![]()
Spock and Joe go down to a planet because the scientists aren't responding. Well, that's cause they're all dead. In weird ways too. Our guys are sensibly wearing hazmat suits. Oh no! Joe has to scratch his nose and stupidly takes off his glove, getting infected with... something.
McCoy and Spock tease each other in Sickbay and I love it. However, neither decontamination nor a medical exam found the infection. Joe is freaked by what he saw - "They didn't care."
I love the little snake hiss/rattle for the infection signal. Also, Joe (and later others) rubbing their hands together in the "out out damn spot" move.
Riley and Sulu talk fencing. They lampshade Sulu's love of botany. Joe gets grumpy, then depressed, and tries to kill himself with a butter knife. Riley gets infected here, possibly Sulu too.
McCoy is doing surgery on Joe. His frustration is palpable - "Why is this man dying?"
The planet is shrinking so the ship has to be in a tight spiral and in close. Everyone is supposed to be on their A game. So Sulu decides to play hooky! When Riley gets sent out, there's a Subversive Moment when Uhura takes over for him. Riley even comments on women's rights!
Riley then hits on and infects Christine, which leads to a heartbreaking scene later.
Meanwhile, Sulu has taken his shirt off and is playing Musketeer. I love the look on his face when he pricks himself with the foil!
The helm *and* engines are dead. "Captain" Riley has taken over engineering and looks like he's having a ball playing with switches and buttons.
Sulu on the bridge! Uhura tries to calm him, leading to the infamous, "Sorry, neither!"
Time is running out and fights are breaking out everywhere. Riley mentions the bowling alley! He also mentions how the women of the ship should look, which has Uhura angrily trying to cut him off the intercom. Rand takes the helm, which I had completely forgotten! Scotty's in a Jeffries tube - is this the first time we see that?
The Scene in Sickbay. Nimoy and Barrett really nailed this. When Spock says, "I am sorry" to her, there's So Much There. A beautiful scene.
Spock's infected now and is trying to keep control... and failing. Again, Nimoy cannot be given enough credit here. He played a bunch of conflicting emotions and did it damn well. Then Spock infects Kirk and we get some nice work from Shatner. Kirk complains about his ship taking everything, but he also tells Enterprise, "Never lose you. Never."
Scotty mentions the laws of physics.![]()
McCoy has made a breakthrough - the water on the planet changed! Being water, it didn't show on scans and it spread through sweat.
Kirk says Engage decades before Picard. The never-before-done way they started the engines back up gets us to Do the Time Warp. Saved! Kirk looks at Rand and his closeup is beautiful - all the regret and sadness there.
Whatever one thinks of the plot, the character work in this episode is superb. Everyone gets some nice bits. Kirk and Uhura's rising frustration on the bridge leads to a nice scene between them where the respect between them is obvious. All the actors do terrific jobs. There's some terrific humor in here, as well as some pathos. All in all, just a great episode; one of my faves.
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.
It's not a hazmat suit -- it's for the cold. The hood is clearly wide open on the bottom.
My personal opinion is that Spock's human half protects him from that.(Especially when we see Spock cry later, and in later episodes where we're told how they oppress emotions and how releasing it can be fatal... so in retrospect, his crying is HUGE.)
Yes, super creepy!What about the dude with the paintbrush scribbling "LOVE MANKIND" and later "SINNER REPENT" very legibly on bulkhead walls and doors, as if there wasn't enough suspense and fear already - now combined with a sense of psychological threat. How would the crewman ensure people repent?
So when they went down to the planet all they knew was that it was cold down there and presumably no life-signs. So all they needed was an environmental suits from the cold.not total protection from an unknown virus.My personal opinion is that Spock's human half protects him from that.
Yes, super creepy!
I think the episode beautifully shows all the different ways that different people respond to being drunk/drugged too.
Wikipedia calls them "environmental suits."
Well remember, supposedly the TNG era Transporters had the magic biofilter that would automatically filter out and Destroy any bad viruses in the process of transporting from one place to another.At least in TOS they wore some sort of protection, unlike these future bozos...
https://tng.trekcore.com/hd/albums/1x03/nakednow_hd_047.jpg![]()
While on that scene, I just noticed these lines from Kirk:Spock's infected now and is trying to keep control... and failing. Again, Nimoy cannot be given enough credit here. He played a bunch of conflicting emotions and did it damn well. Then Spock infects Kirk and we get some nice work from Shatner. Kirk complains about his ship taking everything, but he also tells Enterprise, "Never lose you. Never."
While on that scene, I just noticed these lines from Kirk:
KIRK: I have a beautiful yeoman. Have you noticed her, Mister Spock? You're allowed to notice her. The Captain's not permittedSo, Kirk is stating that there is a rule (formal or informal) that the Captain is not allowed to romantically fraternize with anyone under his command, but Spock, as First Officer, is allowed...maybe?![]()
Power dynamics in a relationship are definitely something that needs to be considered. There is a reason why codes of ethics or military regulations prohibit romantic relationships between supervisors and subordinates, or between officers and enlisted, or personnel in the same chain of command. The power different creates a very unbalanced relationship, that can be weaponized very quickly, or misinterpreted very easily.Fraternizing with someone assigned to you as your assistant seems different from fraternizing with other officers. Though the commanding officer of a vessel shouldn’t at all, right? Because of the power differential?
So, Kirk is stating that there is a rule (formal or informal) that the Captain is not allowed to romantically fraternize with anyone under his command, but Spock, as First Officer, is allowed...maybe?
Of course, that means the locals of the Roman Empire Planet must speak English as their native tongue, since the play on the words "sun" and "son" only works in English.. . . Then at the end, when they are puzzled by the "sun" worship, Uhura informs them that she's been monitoring their communications, and it's not the sun up in the sky they worship, it's the Son of God. Sends chills down your spine.
Based on some form of universe (maybe only galactic) clock/time effect, it must trigger a genetic feature coded in all higher intelligent life forms to speak a common language that Eathlings happen to call English...Of course, that means the locals of the Roman Empire Planet must speak English as their native tongue, since the play on the words "sun" and "son" only works in English.
No need to speculate on that score, since just after the landing party beam down we get this exchange:Of course, that means the locals of the Roman Empire Planet must speak English as their native tongue, since the play on the words "sun" and "son" only works in English.
That's true -- the "Son" worshipers would have spoken Vulgar Latin.If course if it were a complete Earth parallel, it wouldn't have been English.![]()
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