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Star Trek TOS Re-Watch

Still, I try to find some good in the bad: the UFP flag is seen for the first time.
And it looks like something designed in five minutes by a middle-school art student.

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I'll disagree because Edith is Edith. Kirk was always going to be instantly head over heels. Because she's Edith. And the reason why City is the all time classic that it is is because the performers back that up. It's not just on the page. They actually make it work.

Great story, great performances, but I never bought the relationship. At least not so much that it's Kirk's "one true love" that fans keep hitting me with (right up there with Khan being Kirk's greatest nemesis).

Paradise Syndrome. Parts of Shatner's performance are so on the money. But some of it... Sheesh.

Yeah, agreed. Some of it is the looping, some of it...isn't. Put this same story in an earlier season, and it would have been magic.

It's an amazingly natural performance. One of those moments where you think "She could have been like this the whole time?!?"

Yeah, when they let Majel have moments like this, where her own charm comes through, she's great. 98% of the time, Chapel isn't allowed that.

Funny that you managed to pick four with original scores.

Just takin' them in order. The next three have original scores before they start falling back on library music for a few weeks before one more full score. After that, stock music, library cues and the odd bit here and there.

It occurs to me as I read these recaps that the "public perception" of Star Trek leans heavily on this season. It's the loudest, most garish, most stereotypically 60's, really the most like Batman. It's even when there really started to be the "girl of the week" like on other contemporary shows like Wild Wild West.

It was the general Pop Art/Culture of the day. Star Trek, while still quite good, became more run of the mill because the showrunner (much as I love the guy) was your average TV producer who was just trying to get a challenging show on the air for less money and with less time. Episodes had to be "good enough."

Still, for all of its perceived faults, a lot of concepts from this season stuck with fandom and Trek in general. The UFP pennant? Third season. IDIC? Third season. Surak? Third season. Tholians? Third season. Kang? Third season. Col. Green? Third season. Hell, "All Our Yesterdays" spawned two successful novels.

Not too bad for the Freiberger run.
 
Great story, great performances, but I never bought the relationship. At least not so much that it's Kirk's "one true love" that fans keep hitting me with (right up there with Khan being Kirk's greatest nemesis).
Well, we can both agree that Rayna isn't in the running. For either category, I suppose.

I don't know that Kirk really HAD a nemesis. But Khan isn't even Star Trek's greatest villain. He's a great actor in a good episode that spring-boarded to a great movie. (I don't know who the best villain is. Kor?)

Still, for all of its perceived faults, a lot of concepts from this season stuck with fandom and Trek in general. The UFP pennant? Third season. IDIC? Third season. Surak? Third season. Tholians? Third season. Kang? Third season. Col. Green? Third season. Hell, "All Our Yesterdays" spawned two successful novels.
It's the Return of the Jedi of Star Trek.
 
Khan had an obvious weakness waiting be exploited: he had a big ego and couldn’t imagine anyone else could beat him. He likely made the same mistake centuries earlier on Earth when “ordinary” men beat him and chased him into exile.

Khan may well be physically superior, but he was obviously not mentally, or emotionally, superior. And mentally is how he could be beat.
 
Still, for all of its perceived faults, a lot of concepts from this season stuck with fandom and Trek in general. The UFP pennant? Third season. IDIC? Third season. Surak? Third season. Tholians? Third season. Kang? Third season. Col. Green? Third season. Hell, "All Our Yesterdays" spawned two successful novels.
Definitely has some of my favorite moments and Romulan performances.

And those novels are among my favorite.
But Khan isn't even Star Trek's greatest villain. He's a great actor in a good episode that spring-boarded to a great movie. (I don't know who the best villain is. Kor?)
Kor, and possibly Mudd.
 
The Devil in the Dark by Gene L. Coon

Unusually, this episode opens on a mining colony, where 50 people have died and another does here. McCoy determines he died from corrosive burns. After the credits, Kirk, Spock, and McCoy beam down to investigate.

In the administatrator's office, Spock sees a silicon ball. They're everywhere on the level the mine just got to. This is Chekov's gun (no Chekov yet, that's next season).

The "monster" attacks the colony's reactor, kills the guard and takes a pump, a part which isn't available anymore. Without it, the reactor will go critical and kill everyone.

Spock speculates they're dealing with a silicon-based lifeform. McCoy thinks it's not possible, but Kirk goes along, ordering Spock to adjust Phaser Twos for such a being. Meanwhile, Scotty jerry-rigs a workaround for the reactor.

Search parties with adjusted weapons are sent out. Spock adjusts his tricorder and picks up readings of a silicon lifeform. A redshirt dies, but the monster moves pretty quickly and is already gone. However, it leaves behind a perfect tunnel. It shows up briefly and Kirk and Spock fire on it and it flees. A piece is left behind similar to asbestos. Kirk has the lead redshirt warn his people.

Spock gets readings that there is only one creature, but more tunnels than one could ever create. He speculates it's the last of its kind. However, Kirk reminds him their mission is to get the mining going again, so it must die. Spock, a little passive-agressively, tells the redshirts to capture it if possible. Kirk is upset and orders Spock to assist Scotty - which Spock points out is unneccesary. Kirk then says they can't risk both of them and Spock gives him the odds against both of them dying. Kirk gives in :D and the hunt continues.

Spock realizes they're being watched. He and Kirk check out 2 fresh tunnels. Kirk finds more silicone balls. The creature knocks down some rocks, which Kirk thinks is a cave in. The creature comes in to where Kirk is... and stops. It backs away from his phaser, but they're in a standoff. Kirk doesn't want to kill something that isn't threatening him. Spock comes in and brings up the Vulcan mind meld. He tries it and feels the creature's pain, nearly passing out. The creature moves, leaving "no kill I" burned in the rock. Spock says the Horta is highly intellegent and sophisticated. Kirk calls McCoy to where they are, figuring healing it is a way to gain its trust. Spock touches the Horta (shouldn't that burn?) and establishes a deeper mind meld.

McCoy shows up and is nonplussed by the sight of Spock touching the Horta. Kirk orders McCoy to heal the Horta. Treat it. "I'm a doctor, not a bricklayer." Through Spock, the Horta tells how the children (the silicone balls) were murdered and where the missing reactor part is.

Meanwhile, the miners are getting restless but are held back by redshirts. Kirk finds the broken eggs and the missing part. The Horta thinks it's dying. The miners get past the redshirts and want to kill the Horta. Kirk tells them about the eggs they destroyed. Kirk convinces them to work with the Horta. McCoy manages to heal the Horta.

This episode still effects me. Everyone has their first "the monster isn't one" story, and I think this was mine. It stuck with me. Everyone wins in the end. Kirk teases Spock. It's all Very Star Trek to me.
 
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