Maybe Commodore Wesley sat behind a desk at a starbase a little too long. A little rusty in the big chair.
And he had a BIG big chair.A little rusty in the big chair.
"Genius doesn't work on an assembly line basis...." is probably my favorite Kirk speech.Ultimate Computer is one of my top 5. (I probably have 10 or 11 top 5s.) This isn't the first episode to highlight Kirk's romance with his ship but this one does it the most and probably the best. (Until that little Robert Wise art film.)
Marshall is one of the absolute best Trek guest stars. Ever.
The only part that falls a little flat for me is when the Starship under experimental computer control starts randomly shooting at Fed ships Wesley starts calling for Kirk's head. Hey, Bob, let's think this one through for just a moment, OK? (I want to make my own Star Trek show JUST to make every other Starship captain almost as smart and awesome as Kirk.)
Ultimately Wesley was the one to call for all ships to hold fire when the shields dropped- and Spock was right in that such a trap could have been something the M-5 could/should have done; but Wesley took the chance when he didn't have to, so he already redeemed himself.Ultimate Computer is one of my top 5. (I probably have 10 or 11 top 5s.) This isn't the first episode to highlight Kirk's romance with his ship but this one does it the most and probably the best. (Until that little Robert Wise art film.)
Marshall is one of the absolute best Trek guest stars. Ever.
The only part that falls a little flat for me is when the Starship under experimental computer control starts randomly shooting at Fed ships Wesley starts calling for Kirk's head. Hey, Bob, let's think this one through for just a moment, OK? (I want to make my own Star Trek show JUST to make every other Starship captain almost as smart and awesome as Kirk.)
Everything else in the episode shows Wesley to be a level headed and competent commander. Spock even admires him. Even the Captain Dunsel remark could be seen as leveled not only at Kirk but also at himself and his kind.Ultimately Wesley was the one to call for all ships to hold fire when the shields dropped- and Spock was right in that such a trap could have been something the M-5 could/should have done; but Wesley took the chance when he didn't have to, so he already redeemed himself.
To be fair, Commodore Wesley saw the USS Excalibur hulled and it's entire crew complment killed.Everything else in the episode shows Wesley to be a level headed and competent commander. Spock even admires him. Even the Captain Dunsel remark could be seen as leveled not only at Kirk but also at himself and his kind.
So his outrage at Kirk seems... Hasty?
Ha! Nice Billy Thorpe reference."Bread and Circuses" by Gene Roddenberry and Gene L. Coon
This is one I'm honestly not sure I've ever seen.
Enterprise finds the wreckage of the Beagle, a survey vessel, but no bodies. They also find another just-like-Earth planet, one with slaves on TV fighting gladiatorial games. Kirk, Spock, and McCoy beam down and are captured by escaped slaves, the "children of the sun" (cue Billy Thorpe). They meet Septimus (Mr. Atoz!) and Flavius, a former gladiator. Kirk mentions he's looking for Merik, the captain of the Beagle, and the slaves think he could be First Citizen Mericus.
The entire society is mid-20th century earth if the Roman Empire never fell. The slaves have even managed to get concessions like medical care and old age pensions over the years. Old Roman Gods are still worshipped. (McCoy is wrong btw. The Romans worshipped Apollo as the Sun God.)
Flavius leads them to the city. They get captured on the way and taken before Mericus/Merik and his disgusting and odious patron, Proconsul Claudius Marcus (played to perfection by character actor Logan Ramsey). Merik explains his people either assimilated or died. Marcus tries to get Kirk to have the Enterprise crew beam down so he'll have more gladiators for his games. Kirk instead signals to Scotty, in code, that the landing party is in trouble, but that no rescue attempt should be made. On the ship, Scotty has Chekov spot the planet's power plants so he can give them a scare.
Trying to pressure Kirk, Marcus has Spock and McCoy sent into the arena against two gladiators, one of whom is (luckily) Flavius. McCoy doesn't do very well. Spock overpowers one of the gladiators and uses a nerve pinch on Flavius. All audience boos and cheers are pre-recorded and used manipulatively.
Spock and McCoy are taken back to their cell and have a terrific scene together, a real highlight and very well done by Kelley and Nimoy. Kirk is taken to Marcus' quarters, where a hot blonde named Drusilla is Kirk's slave for the night. Marcus has learned to respect Kirk and thinks he's earned a last night "as a man." Marcus dismisses Merik, as he doesn't respect him as a man. One of the communicators the Proconsul took is missing and Marcus suspects Kirk had Drusilla take it. He has Merik search Kirk, but he comes up empty.
They take Kirk to the arena where he's to be executed live on TV. However, Flavius runs in and fights the executioner. Flavius is shot and killed. Kirk kills a few guards and grabs a gun and goes to the cells to free Spock and McCoy. Scotty causes a temporary blackout. Merik has the stolen communicator (I'm guessing he took it from Kirk) and calls the Enterprise, causing Marcus to kill him. Our Heroes beam back to the ship.
Uhura has been monitoring radio communications and tells the guys that they weren't talking about the "sun", but the "Son". They had both Caesar and Christ.
KIRK: Wouldn't it be something to watch, to be a part of? To see it happen all over again? (He obviously isn't thinking about the Crusades or other religious wars here.)
It's heavy-handed as hell, but it was telegraphed when they first meet the Children of the Son - Spock shows Kirk a magazine with ads for things named for Roman Gods and Septimus calls them false gods. Also:
SEPTIMUS: Oh? Are you Children of the Sun?
MCCOY: Well, if you're speaking of worships of sorts, we represent many beliefs.
FLAVIUS: There is only one true belief!
Much like "Who Mourns for Adonais?" this episode has a Christian/monotheist bent. Not my thing, but I was caught up in the story and the characters nonetheless. A good, basic episode.
When I did a rewatch in production order I found that this scene was the result of several episodesworth of build up, with their exchanges getting nastier on both sides!I actually think McCoy is a real dick to Spock in the cell there.
MCCOY: Do you know why you're not afraid to die, Spock? You're more afraid of living. Each day you stay alive is just one more day you might slip and let your human half peek out. That's it, isn't it? Insecurity. Why, you wouldn't know what to do with a genuine, warm, decent feeling.
Damn.
Only because Spock was a real asshole to him before:I actually think McCoy is a real dick to Spock in the cell there.
MCCOY: Do you know why you're not afraid to die, Spock? You're more afraid of living. Each day you stay alive is just one more day you might slip and let your human half peek out. That's it, isn't it? Insecurity. Why, you wouldn't know what to do with a genuine, warm, decent feeling.
Damn.
Only because Spock was a real asshole to him before:
SPOCK: Oh, yes. You humans have that emotional need to express gratitude. You're welcome, I believe, is the correct response. However, Doctor, you must remember I am entirely motivated by logic. The loss of our ship's surgeon, whatever I think of his skill, would mean a reduction in the efficiency of the Enterprise.
Saying this to someone that's trying to honestly thank you isn't very nice. Implying that he's just a tool for the ship, and at the same time highlighting that he's not even a very useful tool anyway.
McCoy might have expressed himself poorly, but his intuition was bang on regarding Norman—something about him was definitely off.
That, too.The script?
I think it builds up until The Tholian Web where they seem to come to an understanding. It doesn't seem as bad between them after that.When I did a rewatch in production order I found that this scene was the result of several episodesworth of build up, with their exchanges getting nastier on both sides!
When Spock didn't respond as McCoy wanted, McCoy called him a pointed-eared hobgoblin. I don't think anything Spock said there is deserving of McCoy's response.Only because Spock was a real asshole to him before:
SPOCK: Oh, yes. You humans have that emotional need to express gratitude. You're welcome, I believe, is the correct response. However, Doctor, you must remember I am entirely motivated by logic. The loss of our ship's surgeon, whatever I think of his skill, would mean a reduction in the efficiency of the Enterprise.
Saying this to someone that's trying to honestly thank you isn't very nice. Implying that he's just a tool for the ship, and at the same time highlighting that he's not even a very useful tool anyway.
Yes, of course there's affection behind their arguments, and they're no real enemies. But I think that Spock gets away as "blameless" far too many times.I think underneath it all, McCoy really cares about Spock, and he really thinks it would be in Spock's best interest to embrace his emotions. I can see here that he might be using tough love to try to jolt Spock in that direction, but I think McCoy can be pretty brutal about it sometimes, and I sometimes think it's none of McCoy's damn business. Who appointed McCoy the decider of how Spock should feel and behave?
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