Or the look Kirk, up to his chest in tribbles, gives McCoy when he says "I haven't figured out what keeps them alive yet."
Yeah. Shatner talked in his book Star Trek Movie Memories how the sidestep thing that Kirk's horse does to approach Picard's horse is a difficult move for a rider to make. Shatner was riding one of his own horses in that scene, so there was a trust there....and Shatner’s horsemanship skills are briefly demonstrated, too.
It would have been disturbing if Spock’s neck pinch didn’t work on a Vian.Kirk gives Spock a quick glance just before Spock neck pinches the Vian.
I like the very end where Kirk is back in the command chair and he's ordered warp one, and he's asked the heading.Shatner is a good actor! He can make you believe every word he says! In the TV series he was excellent, it was only in the movies that I started to doubt his commitment to the role! Then again the joy in his voice at seeing the Enterprise again after a few years in TMP was very emotive and a marvellous scene! Shame about the rest of the film!
JB
It is impossible to watch this scene without cracking up. Every inflection, every subtle movement, speaks volumes about both characters. What fine actors. And they always had amazing chemistry on screen. Too bad Doohan came to resent Shatner so badly off-screen.
I recall reading somewhere, maybe it was Nimoy's "I Am Spock", but I swear someone on the cast or crew commented along the lines that Shatner went OTT in the third season because they all knew it was over and hamming it up was the only way he could stay interested.
That fishing episode is one of my all time favourite episodes. “Did you say Klingons?” Ha!Rewatching Boston Legal, now in season 5. Denny Crane was played perfectly. He hit every note spot on, pitch perfect.
Shatner takes a lot of criticism, but he's a very good actor.
Rewatching Boston Legal, now in season 5. Denny Crane was played perfectly. He hit every note spot on, pitch perfect.
Shatner takes a lot of criticism, but he's a very good actor.
Yeah. I think that if he doesn't have a strong director riding herd on him he can get broad and self-indulgent, though. Nicholas Meyer has often said that the more takes he made Shatner do, the better he'd get. I really like the more mellow, naturalistic Kirk we see in TWOK and TUC under Meyer's direction. He's got the thoughtfulness we saw in the Kirk of the first season. He questions himself and occasionally finds out that he's been in the wrong. (Think TWOK's "I've cheated my way out of death, and patted myself on the back for my ingenuity" and TUC's "I was scared of no more Neutral Zone. It never even occurred to me to take Gorkon at his word.")Shatner takes a lot of criticism, but he's a very good actor.
With Shatner and Spader close behind.Shatner is also very good at the end of "Amok Time." Shatner (and/or director Joseph Pevney) realizes that this is Spock's big moment, so Shatner goes small to balance out Nimoy going big. I love Kirk's smile as he enters and his little self-assured chuckle as he crosses to McCoy (patting himself on the back for his ingenuity, no doubt). And I LOVE the directorial touch that Spock's expression changes to that broad grin during the split second when Kirk crosses in front of him -- It makes the smile all the more surprising because we don't see the transition.
Shatner and Nimoy were a great double act, man.
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