For what it's worth, I never found it complicated when I originally watched as a kid, and my kids didn't have any problem with it when they were younger.I don't quite understand the point of this series. It's too complicated for kids (unless I'm underestimating them) but it's too kiddy for adults.
I'm surprised no one recommended "The Slaver Weapon." The Kzinti seem to be such cult-favorites.
A trek tech problem was the way the transporter saved the day – it would mean immortality under different circumstances.
Well I disagree. Well mostly. I much prefer this to the Survivor.It's a rather odd story: the heroes (sans Kirk) achieve essentially nothing at any point. They just watch as a bunch of aliens shoot themselves in the foot, almost literally, and do most of that watching while tied up in the corner like a silly damsel-in-distress character from a sitcom.
Sure, those aliens are interesting as such. And there's this tiny bit of worldbuilding, too, with the Slaver Boxes and their role in galactic history and all. But for all their considerable effort, the heroes just manage to get captured time and again, while the "Don't play with guns, kids" message plays on its own, and would have, even were the heroes completely absent.
Thin, straightforward plots I don't mind: the episode-long chase in "Survivor" is fine, say. But even that is more than we got in "Slaver". Oh, how much more we could have done with "The ratcats don't think Uhura is sapient" or "Spock's vegetarian pacifism is a deadly weapon" if Larry Niven didn't just retell his The Soft Weapon word for word in the Trek environment...
Timo Saloniemi
Dramatically, the Huron took too long to run from the Orions. They're carrying valuable dilithium (this isn't their first rodeo) yet they keep trying to hail the predatory ship until it's basically top of them, then try evasive maneuvers. They should have gone to flank speed to reach the Enterprise the moment their hails were denied. We know they're going to be a problem, the kids know they're going to be a problem, the sound guy knows they're going to be a problem, but the director takes his merry time cutting to the chase.
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