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The door not opening to Spock?

CommanderBloom

Ensign
Newbie
|| SPOILERS ||
In the ep. The Na ked time, min. 36:21. You can see Spock showing emotion causing from the "craziness infection". But you can see him leaning on the door, now someone explain to me why doesn't the door open? He stands there for 1 minute and nothing happens. I'm very confused.:shrug:
 
|| SPOILERS ||
In the ep. The Na ked time, min. 36:21. You can see Spock showing emotion causing from the "craziness infection". But you can see him leaning on the door, now someone explain to me why doesn't the door open? He stands there for 1 minute and nothing happens. I'm very confused.

I used to think that was odd, but these days, sliding doors with motion sensors are common enough that you can experience the same sort of thing in real life. If you stop for some reason just inside the sliding doors, they may slide shut on you, because you're too close to be in the motion sensors' line of sight, or because you aren't moving enough to trigger them.

Of course, the real explanation is that the doors were operated by a stagehand behind the wall, and the director had them keep the doors shut.

What gets me are the scenes in various episodes where characters walk close enough past the doors that they should trigger the motion sensors, but the doors don't respond, as if they know (as the director does) that the characters don't plan to go through them. I figure the motion sensors use things like gait analysis and gaze tracking to recognize the difference between someone just passing close to a door and someone intending to go through it.
 
I used to think that was odd, but these days, sliding doors with motion sensors are common enough that you can experience the same sort of thing in real life. If you stop for some reason just inside the sliding doors, they may slide shut on you, because you're too close to be in the motion sensors' line of sight, or because you aren't moving enough to trigger them.

Of course, the real explanation is that the doors were operated by a stagehand behind the wall, and the director had them keep the doors shut.

What gets me are the scenes in various episodes where characters walk close enough past the doors that they should trigger the motion sensors, but the doors don't respond, as if they know (as the director does) that the characters don't plan to go through them. I figure the motion sensors use things like gait analysis and gaze tracking to recognize the difference between someone just passing close to a door and someone intending to go through it.

Thank you for responding, I kinda get it now but the last part that you wrote just doesn't seem right. I don't think the doors can tell if you want to get through or just past by.
 
Happened in "Journey to Babel" too and a different door. Very annoying but dramatically effective.
I also wonder how the comms system know where everyone is too. Is it psychic as well?
 
I don't think the doors can tell if you want to get through or just past by.

Watch carefully. There are plenty of times where actors walk near the doors (like walking past the bridge turbolift, say), close enough that any real-world door with a motion sensor would be sure to open, but the doors stay closed, because the director and stagehands know the doors aren't going to be used. The only in-universe explanation for that contrivance is that the door sensors themselves are smart enough to determine that too.
 
From Wolf in the Fold: "...and the computer controls the ship."

Maybe she's a kind of watchdog who monitors when best to open and close doors.

Or, yeah, dramatic license. :rommie:
 
As Spock himself might say, "There are two possibilities: It is unable to respond, it is unwilling to respond."
But yeah, automatic door technology will probably be much more advanced a few centuries from now.

Kor
 
I recall reading (ages ago) that in an early draft of the script that Spock actually presses a button to lock the doors before collapsing against them. But that would have required them to install a button on the set, so it was probably easier not to ;)
 
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|| SPOILERS ||
In the ep. The Na ked time, min. 36:21. You can see Spock showing emotion causing from the "craziness infection". But you can see him leaning on the door, now someone explain to me why doesn't the door open? He stands there for 1 minute and nothing happens. I'm very confused.:shrug:
BTW, you don't need to Spoiler a 56 year old episode [EDIT: Unless you are in a thread like those @Neopeius maintains]

If you do need to actually Spoiler some text, there's a function for that. Highlight the text you wish to hide then click/tap the + icon and you'll find the Spoiler code option, as below...
Screen Shot 2022-05-09 at 12.26.54 PM.png

The result
is all spoilery n stuff.
 
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BTW, you don't need to Spoiler a 56 year old episode.

If you do need to actually Spoiler some text, there's a function for that. Highlight the text you wish to hide then click/tap the + icon and you'll find the Spoiler code option, as below...
View attachment 27764

The result
is all spoilery n stuff.

Hey, hey HEY. For some of us, that episode is only a year old! But, it's true we did just watch the summer rerun.

But if anyone tells me how Amok Time ends, boy will I be steamed!
 
BTW, you don't need to Spoiler a 56 year old episode [EDIT: Unless you are in a thread like those @Neopeius maintains]

If you do need to actually Spoiler some text, there's a function for that. Highlight the text you wish to hide then click/tap the + icon and you'll find the Spoiler code option, as below...
View attachment 27764

The result
is all spoilery n stuff.
Thank you, I'm new to this platform, it was my first thread. I will know for other time.
 
Why didn't the door open when Spock collapses against it?

Well, I wouldn't think it would make for very serious drama if as Spock collapses backwards, the door obediently swishes open and he falls on his ass in the corridor.

Robert
 
Multiple choices.

1. The door "knew" Spock did not want it to open.

2. Spock somehow locked the door, disabling the auto-sensor.

3. The door works at the speed of plot, it only opens when the script says it does.
He's another idea:

4. The door controller calculated that if it were to have opened the door, Spock could have been injured by falling over backwards. Keeping the door closed was a safety feature.
 
Has there been an instance in TOS where the door opened for someone walking or leaning backwards into it? Or does it always open when the person is facing the door and moving towards it?
 
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