1. The Exeter scenes in the teaser are pretty cool, much like "The Tholian Web." I especially like the bit where the play-back log ends with the doctor falling out of the chair, and then you see his remains on the floor.
2. Morgan Woodward was so good at becoming someone else, I went through childhood not putting him together with Simon Van Gelder.
3. Captain Tracy is tough as nails and amoral despite being "one of our guys." It was a dose of gritty naturalism in a series usually more prone to romanticism. Getting outdoors and shooting in sunlight added to the real feel.
4. Kirk doesn't win his first two fistfights, which must have surprised the character and astonished Shatner.
5. Kirk and Spock are not thrown into the typical, highly-escapable prison that TV heroes of the period were used to-- they have real trouble getting out.
6. Kirk doesn't use a cheesy romance ploy on Cloud William's girlfriend.
7. Good use of "that fight music" by Gerald Fried.
8. Spectacular close-up on a communicator at the climax of Act IV. You can see everything.
9. Shatner's dramatic reading of the Preamble. Some fans are appalled, and as I recall David Gerrold trashed it in his book The World of Star Trek, but from a purely theatrical standpoint, it was a high-intensity spoken-word showpiece. In other words, quintessential Shatner.
2. Morgan Woodward was so good at becoming someone else, I went through childhood not putting him together with Simon Van Gelder.
3. Captain Tracy is tough as nails and amoral despite being "one of our guys." It was a dose of gritty naturalism in a series usually more prone to romanticism. Getting outdoors and shooting in sunlight added to the real feel.
4. Kirk doesn't win his first two fistfights, which must have surprised the character and astonished Shatner.
5. Kirk and Spock are not thrown into the typical, highly-escapable prison that TV heroes of the period were used to-- they have real trouble getting out.
6. Kirk doesn't use a cheesy romance ploy on Cloud William's girlfriend.
7. Good use of "that fight music" by Gerald Fried.
8. Spectacular close-up on a communicator at the climax of Act IV. You can see everything.

9. Shatner's dramatic reading of the Preamble. Some fans are appalled, and as I recall David Gerrold trashed it in his book The World of Star Trek, but from a purely theatrical standpoint, it was a high-intensity spoken-word showpiece. In other words, quintessential Shatner.