I figure the only reason Chekov survived was because McCoy was there with a medkit.
But I get tired of people riffing on Shatner. The simple fact is that the director must have wanted such a performance. Meyer could have just said, "Bill, no. Let's do another take, and take it down a notch."
If it weren't for "Kh-a-a-a-n!" would anyone other than hardcore fans remember this movie at all?![]()
^Well, if you're saying the damage is gradual and death occurs after the eel leaves, then yes, that makes sense that McCoy would've saved him afterward. But the impression I've had all these years is that the eel caused death while inside the body, that fatality was a direct result of its growth within the body crushing the brainstem and it didn't leave until after the host died and ceased providing it with nutrients. So you can see, going from that, how its departure from Chekov before death seemed arbitrary to me. It didn't occur to me to look at it the way you're suggesting, but your proposal does make sense.
I just checked to see how Greg Cox dealt with the eels in his novel To Reign in Hell: The Exile of Khan Noonien Singh. It says that the eels leave the body "only when they are fully developed or when the hosts expire." Based on that, it could go either way. Chekov's eel must've simply reached full maturity before it killed him -- though you could certainly still be right that the damage it caused would be fatal if left untreated.
Still, that's all extrapolation after the fact. If you go strictly by what's in the movie, Khan says the eels kill their hosts, then Chekov's eel spontaneously leaves him and he survives. In strictly in-film terms, it still feels like an arbitrary reversal, saying a character is doomed and then having him survive with no overt explanation. So I still call it a script flaw, even if it can be rationalized away after the fact.
But I get tired of people riffing on Shatner. The simple fact is that the director must have wanted such a performance. Meyer could have just said, "Bill, no. Let's do another take, and take it down a notch."
Yeah. What makes that scene doubly odd is that what you're describing there is exactly how Meyer did operate everywhere else in the film. According to him, Shatner kept overplaying everything, so he did take after take after take until Shatner got tired, stopped trying so hard, and gave a more natural, understated performance. In that context, something as overplayed as "KHAAAAAANNNN!!!!" seems deeply incongruous.
I always thought it had to do with Chekov fighting the eel's influence to be susceptible to influence. This caused a change in his brain chemistry that was distasteful to the eel so that is why it left.
It vas Chekov's superior Russian immune system. Ve all know how effective Russians are at repelling inwaders.
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