WNMHGB just didn't do it for us. Shatner hadn't figured out his character yet; everything was too much.
But The Tammy Grimes Show ended on September 29 after only four aired episodes. So Star Trek is definitely doing better. The current competition is stiffer.The consensus as of the end of October '66 is that Star Trek is an inconsistent show with tremendous but somewhat unrealized potential. Here's hoping it makes it past the half-season cutoff (hey, it's doing better than The Tammy Grimes Show at least...)
I really don't understand this part. Shatner absolutely nailed Kirk from scene one. He is utterly recognizable as James Kirk, no matter when you entered the series. I feel he's more "Kirk" in this episode than in The Man Trap.
As for the episode looking "cheap" I cannot agree. Sure, they reused the Talos 4 planet sets, but there was a ton of exterior Enterprise shots (which The Cage didn't have much of) plus the barrier. Lots of lasers and lightning effects. Pyrotechnics galore, repainted consoles, a sickbay set, etc. Actually it looks more expensive than it was.
There's a reason why this episode sold the series.
The idea that WHMHGB ranks lower than Miri, Mudd's Women and Little Girls just stuns me.
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Here ve come. Valking down the street...
I am completely biased as WHMHGB was the second episode I saw, after Balance of Terror. Yeah, Miri rates very low for me in the TOS scheme of things, including below Spock's Brain and Catspaw.The idea that WHMHGB ranks lower than Miri, Mudd's Women and Little Girls just stuns me.
I am completely biased as WHMHGB was the second episode I saw, after Balance of Terror. Yeah, Miri rates very low for me in the TOS scheme of things, including below Spock's Brain and Catspaw.
Charlie X is uncomfortable, while This Side gets a pass because I like exploring Spock.I tend to run counter to popular opinion on a lot of episodes. Spock's Brain gets more rerun traffic from me than Charlie X and This Side of Paradise, both of which fall near the very bottom of the run for me.
Kirk insulting Spock in the transporter is amazing, though. I've said it before, Shatner is ON FIRE in that scene. Because it's not the words, it's the delivery.
We just watched "Dagger of the Mind" last night. Our crowds keep growing. We were near thirty, and many of the viewers were young and had never seen Trek before. They are enjoying our format.
One of the virtues of contextual watching is that we can make connections that aren't otherwise apparent. Obviously, the subject of brainwashing was a popular one at the time: viz. The Manchurian Candidate and the UK film, The Mindbenders.
But for me, the closest predecessor to "Dagger" is a 1964 story by Trek-writer, Norman Spinrad: "Your name shall be...Darkness" which also features a military officer having his ego stripped away, then reconstructed with new programming attached.
Do you think the similarity is strictly coincidental? Or is this an example of ideas first explored in literary SF makings its way to the small screen through Trek?
When a scene calls for Kirk to go big, it plays to Shatner's strengths. He can be hugely theatrical and pull it off . He also has a flair for drama, and for making Kirk seem like a Somebody with his bearing and mannerisms. David Hedison wasn't like that at all, he played a matter-of-fact and realistic Navy officer, while Guy Williams was closer to the Shatner School of High Drama.
David Hedison was an excellent dramatic actor
This week in TV -- Mission Impossible was full of familiar faces. My favorite was seeing Eddie Paskey on Trek and then immediately after on MI -- with no lines in either! This is from tonight's excellent episode.
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Eddie's voice wasn't very strong and he didn't learn the craft, but he sure looked like a star. He could have been a catalog model, or found customer-facing work in a high-end restaurant or hotel, that kind of thing. And there's money in that.
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