Considering some of the other reactions respectful silence was sufficient rather than calling him out on another lapse of memory.
Meh. I'll go with what's on screen since there's no reason to doubt the intent of the writer.
Considering some of the other reactions respectful silence was sufficient rather than calling him out on another lapse of memory.
Yeah, to be candid there isn't much meat there. And he echoes what many others have said before him.The Starlog magazine Carabastos interview from issue 168 (July 1991) can be found online (page 60) at
https://ia600500.us.archive.org/32/items/starlog_magazine-168/168.pdf
No idea. I don't think the other drafts of COTEOF have ever been published anywhere. Just Ellison's and maybe the final version.Anyone know who wrote the CotEoF scene with McCoy and the hobo in the alley? I think that's my favorite Trek scene.
So you know the Ellison book, JQ? Is the scene there?No idea. I don't think the other drafts of COTEOF have ever been published anywhere. Just Ellison's and maybe the final version.
Yes. Which is kind of a shame, IMO. I loved the poignancy of Kirk asking Spock, "You know history... What is Verdun?" right after Trooper had sacrificed his life for them.The hobo isn't in the draft Ellison published, nor in the comic adaptation of same. He seems to have been added in place of the Trooper character.
It took me ages to realize that the bum that McCoy encounters in the alley is the same guy at the mission who tells Kirk and Spock that listening to Edith Keeler is the price you have to pay for the food.
Well, do you think bums grow on trees? There was a Depression on!They could only afford one bum in New York City back then.
Considering some of the other reactions respectful silence was sufficient rather than calling him out on another lapse of memory.
No, I still can't buy it. If the situation were happening in the real world, yes, respectful silence would be a reasonable and decent response. But that fails fantastically as drama. If Kirk were supposed to have remembered his age wrong, then that fact has to be communicated to the audience. And that means someone has to tell the audience Kirk's actual age, or the reactions have to make clear everyone but Kirk knows he got it wrong.
Whatever. I'm just calling it in a way that makes everything else work. Because there is no way whatsoever I buy the idea of a 29-30 year old being given command of a Constitution-class vessel. Thats almost as bad as the ridiculousness of JJtrek.No, I still can't buy it. If the situation were happening in the real world, yes, respectful silence would be a reasonable and decent response. But that fails fantastically as drama. If Kirk were supposed to have remembered his age wrong, then that fact has to be communicated to the audience. And that means someone has to tell the audience Kirk's actual age, or the reactions have to make clear everyone but Kirk knows he got it wrong.
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