They should have put on Fedoras DURING And The Children Shall Lead.![]()
The boys should have slapped on their Fedoras again during S3. It couldn’t have been any worse than And The Children Shall Lead…or could it?![]()
RCA called; they want more color!I love the lavender/purple transporter room.![]()
I love the lavender/purple transporter room.![]()
Scotty barely appears in "Plato's Stepchildren."
I find Season 3 overall is not as bad as many make it out to be. Half of the season (12 episodes) is good to excellent, a quarter of it (6 episodes) is fair/watchable and a quarter of it (6 episodes) is poor to bad. Even TNG in its supposed best seasons didn’t do better than that.
Furthermore even when TOS is disappointing it’s never boring. A lot of TNG and what followed was boring. 21st century Trek is plain forgettable garbage.
And put the children on ice?They should have put on Fedoras DURING And The Children Shall Lead.
I love the lavender/purple transporter room.![]()
RCA called; they want more color!![]()
I was rewatching a handful of season 2 episodes. Wish I could remember the episode, am sure it was in the latter half of the season, and they backlit the transporter room walls that lavender hue. Looks like they definitely had some ideas before season 3.
Yeah, if the budget had not been reduced and more episodes not be stuck on the ship, would it have been better? How much they could eke out is technically impressive.
Did they? I've got to log off now, but I want screenshots!I'd love to know. I do feel like the walls were not overly purple in "Assignment: Earth", because I think the fight there at the beginning is one of the best action moments in the series (Spock's cry of surprise! Kirk's/Shatner's jump off the pad!!!), and I feel like I would have noticed the purple after rewatching that so much over the years. Or maybe the scene was so awesome that I have never looked at the walls.
I also feel like in S3 it wasn't backlighting but straight purple paint. Could be wrong there too.
Very interesting!
Sorry for two posts in a row, especially when I claimed I needed to log off for a bit (I do),
but one of the things I *love* about S3 is that we get to see so much of the Enterprise! "Day of the Dove," my personal S3 fave "Wink of an Eye," and "The Mark of Gideon" all come to mind. "Is There In Truth," too, and heck, "The Way to Eden" and even "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield" and "And the Children Shall Lead"! The ship feels much bigger and I am here for it.
Agreed, he may not have been the best choice to take over the job of not only being the show runner but lead story editor (really just down to him and Arthur Singer for the most part - two strangers to the show), there was no chance the series was going to go to a fourth season. Lousy time slot, shorter production schedule and a slashed budget made that impossible. The only thing that could have saved it is if somehow all that backfired and the series rocketed to the top of the ratings anyway.Freiberger's time had him pegged as "show killer", but I don't really see that as being the case. Certainly for Trek. The new music, new types of stories that generally didn't break the mold, making the show feel serious instead of jokey again, ditching the overused parallel Earth development trope, etc... he once made a claim about Trek's demise being a self-fulfilling prophecy. It's hard to disagree with him on that. Trek season 3 made and kept to character and plot continuity far better (even with the "Battlefield" Spock gaffe and arguable moment with stern-Chekov in "Eden" but I liked Chekov not being used as the butt of jokes, but even then season 2 was starting to have him mellow by the end as well.)
Agreed, he may not have been the best choice to take over the job of not only being the show runner but lead story editor (really just down to him and Arthur Singer for the most part - two strangers to the show), there was no chance the series was going to go to a fourth season. Lousy time slot, shorter production schedule and a slashed budget made that impossible. The only thing that could have saved it is if somehow all that backfired and the series rocketed to the top of the ratings anyway.
Which was variable already. Season 2 would be as subtle as a den full of jumping porcupines, with "A Private Little War" (and its TNG loose-sequel of "Too Short a Season" that is just as blunt)...While the series lost whatever subtlety it had,
it was still a solid SF series with a lot of new, high concept stories that still tried to have something to say. Some of my favorite episodes are in that season.
Freiberger had more successes in his career than failures and if he never did Star Trek, he'd have no reputation at all outside of whoever in the industry remembered him. Star Trek fans, and then the ex-staffers from earlier years, vilified him. David Gerrold and Dorothy Fontana had axes to grid because they didn't like their work. But think about all of the concepts and characters from that year which not only exciting the fans but also became staples of Trek Canon.
As for being a show killer, people also forget that Space:1999 was pretty close to dead as well until he came on and "Americanized" it. ITC didn't want a second year in the same format and feel as the first. And there are plenty of great episodes in his run. The Six Million Dollar Man was on its last legs when it got a 5th season, but he still tried to goose the format with two-parters and getting Steve Austin back into NASA missions. Some of those episodes are damned fun. And let's not forgot who got The Wild Wild West back on track and who was in charge of the episodes that introduced Dr. Loveless.
He wasn't a genius by any means, nor was he a careful futurist who poured over every script a dozen times. However, he was a solid, if typical, TV producer who could put out what everyone expected to be disposable television entertainment. On time and on budget. A lot of his episodes were fun, fast paced and sometimes thought provoking.
As for being a show killer, people also forget that Space:1999 was pretty close to dead as well until he came on and "Americanized" it. ITC didn't want a second year in the same format and feel as the first. And there are plenty of great episodes in his run.
Definitely true; Space 1999, which otherwise wouldn't have been made, had him also trying to piece things together - but unlike TOS with Nichols and Shatner defending the guy stuck in the middle, Landau and others were opposed, with Landau not even appearing in several episodes (can't blame him, S1999 season 2 dropped in-story continuity really badly - how much of that is on Freiberger or the individual writers, that I do not know.)
It's definitely as subtle as a room full of paranoid skunks and no vents
Cool! I had no idea.episodes that introduced Dr. Loveless.
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