It seems the episode raises issues beyond the intent of those who made it.
Well, that's her side of the issue. Quite possibly, though, she had merely forgotten in the intervening years that Roger Korby had been exactly like this all along. I mean, just look at the guy's career choices!Chapel made numerous attempts to maintain her level of affection for Korby. It was when he demonstrated that his goals, thought processes, and emotions had been irrevocably altered that she withdrew her affections.
The "attempts at contact" issue is interesting: how is interstellar communication supposed to work in TOS? How commonplace are interstellar communicators? Can any alien device send a message that Earthlings could receive and decipher? Kirk's own brother supposedly was a "radio amateur" with his own callsign - yet Jim had not been in contact with Sam for "over a year", and Sam had not contacted the outside world about the plight of Deneva, nor had any other Denevan. That is, no other Denevan out of the millions had contacted the rest of mankind for any reason in the past year!In addition, considering the fact that he had left her for almost five years with no attempts at contact, the fact that she was still willing to attempt to love him was a real credit to the depth of her devotion.
Did Korby realize he had no soul? Or did he just realize that Christine was a narrow-minded bitch who couldn't love him like she had promised to, even though nothing had changed (but the nature of his physical innards) - and there thus was to be no reward for all his toiling, no reason to press on with all this making-the-future-brighter stuff, no reason to live?
Did Korby realize he had no soul?
Timo Saloniemi
Did Korby realize he had no soul? Or did he just realize that Christine was a narrow-minded bitch who couldn't love him like she had promised to, even though nothing had changed (but the nature of his physical innards) - and there thus was to be no reward for all his toiling, no reason to press on with all this making-the-future-brighter stuff, no reason to live?
The episode addressed all that. The Korby-bot did realize he wasn't human, Chapel was not being "narrow-minded" and his innards were not all that had changed, which is a major point of the episode. Korby's transformation is foreshadowed by Dr. Brown, when he speaks of the original inhabitants moving "from light to darkness" and becoming a "mechanistic culture." And indeed, when it comes time to prove to Christine that he's the man she loves, his appeals are indeed (to his own surprise) mechanistic: "Ask me to solve... Equate! ... Transmit! ..." "Does this make such a difference?" he asks about his exposed mechanical hand, then answers his own question a few seconds later: "You cannot love, you're not human" he tells Andrea, with a sad smile of resignation that shows he's referring to himself, too.
I usually find Michael Strong a fairly bland actor, but what he does in the final scene as Korby is really good and makes me wonder if I've just missed seeing him with better material.
Did Korby realize he had no soul? Or did he just realize that Christine was a narrow-minded bitch who couldn't love him like she had promised to, even though nothing had changed (but the nature of his physical innards) - and there thus was to be no reward for all his toiling, no reason to press on with all this making-the-future-brighter stuff, no reason to live?
...Did Korby realize he had no soul?......
In one of the novels, that is exactly what happened!
Exactly. And now he has embarked on a greater adventure than all the previous ones put together, leaving his mortal coil behind. What's so new about him here? Did he not "solve, equate and transmit" all the time when his nose was buried deep in Orion ruins and Chapel was enjoying little else but the sight of his butt sticking up?Timo, Dr. Korby's reputation, as it is portrayed in the episode is almost god-like. He is a genius, and a bold adventurer who has helped the Federation in immeasurable ways. I would think his "career choices" were one of the things that drew Chapel to him.
Exactly. And now he has embarked on a greater adventure than all the previous ones put together, leaving his mortal coil behind. What's so new about him here? Did he not "solve, equate and transmit" all the time when his nose was buried deep in Orion ruins and Chapel was enjoying little else but the sight of his butt sticking up?Timo, Dr. Korby's reputation, as it is portrayed in the episode is almost god-like. He is a genius, and a bold adventurer who has helped the Federation in immeasurable ways. I would think his "career choices" were one of the things that drew Chapel to him.
He may have been a romantic Indiana Jones in his day, sure, and that would denote a definite change. But what are the odds of that outside the Indiana Jones universe? And we know Chapel's type anyway: watching "The Naked Time", "Amok Time" or "Mudd's Passion" helps there.
Timo Saloniemi
Exactly. And now he has embarked on a greater adventure than all the previous ones put together, leaving his mortal coil behind. What's so new about him here? Did he not "solve, equate and transmit" all the time when his nose was buried deep in Orion ruins and Chapel was enjoying little else but the sight of his butt sticking up?
That's basically because Chapel's character flaw is such a despicable one: racist narrowmindedness and disgust.I really find it odd that you appear to be blaming a character flaw in Christine Chapel for the breakup of her and Dr. Korby's relationship.
That's basically because Chapel's character flaw is such a despicable one: racist narrowmindedness and disgust.I really find it odd that you appear to be blaming a character flaw in Christine Chapel for the breakup of her and Dr. Korby's relationship.
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