All these years later and we still don't know what they need with a starship...
In that case, Kirk should have used a barrier to trap him on Delta Vega, after which Mitchell could have surfed around in the sky soliloquizing about his fate.In the James Blish novelization, Mitchell's body starts become silver. I remember Blish saying he hits Kirk with a "silver fist."
In the episode we do see Mitchell go grey over time. It may have supposed to be perceived as going silver.In the James Blish novelization, Mitchell's body starts become silver. I remember Blish saying he hits Kirk with a "silver fist."
There's usually a voice change involved as well.IMHO, glowing eyes are required to show off your god powers.![]()
It seems clear it was done as an economical re-use of barrier fx footage from WNMHGB. I don't usually favor "material" changes in the TOS-R fx, but I like the way they made the void look different in "Is There in Truth No Beauty." That's not the galactic barrier, it's somewhere else and something other.
Regarding Gary's change of character from good to evil, I still say the power was involuntarily distorting his brain functions, and not just tempting him to go bad on purpose. Ssosmcin makes a reasonable case, but we'll have to disagree on this one. Gary is a good officer who suddenly has literally galactic energies pouring through his brain.
If it were just a matter of will, he'd at least take a lot longer to stop caring about people. I say his brain gets messed up by the energy.
There's usually a voice change involved as well.
They had 51 minutes to tell this tale. It had to be done in that shorthand style of television storytelling. Had this been a film, they could have spent more time showing us Gary's decline. Instead they had to get from showing us quickly that he was a fun dude and Kirk's best friend to a god looking at humans as less than ants while still introducing us to the series concepts and characters. This is why I take it at face value.
Anyway, when one of us is zapped with the power to move us from average human to practical godhood in just a few days, we'll be able to say whether or not we'd disregard human life so casually. Just because we can't conceive of such a change doesn't mean it wouldn't happen under those circumstances.
Only if you're Q.Or you could create monsters with your subconscious mind.
Only if you're Q.
I think you need to re-watch the episode. Mitchell's eyes were opaque as soon as Kirk went to check on him after he collapsed on the Bridge.Then again, Mitchell's eyes didn't go opaque until fairly late in the game; he didn't have a big lead on Dehner there. And why should he? Both were "infected" at the same time.
It's just that while everybody was gasping at Mitchell's grandstand stunts, nobody had the presence of mind to look at what Dehner was doing behind their backs... Whereas she very much had the presence of mind not to reveal her cards, especially considering how the crew treated the man/God trusted upon her care!
Timo Saloniemi
The most interesting thing about that episode was that it showed whoever wrote it really didn't know much about Star Trek in general. I say that because he had the crew describing the Mintokins as primitive proto Vulcans, which were very logical.Remember in TNG that lunatic that shot Picard when he thought he was a god? What was that imbecile trying to accomplish?
If Picard is a god then shooting him isn't likely to convince him of doing anything, if he isn't then you've just killed some guy.
That guy should have been a packled.
It also depends on the person's ESPer rating. Gary's was higher than Dehner's so he changed faster and grew powerful faster. Dehner never was going to be as powerful as Gary, and she never got as evil either.Then again, Mitchell's eyes didn't go opaque until fairly late in the game; he didn't have a big lead on Dehner there. And why should he? Both were "infected" at the same time.
It's just that while everybody was gasping at Mitchell's grandstand stunts, nobody had the presence of mind to look at what Dehner was doing behind their backs... Whereas she very much had the presence of mind not to reveal her cards, especially considering how the crew treated the man/God trusted upon her care!
Timo Saloniemi
The most interesting thing about that episode was that it showed whoever wrote it really didn't know much about Star Trek in general. I say that because he had the crew describing the Mintokins as primitive proto Vulcans, which were very logical.
Note too that Mitchell's hair reverts to normal in the moment his eyes do. The silver is a manifestation of his power, not a physical change.
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