Star Trek: The Original Series Season 1: Difference between revisions

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115: '''Shore Leave''' ''[[19]] [[December 29]]''
115: '''Shore Leave''' ''[[1966]] [[December 29]]''


(First watched 2009-02-02)  This may be the weirdest seemingly-deadly but ultimately benevolent location yet.  A technology high enough to read their mind (though requiring a goofy antenna device) and almost immediately recreate what a person is thinking of.  You may get harmed, but you'll get patched right up.  Still, it kinda bugs me how these professionals allowed themselves to get so distracted by various things while it was still a mystery.  Sulu finds a gun on what's supposed to be an empty planet and immediately commences target practice.  Another woman member of the crew goes with really old-fashion desires and wants to be a princess who's fought over.  Kirk runs into a simulacrum of an old flame and basically falls for her immediately.
(First watched 2009-02-02)  This may be the weirdest seemingly-deadly but ultimately benevolent location yet.  A technology high enough to read their mind (though requiring a goofy antenna device) and almost immediately recreate what a person is thinking of.  You may get harmed, but you'll get patched right up.  Still, it kinda bugs me how these professionals allowed themselves to get so distracted by various things while it was still a mystery.  Sulu finds a gun on what's supposed to be an empty planet and immediately commences target practice.  Another woman member of the crew goes with really old-fashion desires and wants to be a princess who's fought over.  Kirk runs into a simulacrum of an old flame and basically falls for her immediately.
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116: '''The Galileo Seven''' ''[[1967]] [[January 5]]''
(First watched 2009-02-09)  A pretty nice Spock episode, though yet again some junior officers seem to totally despise him for his differences.  If things had been left to those guys, I think they'd have spent their entire time on the planet killing native life forms and burying each other.
I think the episode goes too far in trying to present some of Spock's choices as hard to understand for a human crew, or later emotional.  First, people balk about a potential plan which could leave several people on the planet.  Until they discovered the giant apes, I don't see why this is such a problem.  Once in orbit the goal would be to contact the Enterprise.  If that's done successfully, they can just send more help down to pick up the people remaining on the planet.  If they failed at that they'd be boned anyway, so what difference would it make if they were on the shuttle or not?  Later, they talk of Spock's "flare" maneuver as an emotional act of desperation... but what choices were left?  They hadn't been found by Enterprise in the first few minutes, so they seemed to be gone.  What were the options?  Stay in orbit a few minutes longer, hoping that either another friendly ship happens by or that Kirk will turn his ship around?  Losing a few minutes of orbit to make a signal that can be noticed from a distance seems the most logical thing to do.
Are higher-ups from the Federation sent to the Enterprise ever ''not'' dicks who question Kirk's every move?


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