- We get a scene with the three-foot Enterprise miniature
That was one scene I never really understood. Flint has that kind of power? Like Q? From a remote control?
The current thinking is that Flint had a massive transporter device that de-materialized the Enterprise and suspended it in a pattern buffer for long-term storage. The table-top model was thus not the actual ship miniaturized, but a holographic image of the ship's pattern.
The current thinking is that Flint had a massive transporter device that de-materialized the Enterprise and suspended it in a pattern buffer for long-term storage. The table-top model was thus not the actual ship miniaturized, but a holographic image of the ship's pattern.
Or, as I prefer to think of it, "Forget it, Jake. It's Season Three."
Loved The Savage Curtain. I actually had no problem with season three and revisit those episodes often. There are a few episodes I don't sit through, but frankly, there are a couple in the earlier two seasons that don't do it for me either. I'll watch Day of the Dove or The Tholian Web (or even Spock's Brain) a hundred times before sitting through Charlie X or Miri or I, Mudd again.
A famed "Star Trek" captain's romantic conquests have come to life in a new illustrated book. The new book showcases all the women Capt. James T. Kirk of the original "Star Trek" kissed over the course of the show, which ran from 1966 to 1969.
Loved The Savage Curtain. I actually had no problem with season three and revisit those episodes often. There are a few episodes I don't sit through, but frankly, there are a couple in the earlier two seasons that don't do it for me either. I'll watch Day of the Dove or The Tholian Web (or even Spock's Brain) a hundred times before sitting through Charlie X or Miri or I, Mudd again.
There a are plenty of good and bad eps in all three seasons of TOS.
A famed "Star Trek" captain's romantic conquests . . .
Romantic conquest:
I think the romantic part was tracked with a cue from Duning's "Metamorphosis." The conquest "stinger" at the end I'm not sure. Maybe Kaplan's "Enemy Within" from the first season? Anybody know?
A famed "Star Trek" captain's romantic conquests . . .
Definitely from Duning's "Metamorphosis," oft reiterated in that episode. Reminiscent of a Williams LiS riff.
That scene reminds me of the WILD WILD WEST animated intro. Speaking of which, I'm sure it's been noted how Artie's whisper-exclamation or call to "Jim!" is reminiscent of McCoy calling Kirk.