#1 More ST: TAS
Posted: Wed May 14, 2008 6:09 pm
You might remember a while ago I was watching Star Trek: TAS and talking about it, with the intention to eventually watch the whole series of my tapes.
Well, I got sidetracked for a while, but just watched a couple more just now: "One of Our Planets is Missing" and "The Lorelei Signal".
In the former episode, a giant living cloud that eats planets was heading toward a Federation colony of 80 million people, who would all die if it ate the planet (which everyone had to repeat many times throughout the half hour episode, as if we didn't understand it the first time).
Kirk calls the governor of the colony and warns him to start an evacuation, but they don't have many ships and it is really short notice. He says only 5,000 of them will make it off.
Interesting to note that fact - this colony apparently didn't have many starships available.
The crew of the Enterprise determine the cloud being has a brain, and Kirk first suggests blowing it up with the ship's photon torpedoes, but this wouldn't be enough to actually destroy it, given the creature's huge size (about half an AU). Spock suggests self destructing the ship with antimatter (found in the creature's intestines) to have enough energy to kill the brain in one big blow.
Some people object to killing it, saying Starfleet regulations forbid killing intelligent things, to which Kirk responds that if it was the creature or the colony that dies, he'll pick the creature. The ship prepares to blow itself up.
But first, Spock wants to talk to it. He technobabbles himself to contact, and the are able to talk the creature out of eating the planet at the last minute. He tells the creature to go home since if it stays, it might accidentally eat people, which it doesn't want to do after learning that people exist and what they are.
This reminded me of the TNG episode Silicon Avatar, where the entity ate life off planets, and Picard wanted to talk to it, with the option of killing it as a backup plan. The resemblance is slight, but if you think that Picard knew about this mission, his decision to talk to the crystalline entity makes more sense. (Of course, TAS isn't part of the official canon continuity, but I like to sometimes pretend it is.)
And, of course, a giant living cloud was also used in TMP, which I haven't seen for a very long time and don't remember much about at all...
Today's second episode also reminded me of a TNG episode: the second season Unnatural Selection. In the TNG ep, Doctor Pulaski magically gets older, and then the transporter magically cures her, originally planned to use patterns on file, but when none were found, they used magic hair.
Almost the same thing is done to Kirk and co. in this TAS episode.
We start out with the ship getting a signal from a probe that affects all the men on the ship and brings them to a weird planet.
Kirk, Spock, Bones, and a redshirt (who survives, btw) beam down, and all comment on how beautiful it is. The redshirt asks if the captain wants the 'usual routine scans' done, but is told Spock would do them as they proceeded into Castle Anthrax.. err a temple with young women.
The men are quickly subdued and get magic headbands that drain their life force into the women. They escape from their prison and go to hide in a huge urn.
Meanwhile, on the ship, Uhura takes command, determining that the men can't be trusted on this mission. She stations female security guards at the transporters and has female scientists take new readings, since Spock's were wrong. She seems to have the situation under pretty much control.
Uhura really kicks ass in this episode. She quickly figures out something is wrong, and quickly takes command to start solving it. And it gets better.
Spock heads back to the temple to reclaim his communicator so he can warn the ship not to send anyone else down, not knowing Uhura was already on top of things. When he gets to the communicator though, he asks for an all female rescue party.
Uhura and her TOS miniskirt wearing (which I find hilarious in a way) female guards beam down to the temple and demand Spock be released to them. When the women on the planet refuse, Uhura orders her team to simply stun them all and take Spock back by force, which they do quite trivially with the help of a telepathic message from Spock telling his location.
They rescue him and beam up. Nurse Chapel tries to reverse the aging process, but she fails.
Meanwhile, it has started to rain where Kirk, Bones, and the redshirt are hiding, and they are in danger of drowning. Uhura and her team beam back down to rescue them.
We now see one of the most badass moments in the episode: Uhura takes her phaser and vaporizes a vase next to one of the women on the planet and delivers this line: "Release Captain Kirk and his men or we will destroy this temple!"
She means serious business, and this gets the cooperation of the locals. Her team locates the others, shoots the urn in which they were hiding, and beam back to the ship.
We now have another quick drop of the women's competence, when Spock suggests something and Uhura and Chapel respond "we tried that", which was good to see; they knew what they were doing. Then Spock suggests using the transporter to fix them, and they do.
There is some exposition about how the planet ended up being this way, and their curse is broken and the planet's women are given the chance to integrate with Federation society, which they accept, and live happily ever after.
Like I said, the magic transporter cure and aging reminded me of Unnatural Selection TNG, but I think the real coolness here was Uhura seriously kicking ass.
Well, I got sidetracked for a while, but just watched a couple more just now: "One of Our Planets is Missing" and "The Lorelei Signal".
In the former episode, a giant living cloud that eats planets was heading toward a Federation colony of 80 million people, who would all die if it ate the planet (which everyone had to repeat many times throughout the half hour episode, as if we didn't understand it the first time).
Kirk calls the governor of the colony and warns him to start an evacuation, but they don't have many ships and it is really short notice. He says only 5,000 of them will make it off.
Interesting to note that fact - this colony apparently didn't have many starships available.
The crew of the Enterprise determine the cloud being has a brain, and Kirk first suggests blowing it up with the ship's photon torpedoes, but this wouldn't be enough to actually destroy it, given the creature's huge size (about half an AU). Spock suggests self destructing the ship with antimatter (found in the creature's intestines) to have enough energy to kill the brain in one big blow.
Some people object to killing it, saying Starfleet regulations forbid killing intelligent things, to which Kirk responds that if it was the creature or the colony that dies, he'll pick the creature. The ship prepares to blow itself up.
But first, Spock wants to talk to it. He technobabbles himself to contact, and the are able to talk the creature out of eating the planet at the last minute. He tells the creature to go home since if it stays, it might accidentally eat people, which it doesn't want to do after learning that people exist and what they are.
This reminded me of the TNG episode Silicon Avatar, where the entity ate life off planets, and Picard wanted to talk to it, with the option of killing it as a backup plan. The resemblance is slight, but if you think that Picard knew about this mission, his decision to talk to the crystalline entity makes more sense. (Of course, TAS isn't part of the official canon continuity, but I like to sometimes pretend it is.)
And, of course, a giant living cloud was also used in TMP, which I haven't seen for a very long time and don't remember much about at all...
Today's second episode also reminded me of a TNG episode: the second season Unnatural Selection. In the TNG ep, Doctor Pulaski magically gets older, and then the transporter magically cures her, originally planned to use patterns on file, but when none were found, they used magic hair.
Almost the same thing is done to Kirk and co. in this TAS episode.
We start out with the ship getting a signal from a probe that affects all the men on the ship and brings them to a weird planet.
Kirk, Spock, Bones, and a redshirt (who survives, btw) beam down, and all comment on how beautiful it is. The redshirt asks if the captain wants the 'usual routine scans' done, but is told Spock would do them as they proceeded into Castle Anthrax.. err a temple with young women.
The men are quickly subdued and get magic headbands that drain their life force into the women. They escape from their prison and go to hide in a huge urn.
Meanwhile, on the ship, Uhura takes command, determining that the men can't be trusted on this mission. She stations female security guards at the transporters and has female scientists take new readings, since Spock's were wrong. She seems to have the situation under pretty much control.
Uhura really kicks ass in this episode. She quickly figures out something is wrong, and quickly takes command to start solving it. And it gets better.
Spock heads back to the temple to reclaim his communicator so he can warn the ship not to send anyone else down, not knowing Uhura was already on top of things. When he gets to the communicator though, he asks for an all female rescue party.
Uhura and her TOS miniskirt wearing (which I find hilarious in a way) female guards beam down to the temple and demand Spock be released to them. When the women on the planet refuse, Uhura orders her team to simply stun them all and take Spock back by force, which they do quite trivially with the help of a telepathic message from Spock telling his location.
They rescue him and beam up. Nurse Chapel tries to reverse the aging process, but she fails.
Meanwhile, it has started to rain where Kirk, Bones, and the redshirt are hiding, and they are in danger of drowning. Uhura and her team beam back down to rescue them.
We now see one of the most badass moments in the episode: Uhura takes her phaser and vaporizes a vase next to one of the women on the planet and delivers this line: "Release Captain Kirk and his men or we will destroy this temple!"
She means serious business, and this gets the cooperation of the locals. Her team locates the others, shoots the urn in which they were hiding, and beam back to the ship.
We now have another quick drop of the women's competence, when Spock suggests something and Uhura and Chapel respond "we tried that", which was good to see; they knew what they were doing. Then Spock suggests using the transporter to fix them, and they do.
There is some exposition about how the planet ended up being this way, and their curse is broken and the planet's women are given the chance to integrate with Federation society, which they accept, and live happily ever after.
Like I said, the magic transporter cure and aging reminded me of Unnatural Selection TNG, but I think the real coolness here was Uhura seriously kicking ass.