“All
Our Yesterdays”
Air
Date: March 14, 1969
Mom
Title: “Spock Falls for Mariette Hartley in a Cave”
Down to the wire now folks. The second to last story is Big Three only. We don't even get to see inside the Enterprise. One communicator call from Scotty is the only indication of where they come from.
It seems fitting that one of Spock’s highlights in the first season was a loss of control fling with a back to nature blonde, and he gets another one as the series draws to a close.
It seems fitting that one of Spock’s highlights in the first season was a loss of control fling with a back to nature blonde, and he gets another one as the series draws to a close.
The Enterprise shows up
to evacuate Sarpeidon three and a half hours before its sun goes supernova. Way to plan ahead, Jim. That Starship has a safe cruising speed of
216 times the speed of light, and they still arrive insanely close to the
impending cataclysm. Someone needs to
set their alarm clock earlier.
Spock’s emotional,
romantic break down is overwhelmingly compelling to the point that I always
forget about Kirk’s strip to the puritanland.
That part had enough interestingness going for it to have worked as a
full episode. The Captain is still one
hundred percent himself. He jumps into a fencing bout while wearing a phaser,
and proceeds to “record” a log while trapped in a stone jail cell in the
“past.”
The key story is, of
course, Spock’s. Why a native of the
desert planet Vulcan is better adapted to cold than a human is a biological
question we’ll have to ignore for now.
Doctor McCoy, and we viewers, are treated to what may be the best
example of why everyone should be thankful Vulcans normally keep their emotions
under complete control. Once Bones is
healed and Spock notices him returning to his normal “Southern Gentleman
Smoothie” mode toward his bearskin clad babe, the normally calm Science Officer
becomes downright terrifying.
The only way McCoy is
able to get through to him is by presenting the situation completely logically.
Granted, he does logically explain it in a most heated and emotional tone, but
that’s why we love ya, Bones.
Of course they return
home, with Spock having learned what joys could be his without the constant
mental influence from his race subduing his feelings, and the powerful
restrictions they place on his actions once the connection is reestablished.
Yes, I do believe this whole thing was an
Andromedan set up to teach Spock a lesson, again.
The evidence:
Sarpeidon has no space
flight, but has pinpoint controlled time travel technology in only one
direction.
The controller for their
mini Guardian at the Edge of Forever looks exactly like Gary Seven’s
computer.
The easiest way for
there to be multiple versions of Mr. Atoz would have been a series of short
hops through the Atavachron.
However, the duplicates are identified as artificial. In other words, androids that are indistinguishable from humans.
However, the duplicates are identified as artificial. In other words, androids that are indistinguishable from humans.
Atoz knows Kirk would be
interested in cowboy times.
The Captain ends up in a
place where he finds help to escape after being conveniently delayed for a
while.
There’s no other viable
explanation for why Kirk, or Spock and McCoy didn’t immediately reappear in the
library when they all instantly turned around and pushed on the same walls they
came back through at the end of the episode, once the teaching was complete.
Either Sarpeidon’s
history was an exact duplicate of earth, or whoever built the Atavachron got a
good deal on Republic Serial stock footage.
In fact, based on those
similarities, and the fact that tossing the entire population back in time
would be a fantastic way to accidentally cause the rescue machine to wink out
of existence, I don’t think it’s a time machine at all. I think those CD’s
(which they still call “tapes,” gotta love the Sixties) create little pocket
universes.
That would still isolate Spock, without the inevitable probability stacking of having civilization vanish or change before the machine is made. Plus if it was really a time machine, you’d think someone would have steered society towards space ark development. Based on what we learned from Lazarus and in the Mirror Universe, the “cell adjustment” also makes oodles more sense this way.
That would still isolate Spock, without the inevitable probability stacking of having civilization vanish or change before the machine is made. Plus if it was really a time machine, you’d think someone would have steered society towards space ark development. Based on what we learned from Lazarus and in the Mirror Universe, the “cell adjustment” also makes oodles more sense this way.
Spock must have known
this, as he has several time travel options at his disposal, and doesn’t use
any to go get her.
(In cannon anyway, for one failed attempt to find her that yielded a surprise, check out Yesterday’s Son by AC Crispin.)
(In cannon anyway, for one failed attempt to find her that yielded a surprise, check out Yesterday’s Son by AC Crispin.)
Getting Spock to realize
the standard, logical Vulcan path isn’t the only way to view the universe must
be important to these beings.
“Turnabout
Intruder”
June
3, 1969
Mom
Title: “Kirk is a Woman”
Captain Kirk harbors
absolutely no suspicions on Camus II that his known to be unhinged ex may be
planning a trap for him...I guess he hasn’t been watching this series.
There’s an exchange that
gets hotly debated by the fandom and creators from this final episode:
Janice, “Your world of
starship captains doesn't admit women. It isn't fair.”
Jim, “No, it isn't.”
This has been used as
evidence that women can’t be captains, or Kirk is a misogynist, or Lester is
coo-coo and Kirk is humoring her.
I think it’s a previous love
interest calling him out on thinking he can’t be a captain, and have a serious,
steady girlfriend. Given the number of
“pre-captain” ladies he’s left behind, that was probably the excuse he gave all
of them.
There is proof that
Captain Kirk still maintains some contact to his body after the transfer. Janice has kept his obsession, entering the
details of her crime into her Captain’s Log.
A “document” we’ve seen used as evidence in the courtroom.
The real Kirk shows even
less control of this problem, “recording” a log while trapped in another body,
strapped down in sick bay.
Speaking of
evidence:
Vulcans.
Known telepaths.
Founding members of the
Federation.
Pathological attachment
to the truth.
Why the fal-tor-pan is
information from a mind meld inadmissible in a court of law?
(Y’know aside from,
“Because then the show would be over now.”)
Bill Shatner obviously
had a blast with this one. I guess there
are some unfortunate implications that his interpretation of a woman is almost
identical to “Evil Kirk” with the fabulous knob turned up to eleven.
But, dang it, it’s just so much fun to watch he should be forgiven.
But, dang it, it’s just so much fun to watch he should be forgiven.
Sandra Smith does an
amazing job of being the only other person (before 2009) to play Captain James
T. Kirk. She displays all the authority,
confidence, and bluffing ability that comes with the character.
Here at the end of the
live action series is as good a point at any to bring up one (of many) things I
love about this series.
I’ve always hated
“double” stories. In examples where
folks have no reason to suspect a perfect duplicate, the technology/magic
shouldn’t exist to create one, and there should be visual tells. That’s not the issue here, as there are
several methods in the Trekverse to create identical copies of someone. With that knowledge, when someone acts
completely out of character, their friends should immediately notice, and that option
should be on the table. In most fictional universes, it isn’t. However, in almost every instance there is a
duplicate Kirk, the double cannot fool those in the crew that are closest to
him.
Scotty’s the one who voices it perfectly this time around during the trial. Then it becomes a matter of figuring out how to fix or find the Captain, rather than a never ending series of gags based on, “Duhhhh…Wonder why Jim’s acting unlike he ever did before?”
Scotty’s the one who voices it perfectly this time around during the trial. Then it becomes a matter of figuring out how to fix or find the Captain, rather than a never ending series of gags based on, “Duhhhh…Wonder why Jim’s acting unlike he ever did before?”
Spock shows his mind
still isn’t fully back in contact with the logical Vulcans. When talking about a complete mental
transfer, the man who’s been possessed not once, but twice, by beings
completely controlling his body states:
“To my knowledge, such
total transfer has never been accomplished with complete success anywhere in
the galaxy.”
Bones doesn’t come out looking
much better in this last adventure. His
emotional test detects no change between Kirk’s current and previous
readings. Wow that machine sucks! A
blind tribble who heard a story about Captain Kirk once would be able to tell
his levels of emotional stability have plummeted off a cliff in the past week.
Spock, McCoy and Scotty
play the internal turmoil of their mutiny as to be expected once they’re
convinced.
Chekov and Sulu are more
subtle, but also show the crew solidarity.
Chekov, as Spock’s apprentice, runs his own evaluation. That’s why he
said General Order Four when talking about the death penalty. Every good
Trekkie knows only General Order Seven carries that punishment.
The real unfortunate
implications only come after the transfer is reversed. Then the whole crew treats Janice Lester,
guilty of several premeditated murders, and planning several more, as:
“Awwwww, she’s a poor
defenseless girl who just needs to be loved.”
It’s a shame Lieutenant Uhura
wasn’t around to slap some sense into them.
The remastering team
does a gorgeous job on the Enterprise, allowing a fitting farewell to the
beautiful lady as the live action series comes to an end with one of the goofier
exploits of the proud crew.
Despite the misfires in
this final season, there were enough successes to insure the gang would be
reunited.
The first time, was as
cartoons.
Too bad no one told the animators’
team that Nurse Chapel’s hair had gone completely brunette as the series has
progressed. Then again, that oversight
is the least of the chromatic or visual problems that version would have.
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