Incorrect! The Orions were first mentioned (and shown) in “The Cage,” the original pilot:
CAPT. PIKE: I could go into business on Orion. DR. BOYCE: You?! A dealer in slaves? Green animal-women?
They were also mentioned by name by Commodore Mendez in the two-part expansion of “The Cage,” “The Menagerie.” (“That’s Vina? As the green Orion slave girl?”)
The Nazi one.
I love the Specter of the Gun - creepy and weird, lots of atmosphere.
Spock’s brain isn’t that bad. I’ll take it over the one with Teri Garr.
Back in the day - even today - I liked the Spock-centric ones. “Amok Time”. “This Side of Paradise” actually made me tear up at the end, and I have a special fondness for “All Our Yesterdays”. Mariette Hartley in furs, living isolated in a cave. Along comes Mr. Spock, who regressed to his early Vulcan heritage and loses his cold logic…this episode is both kinda hot and disturbing, and is the one episode I would call haunting. And I liked the psychedelic special effects in the portal scenes.
Another one I really like, “Is There In Truth No Beauty” with Diana Muldaur and an intelligent but hideous medusa-thing in a box.
And “The Devil In The Dark”, rather touching when it all works out.
Give it another try; The Tholian Web is one of the few really good episodes from the turd, er, third season.
Those suits clearly weren’t sealed; if they had been, the guy from the landing party wouldn’t have gotten dosed and the episode would have been rather boring.
Interesting. Googling, I am unable to turn up the details of the story I vaguely remember, but it looks like Roddenberry was largely uninvolved. I think perhaps the focus of the story was not Roddenberry, but whomever was helming the show at that time.
He took off his glove to scratch his nose, and the mutated water got into his body through his skin when he touched a console.
Your point is quite valid, though. The only way those suits would have protected anyone from anything would be if their mesh pattern generated some kind of force field that shielded the wearer. That’s really the only thing that makes sense; it also explains why only the outside of the suit was decontaminated inside the transporter chamber.
I disagree about “Omega Glory.” Up until Act IV, it was a good episode. I just wish they had resolved the situation in some way other than having Kirk quote the Pledge of Allegance.
The animated series should be considered canon. It provides much better continuity than most of the loopy material that’s been generated by fans over the years. (I detest the vast majority of the Trek novels I’ve managed to slog through.)
BOY I love this thread. I just this week was the recipient of hopefully good-natured jibes when I admitted to attending not one but two Star Trek Conventions in the early 1970’s.
:D:D:D
I’ve got tons of favorites but because it does seem that the Spock character has become the keystone of the organization, I’d suggest Amok Time.
I had to watch that episode three times to see the whole thing; I kept falling asleep before the end.
“Lights of Zetar,” “The Cloud Minders,” “The Empath,” “Mark of Gideon,” all had a similar effect on me. I think “Plato’s Stepchildren” is the episode I hate the most.
It’s a lot harder to name the good-to-watchable third season episodes than it is to name the ones that stank to high heaven.
Haters prepare to hate, but I gotta say it. Spock’s Brain. Yes, it’s goofy, but it’s a hell of a FUN episode, with a lot of great lines and just leagues above any other “bad” TOS episodes, like the space hippies.
OK, so “Spock’s Brain” was not just terrible, but hilariously terrible in the best possible MST3K way.
“Omega Glory” though … damn. So was that planet supposed to be a lost Earth colony that got really weirdly nationalistic, or were they supposed to have come up with the Constitution, the Pledge of Allegiance, and the American flag entirely independently? Because neither one of those things makes any sense.
What part did you find the funniest? Mine was when Spock was a robot, controlled by like a two button switch.
That’s one of those parallel evolution planets. This is far from the only example. Some writers used Star Trek as being closer to the Fox show Sliders than a space opera.
The one I remember most fondly is the one where you have a Roman society with the tech of the 20th century, with televised Colosseum-style events. Google says it’s “Bread and Circuses,” episode 2x25.
Yup. IIRC the planet they found in Miri really was a duplicate of Earth down to geographical detail, not just a similar biosphere with parallel evolution. But A Piece of the Action doesn’t quite count - although the inhabitants were human, the only reason their culture resembled 1920s Chicago was that they’d deliberately imitated it after adopting a book about gangsters as their bible.