On Eminiar VII, he tricked a guard into believing the landing party had escaped, thereby getting him to open the door to their room.
When taken prisoner by the Kelvans, he did the same thing to Kalinda. In both cases, it was through a wall with no physical contact with the other person.
In “Name,” Kirk and Spock actually referenced the first instance: “On Eminiar VII…” “Yes, Captain, I recall…”
I’d say it’s a tie between “And the Children Shall Lead” and “The Way to Eden.”
“Plato’s Stepchildren” and “Bread and Circuses” would fight it out for third place.
“Spock’s Brain” is stupid, but the exchanges between “Spock” and “McCoy” at the end are legitimately funny and “Brain and brain! What is brain?” is so stupid it’s hilarious.
Re: some of the other episodes.
I like “That Which Survives” and “The Savage Curtain.” “The Return of the Archons” isn’t bad and “The Gamemasters of Triskelion” has an interesting romance between Kirk and the blonde and a good fight sequence at the end. One of Kirk’s best, I think.
“Miri” is easy to make fun of (the planet obviously doesn’t have any wildlife or the kids would have been dead centuries ago), but it is kind of touching.
“The Corbomite Maneuver,” #3, Stardate 1512.2. The Enrterprise is confronted by a “radioactive warning buoy” and destroys it, and a frightening-looking thing called “Balok” threatens death in ten minutes. To make a long story short, “Balok” is a mask used by a child who in essence invites dinner guests at gunpoint.
No way! The two aren’t even in the same league! * “If they give you any trouble, screw them!”*
The best thing about that episode was Angelique Pettijohn’s humungous rack.
Trivia: It was directed by Gene Nelson, whom Shatner described as “an old song-and-dance man who was literally tap-dancing his way through the whole thing.”
It’s not amusing like Spock’s Brain (“the givers of pain and pleasure” – that episode is chock full of awesome). It’s just boring, and I’m mostly embarrassed for the mute woman. It’s their attempt at some post-modern sixties crap.
No, not The Corbomite Maneuver. Clint Howard makes anything better. Plus you have Kirk showing Spock why chess is not always the best metaphor for space confrontations; sometimes, poker is better.
Well, he tried, but was literally thrown by how awesomely alien her mind was. It didn’t help them escape, but it did conveniently give him insights in the nature of the Kelvans, which he could expositionally share with the others.
Back in the mid 1980s I was tech at a Jag dealership, and I used to work on Captain Kirk’s Jag.
One of my coworkers used to say he wanted to ask Shatner “Hey what’s it like to screw one of them chrome chicks?”
Class guy that.
Yes, he was knocked back, but she still knew something was wrong and got up and opened the door. That was when Kirk gave her the karate chop on the neck (and the two reds were shrunk into plaster dodecahedrons for trying to escape).
Didn’t she casually walk up to them afterward, showing no signs of being knocked out? I got the impression she was just playing along.
And I thought the punishment administered on the reds (where one of them got “hedroned” and crushed) was earlier, on the planet. Gad, it’s been a while.
In any case, no episode with the line “It’s… it’s… it’s green!” could possibly be the worst.
All of that scene took place on the planet. They beamed up only after the reds were punished.
She was knocked out at first, giving the landing party just enough time to escape, but you’re right: she recovered pretty damned quickly and came striding out of the cave, or wherever it was they were being held.