I can't remember the name of the episode, but a really annoying one from the original series was that Halloween one, with Sylvia, the wizardess, who was sometimes a black cat. I know they were on a very tight budget, but couldn't they have tried even a little bit harder to hide the cords on the puppets they showed at the end?
The holdeck was a lame means by which to create non-space, non-sci-fi stories.
Exactly! To me the best use of the holodeck was the Barclay stories on TNG, like the one where Barclay has an addiction to the holodeck and was [ahem] "carrying on" (wink wink) with Troy, Crusher et al. That was classic!
Everyone knows that that would be the ONLY real use of the holodeck.
The holdeck was a lame means by which to create non-space, non-sci-fi stories.
Exactly! To me the best use of the holodeck was the Barclay stories on TNG, like the one where Barclay has an addiction to the holodeck and was [ahem] "carrying on" (wink wink) with Troy, Crusher et al. That was classic!
Everyone knows that that would be the ONLY real use of the holodeck.
duchess of malfi wrote:I can't remember the name of the episode, but a really annoying one from the original series was that Halloween one, with Sylvia, the wizardess, who was sometimes a black cat. I know they were on a very tight budget, but couldn't they have tried even a little bit harder to hide the cords on the puppets they showed at the end?
Next to the crappy U.S.S. Constellation model that wobbled and vibrated as it was supposedly entering the maw of the Doomsday Machine, that scene with those idiotic alien puppets is laughable. Unless their species wander around with thin black threads suspended from above.
Hmm... Maybe I'm all wet on the subject.
"If you can't tell the difference, what difference does it make?"
dlbpharmd, you've summed up just how unreliable 23rd century technology is!
I'm not sure which happens more often on Star Trek: the crew losing helm control or the transporter malfunctioning.
Reminds me of other annoying Trek malfunctions that I've mentioned elsewhere:
ST:TMP -- V'Ger approaches Earth...and all planetary defense systems suddenly go off-line.
ST IV: Voyage Home -- Probe approaches Earth...and all planetary defense systems...well, you know. (Hmm, this is actually a good scene from the movie. It doesn't really have bad scenes, does it?)
ST VIII: First Contact -- Notice how one hit from a Borg disrupter causes most starships to simply burst into flame? The Ford Pinto lives!
How about all the times when some various form of radiation won't allow the sensors to work, or the transporter can't get a lock? The transporter has got to be the most unreliable piece of equipment on the whole damn ship - except, of course, during the last 5 minutes of the episode, the Romulans have phaser lock on Picard in his little shuttlecraft (with shields up) and the Enterprise comes screaming in at warp 9 - then that transporter works like a charm everytime.
Roland of Gilead wrote:The transporter was the single worst corner the Trek writers ever backed themselves into.
Because of it's deus ex machina nature, it must be "disabled" in almost every episode - otherwise, no suspense.
Yeah, and I'd give a year's salary to se Scotty pull out a roll of Duct tape to fix the damn thing after the obligatory "poof!" when the damnable thing broke...yet again! Lt. Kyle must have been the most incompetent engineer EVER. Whatta sad sack.
Yeah, that crossed my mind, too, Gunslinger. Kyle should have at the very least been demoted a few times. Or made into security for one of Kirk's awaay missions - a surefire death sentence.
"I am, in short, a man on the edge of everything." - Dark Tower II, The Drawing of the Three
Moment: The Enterprise's shields absorb the equivalent energy of 90 photon torpedoes from a blast from Nomad and weren't instantly vaporized like an ice cube dropped in a volcano.
90...photon torpedoes.
90!
Either the Enterprise was the most indestructible ship ever created or the writer of the screen play fat fingered the number on his keyboard and no one chose to correct it.
Hell, 9 would have been way too much.
"If you can't tell the difference, what difference does it make?"
Moment: The Enterprise's shields absorb the equivalent energy of 90 photon torpedoes from a blast from Nomad and weren't instantly vaporized like an ice cube dropped in a volcano.
90...photon torpedoes.
90!
Either the Enterprise was the most indestructible ship ever created or the writer of the screen play fat fingered the number on his keyboard and no one chose to correct it.
Hell, 9 would have been way too much.
Gotta give you that one. Heck if your ship can withstand 90 photon torpedoes at once, then why worry about "evasive maneuvers"? Rather, "just take his fire until he runs out of firepower then tow him to starbase 555."
“One accurate measurement is worth a
thousand expert opinions.”
- Adm. Grace Hopper
"Whenever you dream, you're holding the key, it opens the the door to let you be free" ..RJD
Rawedge Rim wrote:
Gotta give you that one. Heck if your ship can withstand 90 photon torpedoes at once, then why worry about "evasive maneuvers"? Rather, "just take his fire until he runs out of firepower then tow him to starbase 555."
Bwahahahaha!!!!!
"If you can't tell the difference, what difference does it make?"