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|    jphalt@gmail.com to All    |
|    The Time Trap (TAS): my review    |
|    27 Aug 11 20:12:52    |
      From Newsgroup: alt.tv.star-trek.tos       From Address: jphalt@gmail.com       Subject: The Time Trap (TAS): my review              THE TIME TRAP: PLOT       The Enterprise is investigating The Delta Triangle, an area of space in which       an unusal number of ships have disappeared. As soon as they reachit, they are       attacked by three Klingon ships. Kirk's old adversary, Commander Kor (this       time voiced by James Doohan), is in the lead. The battle begins... but ends       abruptly, as Kor's ship vanishes before their eyes.       Kirk orders the Enterprise to those exact coordinates and finds his ship       following Kor's into a pocket universe. Here, races from various ships that       disappeared in the Triangle have learned to live in harmony. Kirk and Kor are       welcomed into the community, known as Elysia, and are even welcome to attempt       escape. But there is one rule which they cannot countermand, on penalty of       being frozen for 100 years - no violence of any kind, from any member of their       respective crews!       CHARACTERS       Spock behaves with excessive friendliness toward the Klingons in order to use       his Vulcan Voodoo on them, tipping him off that they are planning some sort of       sabotage. When one of Kor's men breaks the Elysians' non-violence law, Kirk       gets to make a speech championing home over the Elysians' perfect society,       showing (not for the first time) that even cartoon Kirk can always find a soap       box to climb.       THOUGHTS       Better than the last two episodes, this riffs on Lost Horizon to reasonable       effect. It's still rushed, though. The Elysian society is established through       a couple of brief scenes, but there's no chance to really explore it.       Similarly, Kor's plan to sabotage the Enterprise and Spock's atypical behavior       covering his attempts to figure out and stop the sabotage are plot turns with       a lot of potential - but the rushed pace doesn't allow either strand to be       properly developed. Spock's ruse is a story strand that ends up being dropped,       with the resolution of the sabotage subplot being provided by the Elysians at       the eleventh hour.       In other words, The Time Trap is another episode that's kept short of its       potential by the short running time. There was enough story here for a       2-parter, which would have allowed the breathing space the various plot       strands require in order to develop it all. It also would have made good       economic sense - a 2-parter would offer Filmation even more opportunities to       recycle shots and artwork than is already the case!        Even with the rushed pace, this is a decent episode. I enjoyed seeing Kirk put       in the position of working with the Klingons, and the glimpse we got of the       Elysians was interesting enough to make me wish the episode could actually       spend more time with them. The ongoing pacing issue is aggravating, though. By       this point in the series' run, the writers and producers really should have a       stronger sense of how much story can fit into 22 minutes. As it stands, we       seem to move back and forth between episodes with virtually no story and       episodes with too much story, with only an elite handful of shows managing to       strike the balance just right.       Rating: 6/10.        --- Synchronet 3.15a-Linux NewsLink 1.92-mlp        * Origin: http://groups.google.com (1:2320/105.97)       --- SBBSecho 2.12-Linux        * Origin: telnet & http://cco.ath.cx - Dial-Up: 502-875-8938 (1:2320/105.1)    |
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