DVD Star Trek The Original Series - The Complete Third Season:
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DVD Star Trek The Original Series - The Complete Third Season
Saved from the brink of cancellation by its loyal fanbase, Star Trek's third and final season rewarded them with a number of memorable episodes. Tight budgets and slipping creative control, however, made it the series' most uneven season, though it did have some of the coolest episode titles ("For the World Is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky," "Is There in Truth No Beauty," "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield"). Some of the best moments involved a gunfight at the OK Corral ("Spectre of the Gun"), a knock-down drag-out sword battle with the Klingons aboard the Enterprise ("Day of the Dove"), the ship getting caught in an ever-tightening spacial net ("The Tholian Web"), TV's first interracial kiss ("Plato's Stepchildren," and it should be easy to guess who participated), Sulu taking command ("The Savage Curtain"), and Kirk's switching bodies with an ex-love interest ("Turnabout Intruder").
Also appearing in the set as a coda are two versions of the series pilot, "The Cage," a restored color version and the original, never-aired version that alternates between color and black and white. Starring Jeffery Hunter as Captain Pike, Leonard Nimoy as a relatively emotional Spock, and Majel Barrett (the future Nurse Chapel and Mrs. Gene Roddenberry) as a frosty Number One, this pilot was rejected, but a second was commissioned, "Where No Man Has Gone Before," now considered the "official" beginning of the series. But "The Cage" is very recognizably Star Trek with its far-out concepts (telepathic aliens collecting species samples), sexy humanoid women, character development, and of course cheesy costumes and special effects. Footage was later reused in the season 1 two-parter, "The Menagerie."
The best of the 63 minutes of bonus material focuses on three of the actors: Walter Koenig, George Takei, and James Doohan. Koenig discusses how he was cast and shows off his various collections, one consisting of Chekov figurines. Takei speaks movingly about the Japanese American internment and, in what is probably his last Star Trek appearance, Doohan, slowed by Alzheimer's but still with a twinkle in his eye, recalls his voiceover roles and his favorite episodes. The Easter eggs are amusingly called "Red Shirt Files" in tribute to those poor saps who everyone knew were only in the landing party so they could die. --David Horiuchi
Review(s): DVD Star Trek The Original Series - The Complete Third Season
Not my favorite
Not my favorite of the Star Trek seasons, but the presentation is just as nice as the first 2 seasons.
some essential episodes here..
sure there are some bum episodes in season 3, as in ALL Star Trek seasons, old and new, but, there are a few here that, for me, are requisite.
namely:
All Our Yesterdays (Bones and Spock trapped in Ice Age, Spock falls in love)
For the World is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky (long title! cool plot)
The Way to Eden (Spock jams on Vulcan harp with Hippies, Kirk portrayed as a square)
The Cage (actually the series pilot but included on this box! can't beat it, intelligent sci-fi TV, almost an oxymoron)
Season 3--The Good, The Bad and Spock's Brain
You've heard it all by now--the 3rd Season was the letdown. Well, that's not necessarily true. Yes, there are some bad episodes--"And The Children Shall Lead..." stands out as a truly cringe inducing episode.
However, you overlook the gems if you pass this box set up: "The Enterprise Incident", "Turnabout Intruder", "The Tholian Web", etc.
Of course, the set is worth it alone for "Spock's Brain". This episode was so bad it was good and was humorously grafted into an episode of "The Wonder Years" many years after.
Paramount does a fine job with the extras to the set. Basically, if you're an original series fan, you've got to own the 3rd Season to complete your set! The pictures are sharp & crisp and the sound is excellent!
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