Four-and-a-Half Vulcans
- El episodio se transmitió el 28 ago 2025
- TV-PG
- 55min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.8/10
1.4 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAfter a mission turns crew members into Vulcans, trouble arises when they try to revert to human.After a mission turns crew members into Vulcans, trouble arises when they try to revert to human.After a mission turns crew members into Vulcans, trouble arises when they try to revert to human.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Fotos
Opiniones destacadas
SNW is stuck in neutral. Occasional silly is fine --- not every other episode. I don't want anymore Spock romance. The series is half over and it's time for Spock to become Spock. The human-Spock arc needs to wrap it up.
This episode had some genuine fun, it's not a 1, it was also awkward, it's not a 10. It's a 5.
This episode had some genuine fun, it's not a 1, it was also awkward, it's not a 10. It's a 5.
The idea of the crew getting first hand of another species psychology and point of view is novel. However, I do think the episode focused too much on the comedy and did not sufficiently address the struggles.
The acting took away from the story as well. Pike (Anson Mount) reminded me more of a Conehead than a Vulcan. La'an (Christina Chong) could have embrace more of the Romulanesque cold, paranoid, and calculating nature. Chapel (Jess Bush) did a better job of addressing the task centered natured of the Vulcans. Uhura (Celia Gooding) did a superb job of demonstrating the Vulcan arrogance in their beliefs being superior to otheirs.
While it was not a bad episode, there was a lot of potential story left on the table.
The acting took away from the story as well. Pike (Anson Mount) reminded me more of a Conehead than a Vulcan. La'an (Christina Chong) could have embrace more of the Romulanesque cold, paranoid, and calculating nature. Chapel (Jess Bush) did a better job of addressing the task centered natured of the Vulcans. Uhura (Celia Gooding) did a superb job of demonstrating the Vulcan arrogance in their beliefs being superior to otheirs.
While it was not a bad episode, there was a lot of potential story left on the table.
This season has shown that the writers still have good ideas, but too often they waste them by turning dialogue and characters into comedy nonsense. They need to have more faith in the format, the values and the strength that Star Trek has, rather than constantly playing for laughs. There's three more episodes to go, so let's keep the faith, but season 3 is very much the weakest of SNW so far.
And he doesn't plan on going back. How did we get from the Gorn to this? Did the production staff go on a two year bender or what? On one hand, it looks as if the crew had a great time doing these episodes. On the other hand, this has gone from a paragon of ST to a parody of it. It's not funny anymore.
I love the series and the cast, Patton Oswalt was great, love the takes at the end.
But... it could be done so much better, for starters, the conversion itself, they should address why is everyone logical seconds after converting with no explanation, it was mentioned later by Spok, but again not the process, that should be the main reason why they fail so much in becoming funcional Vulcans, the difference in how they achieve logic, and emotional control, maybe that was cut, or it never was in the script... but is a huge oversight. Second... why the "new" Vulcans behave so ridiculous for the sake of it...? It will be more interesting if it was severe, grounded, credible with humor sparkled, not just a long gag... Una Chin-Riley also behaves weird and goofy... yes, she can be in love and being vulnerable, but they way is handled seems surreal, yes is a "fun" episode... with a fun guest... but regardless, it can be done in a more grounded way... I laughed, cringed... and get disappointed all at once... a good idea, that lacks finesse in execution...
But... it could be done so much better, for starters, the conversion itself, they should address why is everyone logical seconds after converting with no explanation, it was mentioned later by Spok, but again not the process, that should be the main reason why they fail so much in becoming funcional Vulcans, the difference in how they achieve logic, and emotional control, maybe that was cut, or it never was in the script... but is a huge oversight. Second... why the "new" Vulcans behave so ridiculous for the sake of it...? It will be more interesting if it was severe, grounded, credible with humor sparkled, not just a long gag... Una Chin-Riley also behaves weird and goofy... yes, she can be in love and being vulnerable, but they way is handled seems surreal, yes is a "fun" episode... with a fun guest... but regardless, it can be done in a more grounded way... I laughed, cringed... and get disappointed all at once... a good idea, that lacks finesse in execution...
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe Primanti sandwich mentioned with the fries on the inside is a reference to Pittsburgh based Primanti Brothers, well known in Pittsburgh for the invention of fries on a sandwich.
- ErroresWhen Batel tells Pike and Pasalk to leave the dinner table, Pike and Pasalk pick up their bowls of sorbet and walk away. But when the camera cuts back to Batel, Pasalk's bowl is still sitting on the table.
- Citas
[speculating on why the Kerkhovian serum didn't turn Pelia into a Vulcan like the other members of the away team]
Dr. M'Benga: I wonder if the serum did not work on you because you're Lanthanite?
Pelia: Honestly, I had the same problem with LSD in the 1960s... and the 1990s... and last July.
- Créditos curiososThere's a montage after the credits of Spock explaining human customs to Doug.
- ConexionesReferences Viaje a las estrellas: Amok Time (1967)
Selecciones populares
Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 55min
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
Contribuir a esta página
Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta