My order would be different, but I can't believe how many times TOS uses to what amounts to "electronic blow-up android dolls, in space" as major plot points:
Requiem for Methuselah
At least this one doesn't ham it up in the way "I, Mudd" was alluding to for Chekov's jollies, and the tone and pace of the piece is remarkably serious, even if Ryetalyn is too close to "Ritalin" in name.
Actually, the playing it po-faced with a synthetic robot doll as companion, being played so sincerely, is a borderline plus as this story, with everything it's telling, definitely nails the tone and concepts really well.
Kirk being used like that certainly hits home in one way, though as tool for Rayna to learn from is pretty sick. It's no wonder Kirk got so angry.
The row of Rayna droids is also unsettling, in a way that works with the plot.
Spock's "Forget" line I keep forgetting was in this and not in "The Paradise Syndrome", another one that's a bit high-concept yet sells the doomed romance angle extremely well.
The old dude being all of Earth's historical figures, having fled and reinventing himself is pretty cool, and may have been a possible (albeit slight) influence on a certain Scaroth from that BBC sci-fi show made a decade later as Trek was being repeated across the pond as well.
Wait, I'm citing reasons for liking this, but season 3 isn't all crap. So I'd settled on ambivalence. Trek did the android shtick, even as sex dolls (!!), way too often. It's just sad that this late season 3 episode did a better job with it than some earlier episodes' shlockiness. Nope, I can't hate this one.
Oh wait! I just remembered! Not since 'Catspaw' has the old trick of "shrinkage of the ship" been used as commercial cliffhanger fodder for the audience and in this scene it's way too gimmicky, which is ironic considering "Catspaw" was a handful of gimmicks that just did it better (and it being easier to believe by the aliens in that story). Why miniaturize the ship as punishment and for only 2500 years? Dunno. Looks cool on screen, though. Probably:
Which reminds, the acting was good in this one too.
What's left:
Is There in Truth No Beauty?
Day of the Dove
The Tholian Web
The Cloud Minders
All Our Yesterdays
Requiem for Methuselah
At least this one doesn't ham it up in the way "I, Mudd" was alluding to for Chekov's jollies, and the tone and pace of the piece is remarkably serious, even if Ryetalyn is too close to "Ritalin" in name.
Actually, the playing it po-faced with a synthetic robot doll as companion, being played so sincerely, is a borderline plus as this story, with everything it's telling, definitely nails the tone and concepts really well.
Kirk being used like that certainly hits home in one way, though as tool for Rayna to learn from is pretty sick. It's no wonder Kirk got so angry.
The row of Rayna droids is also unsettling, in a way that works with the plot.
Spock's "Forget" line I keep forgetting was in this and not in "The Paradise Syndrome", another one that's a bit high-concept yet sells the doomed romance angle extremely well.
The old dude being all of Earth's historical figures, having fled and reinventing himself is pretty cool, and may have been a possible (albeit slight) influence on a certain Scaroth from that BBC sci-fi show made a decade later as Trek was being repeated across the pond as well.
Wait, I'm citing reasons for liking this, but season 3 isn't all crap. So I'd settled on ambivalence. Trek did the android shtick, even as sex dolls (!!), way too often. It's just sad that this late season 3 episode did a better job with it than some earlier episodes' shlockiness. Nope, I can't hate this one.
Oh wait! I just remembered! Not since 'Catspaw' has the old trick of "shrinkage of the ship" been used as commercial cliffhanger fodder for the audience and in this scene it's way too gimmicky, which is ironic considering "Catspaw" was a handful of gimmicks that just did it better (and it being easier to believe by the aliens in that story). Why miniaturize the ship as punishment and for only 2500 years? Dunno. Looks cool on screen, though. Probably:
Which reminds, the acting was good in this one too.
What's left:
Is There in Truth No Beauty?
Day of the Dove
The Tholian Web
The Cloud Minders
All Our Yesterdays