Showing posts with label Star Trek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Star Trek. Show all posts

Monday, September 8, 2025

Captain's Library: STAR TREK "Planet of the Robots"

You've seen the various comics from Gold Key, Marvel, DC, IDW, etc....
...but, if you're an American reader, you've likely never seen this!
Captain Kurt?
The Enterprise lands on a planet?
Spock shouting?
Lt Bailey, who was left on the Fesarius with Balok in the episode "Corbomite Maneuver" is still aboard the Enterprise?
It was 1969.
Star Trek had not yet aired in England.
The publisher of the wildly-successful weekly comic magazine TV Century 21, which featured strips based on the various Gerry Anderson series (StingrayThunderbirdsCaptain Scarlet, etc.), decided to launch a new weekly magazine showcasing the currently-running Anderson series, Joe 90.
Entitled Joe 90: Top Secret, it also featured a couple of two-page strips about imported American TV series, Star Trek and Land of the Giants.
Since the shows hadn't yet aired in England, the writers and artist Harry Lindfield were working off whatever print material and photo reference was sent from America.
(Apparently they didn't send them a copy of Stephen Whitfield's Making of Star Trek, which explains things like the Enterprise being unable to land on a planet's surface.)
The storylines usually ran six weeks, but could go longer if required.
Because the Trek strip had the centerfold slot, it allowed for panels running thru what would be the interior gutters on any other page, giving them a wide Sunday newspaper-strip feel and layout.
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Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Captain's Library / CoronaVirus Comics STAR TREK SPECIAL "Flesh and Stone" Part 1

What threat could require the efforts of doctors from every Star Trek series (pre-CBS All-Access)?
Buckle up, space cadets!
You're about to find out...
Dr McCoy here looks as he did in "Encounter at Farpoint", the premiere episode of Star Trek the Next Generation...
...in a scene with Dr Crusher's friend and shipmate, Data!
There (AFAWK), are three other doctors who served as Chief Medical Officer of the Enterprise NCC-1701 (chronologically)...
  • Dr Sarah April: medical officer and wife of the ship's first commander, Captain Robert April in "Counter-Clock Incident"
  • Dr Philip Boyce: Captain Christopher Pike's medical officer in "The Cage/The Menagerie"
  • Dr Mark Piper: Captain Kirk's first medical officer in "Where No Man Has Gone Before"
...but all would've been deceased as of the timeframe of this story.
Dr. Pulaski, though referred to as medical officer of the USS Repulse, was Dr Crusher's replacement on the Enterprise during STtNG's second season.
Crusher returned in the third season.
The conclusion to this story, including flashback to McCoy's encounter with the disease during the time of the original series can be seen tomorrow at...
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Monday, February 19, 2018

The Most Dangerous Man on TV (Conclusion)

...Roger C Carmel had already shown himself to be TV's most proficent practictioner of evil, with multiple appearances on various series, including a record-setting run as Classic Star Trek's only repeat antagonist!
But his greatest role had yet to be played!
And it would be in a historic setting...the first crossover between super-heroes from two different comic companies!
In the Batman second season two-parter "A Piece of the Action" / "Batman's Satisfaction",  Carmel played Colonel Gumm, a counterfeiter using his employer, Pinky Pinkston's stamp-printing facilities to produce forgeries of rare stamps he sells to collectors as the real thing!
It's also implied he had something to do with the demise of his employer's father, Pincus Pinkston, but that's never made clear.
When The Green Hornet (who is believed to be a criminal, though he's actually a hero) shows up demanding a cut of the counterfeiting operation, Gotham's own Caped Crusaders leap into action...to try to arrest The Green Hornet!
However, while tailing the Hornet, they discover Gumm is really the baddie!
When the Callous Counterfeiter appears to have turned the Hornet and his aide, Kato, into life-size stamps, Batman and Robin attack, but are caught like flies on flypaper as the first episode ends with them also about to be processed into oversize postage stamps!
As is the case with such cliffhangers, Batman and Robin break loose and free the Hornet and Kato who, or course, weren't turned into giant stamps!
Gumm and his men escape, and, without evidence, the Dynamic Duo let Kato and the Hornet walk.

Figuring out the Colonel's next move, both duos go to a major stamp exhibition where the Gumm and his gang (in disguise) are about to make off with oodles of rare stamps when both teams of crimefighters take them down while battling each other (since B&R think GH&K are criminals, remember?)!
Roger plays Gumm as someone who really enjoys being evil, going almost as all-out wacky as Victor Buono did as King Tut!
He gloats and preens, all but devouring the scenery and spitting out toothpicks in an overacting tour-de-force!
But that's not all!
Carmel gets to play not only Gumm, but Gumm in three different disguises...all with different accents!
...as an unnamed British gent who eavesdrops on Pinky Pinkston's lunch with Bruce (Batman) Wayne and Britt (Green Hornet) Reid who then pay a visit to the stamp shop of...
...the Russian-accented "Boris Sevaroff" whom Bruce questions about counterfeit stamps.
When The Green Hornet invades Gumm's lair later that night, he reveals he knows Gumm is Sevaroff, leading the Colonel to conclude The Green Hornet is really...wait for it...Bruce Wayne!
Finally, Gumm appears as "Senor Barbossa", an Argentinian stamp dealer, in order to steal rare stamps at the stamp exhibition.
Despite being a one-shot villain, Colonel Gumm was fondly-remembered by Bat-fans, and, a couple of years ago, when a comic based on the TV version of the Caped Crusader, Batman '66, was finally produced, he was brought back for a sequel to the TV series episodes...with a promotion from "Colonel" to "General Gumm"!
But there was a major problem!
The comic's publishers didn't have the rights to use Roger's likeness!
So, the story's writers concocted Gumm having an accident while trying to improve his glue, resulting in a sheet of it permanently affixed to his face!
Despite that drawback, the script captures the character's speech patterns perfectly, and you can "hear" Roger's voice in your head as you read the story!
Will Gumm return again?
Only time will tell!
At any rate, between Colonel Gumm and Harry Mudd, 
Roger C Carmel's position as
The Most Dangerous Man on TV
is assured!

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Sunday, February 18, 2018

The Most Dangerous Man on TV!

He faced off against these two guys three times...
...(more than any other antagonist in television history)!
&
he forced the only time these two duos met...
...though they spent as much time fighting each other as they did dealing with his machinations!
Plus, he went up multiple times against other major heroes (though always in different roles), including Solo and Kuryakin: the Men from U.N.C.L.E., I Spy's Kelly and Robinson, and even Transformer Optimus Prime and his Autobots!
Who is the actor who played the Most Dangerous Man on TV?
A TV fixture in the 1960s (with occasional movie roles), the roly-poly actor's jovial on-screen persona usually concealed deadly intent, which made him a popular guest baddie on genre shows, often appearing as different villains in different seasons!
Roger made three appearances as Harry Mudd, two on Classic Star Trek and one on the Animated series (becoming the only non-Enterprise crew character to do so more than twice)
The Enterprise crew encounter charming rogue "Leo Walsh" transporting three women, ostensibly to become wives to miners on an isolated planetoid.
What they soon learn is that he's really a wanted con man, Harcourt Fenton Mudd!
Mudd utilizes the women to manipulate the miners into withholding needed dilithium from Kirk unless Harry is granted amnesty.
The plan almost succeeds, but one of the women rebels against Mudd and reveals Harry is using illegal drugs to enhance their femininity and attractiveness!
With the con revealed, the miners (who are now married to the ladies) give Kirk the dilithium and Mudd is taken prisoner!
Roger plays Harry as alternately charming and almost psychotically-menacing, not hesitating to allow the Enterprise and all aboard to be destroyed if it allows his escape!
An android disguised as a Starfleet crewman sabotages the Enterprise and hijacks it to a remote planetoid where Kirk and company discover the android's commander is...Harry Mudd!
Harry explains he escaped from prison, but his ship, damaged by pursuers, crashed on this uncharted world.
A world populated by alien androids whose masters had died out centuries ago, so they willingly agreed to serve Mudd.
Unfortunately, his imagination was insufficient to keep up with their need for projects to do, so he hijacked a starship to get a whole crew of bright, intelligent people for the androids to serve...coincidentally, it was the Enterprise!
But, as Mudd's plans tend to do, this one goes awry when the androids reveal that, after observing Harry, they decide it would be best for the galaxy if they pacified humanity by removing it's desire to do anything by giving all humans whatever they wanted, in essence subjugating humanity with kindness!
It's a much more humorous outing then the previous Mudd adventure, filled with witty repartee between Mudd and Kirk, Spock, and McCoy.
But, once Harry ends up trapped like the Enterprise crew, he uses his incessant snarkiness for good instead of evil!
While Harry does help Kirk and company, they leave him with the now-reprogrammed-and-harmless androids...

"Mudd's Passion"
You'd think the least likely returning character to appear on the Saturday morning animated version of Star Trek would be a con man who dealt in drugs and playing with people's sexual drives, yet here he is...dealing drugs and manipulating people's sex drives...but done with delicacy and good taste...sort of...
Having escaped from the androids. Harry is back to his thieving ways, promoting a phony aphrodisiac...which actually works!
Interestingly, it not only inspires romantic love between sexes, but enhances non-romantic affection between same-sex friends, resulting in perhaps the most controversial scene between Kirk and Spock in Star Trek history...

Yes, they're hugging!
Carmel's Harry Mudd is softened considerably here, no longer the callous SOB who would let the Enterprise (and crew) be destroyed, but he's as snarky and snide as ever, getting off a number of zingers before heading for incarceration...yet again!
But that wasn't the end of Mudd!
When DC Comics acquired the rights to Star Trek in 1983, after Star Trek II: the Wrath of Khan came out, they created tales to fill the time frames between the movies, often reviving TV series characters in new adventures.
So it was inevitable that you-know-who would return...
...in a couple of pretty good multi-part tales!
...keeping him in sleazy, snarky character throughout!
And now, the prequel series Star Trek: Discovery has cast Rainn (The Office) Wilson as a younger, but still snarky, Harcourt Fenton Mudd...
...adapting some of the style and mannerisms of Roger C Carmel into his characterization!
But, fans, that's not the only legendary nemesis Caramel created!

BTW, this is part of the...
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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Richard Matheson (1926-2013)

If it wasn't for Richard Matheson...
...zombies would not be rampaging across movie and TV screens today!

His novel, I am Legend, and the first movie adaptation, The Last Man on Earth, were the inspiration for George Romero's Night of the Living Dead....
...which redefined "zombies" in pop culture.
In addition, Matheson was one of the three major contributors to the original Twilight Zone (along with creator Rod Serling and Charles Beaumont) with his most famous story, "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet" filmed twice.
When the leads of the two versions met up in Third Rock from the Sun, they commented on their airline troubles...

Add to that a plethora of novels and short stories, most of which were adapted into tv episodes and movies, plus his own screenplay adaptations of other authors' works (including Edgar Allan Poe), and his own original scripts for shows like Star Trek...
 ...and you have an amazing, creative, talent who will be missed.

Friday, February 17, 2012

Battle of the STAR TREK Captains in THIS MEANS WAR!

It's Kirk vs Picard...over a woman!
There have been numerous examples of actors who previously played heroes appearing together in genre movies and tv shows as other, unrelated, characters.

(This does not count actors meeting their later counterparts like Buster Crabbe on Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, Christopher Reeve and Helen Slater on Smallville, or Adam West on Batman the Animated Series!)

In this case, Chris Pine (Captain James T Kirk in Star Trek [2009]) and Tom Hardy (Captain Jean-Luc Picard clone Shinzon in Star Trek: Nemesis [2002]), making it an alternate-universe Kirk vs a clone Picard in the new film This Means War.
And, while the flick is being promoted as a romantic comedy, it's also an action-adventure/spy pic!

Here are some other "sorta" movie/tv team-ups...

The Lone Ranger meets Commando Cody!
Clayton Moore (The Lone Ranger on The Lone Ranger tv series) played the lead villainous henchman in Radar Men from the Moon!

Batman meets Superman
Robert Lowry (Batman in the Batman & Robin serial) appearing as a government agent on Adventures of Superman!

The Shadow meets The Green Hornet
Victor Jory (The Shadow in The Shadow serial) playing a villain on The Green Hornet [1966]!

Captain Midnight meets Captain Kirk
Richard Webb (Captain Midnight on the Captain Midnight tv series) as a psycho Starfleet officer on Star Trek!

Doc Savage / Tarzan meets Superboy
Ron Ely (Doc Savage in Doc Savage: the Man of Bronze & Tarzan on Tarzan [1966-69]) portraying the retired Golden Age Superman on Adventures of Superboy!

James Bond meets Superboy
George Lazenby (James Bond in On Her Majesty's Secret Service) as Jor-El in Adventures of Superboy.

The Batman meets The Shadow
Adam West (Batman on Batman [1966]) met Alec Baldwin (The Shadow in The Shadow [1995]) on 30 Rock!
For the first time, the meeting of two actors who played heroes, and neither was a heroic character!