MaxWylde wrote:Durandal_1707 wrote:MaxWylde wrote:Take Patterns of Force, for example: In that episode, Kirk does not really end the Nazi regime; he just ends up removing Malakon's plans for an invasion of Zeon, their nearby neighbor. How interesting would it have been for Picard and the Enterprise-D to encounter a primitive but warp-driven starship 80 years later with a Nazi Swastika on it, asking for diplomatic contact to potentially join the Federation? What a great opening for an episode that would've made.
Ugh, just no.
Why? See, I was always curious why Kirk just left the Nazi regime in power. And what would Picard think about this? If the Ekosians effectively qualify to be members of the Federation on paper, but remain fascists, does Picard refuse to even entertain the notion of their admittance? That would be an interesting episode.
1. "Look, Nazis are good guys after all!" isn't a message we need right now.
2. "Look, Nazis are good guys after all!" wasn't a message we needed in 1968 either.
3. "Look, Nazis are good guys after all!" isn't a message we ever need. Keep your swastikas out of my space opera.
4. Infamously crappy episodes like these don't need sequels, especially ones that were just flimsy excuses to save money by going to the backlot. I don't need to see the Nazi planet or the Roman planet or the Halloween planet or the gangster planet again. I don't care what happened to Miri, the space hippies, the Gideons, the Kohms and the Yangs, Elaan of Troyius, the Friendly Angel, or any of those idiots that worshipped malfunctioning computers. I'm actually one of the few that finds "The Alternative Factor" kind of endearing in its utter weirdness, but that doesn't mean we need a sequel to it. If you need sequels, make sequels to the actually
good episodes, or better yet, come up with something original.