TransWikia.com

What is the in-universe reason for Spock smiling in 'The Menagerie'?

Science Fiction & Fantasy Asked on January 24, 2021

In the below picture, Spock is seen smiling – very illogical and too emotional. I am aware of the out-of-universe explanation that this was footage from before Spock was made a logical being, but in-universe is this ever accounted for? If not, is there some other reason suggested by ‘official’ sources (I am afraid of the problems this phrase may establish, but someone like Roddenberry?)

This site provides a semi-explanation as him being very young, but one shown to be inappropriate with other sources like other, younger Vulcans being too logical to smile at something as trivial as this – for goodness’ sake – even Pike doesn’t smile at this!

enter image description here

One Answer

The in-universe reason (from the original teleplay) is that he was "grinning with relief" at having discovered that the source of the strange noise was nothing more than an exotic plant.

16 EXT, TALOS XV RAVINE - LIMITED ANGLE DOWN

Revealing little or nothing but the ravine floor where we see a sudden eddy of dust as if the surface here is being blasted by an invisible force. Then, Winter and his landing party materialize, CAMERA IS EMPHASIZING Winter, allowing us to share his reaction at this first look at a strange new world. We HOLD an instant while Winter and the landing party look, registering some surprise, then:

17 ANOTHER ANGLE

Revealing the weird violet sky, twin suns, around them is multi-hued jagged rocks, here and there orangish vegetation not too dissimilar from Earth desert plants. Suddenly, a MUSICAL FLUTE-LIKE SOUND. The landing party reacts, then Mister Spock moves forward, grins in relief as he points out the source — a plant with paper-thin rigid leaves which vibrate in the breeze. He blows on it, produces new MUSICAL NOTES. (These wind-plant SOUNDS will identify and set mood for all our scenes on the surface of Talos IV).

We learn (in subsequent episodes of Trek) that Vulcans gain additional emotional control as they age. It creates a nice counterpoint to show a discernible difference in attitude between the younger/less experienced Spock, aged 24 years and pretty fresh from the Academy and the older Spock, aged 37 who's seen more than his fair share of death and destruction.

Correct answer by Valorum on January 24, 2021

Add your own answers!

Ask a Question

Get help from others!

© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP