Search
Cookie Usage Statistics Colour Key Sudden Death Monthly Poll Caption Comp eMail Author Shops
Ships Fleets Weaponry Species People Timelines Calculators Photo Galleries
Stations Design Lineage Size Charts Battles Science / Tech Temporal Styling Maps / Politics
Articles Reviews Lists Recreation Search Site Guide What's New Forum
Ablative Armour Antigrav Units Atmospheric filter Comms Devices Computers Exocomps Force Fields Genesis Device Holographic Technology Impulse Engines Medical Technology Navigational Deflectors Particle Fountain Replicators Soliton Wave Drive Sonic Shower Stellar Cartography Stellar Re‑Ignition Terraforming Tractor Beams Transporters Tricorders Universal Translator Viridium Tracking Warp Drive Warp Scales Androids Cloaking Device Cloning Co‑axial Warp Core Comets Cryostasis D'Arsay Archive Dimensional Shift Drones Guardian of Forever Hypergiant Star Iconian Gateway Mind Probe Neutron Stars Null Space Catapult Orbital Tether Parallel Dimensions Particles Planetary Classes Planetary Collision Preserver Cannon Probes Psionic Resonator Quantum Slipstream Spatial Anomalies Special Powers Subspace Amplifier Subspace Phenomena Sunshield Trajector Transwarp Underspace Corridor Vaal Verteron Array Virtual Reality Headset Vision Augmentation Wormholes Additional Sci‑Tech

Tin Man

ReviewImagesDatapointsQuotesMorals
TimelinePreviousNextYour View
Series :
Season Ep :
3 x 20
Title :
Tin Man
Rating :
3
Overall Ep :
67
First Aired :
23 Apr 1990
Stardate :
43779.3
Director :
Year :
Writers :
Your Rating :
4.3333 for 3 reviews
Reviewer : John den Haan Rating : 5
Review : YATI (read: major plothole): 'Tin Man' wants to die, yet he destroys the warbird out there to kill him?
Reviewer : Bryan Moore Rating : 4
Review : I don't have much to contribute to plot analysis for this episode, though I find it solid through and through. Rather, I tend to think of this episode as one that would serve wonderfully if it were created with more modern effects. As the producers had noted, they were limited by the studio environment to truly create a "living ship," out of Gomtu. With modern CGI, this would potentially be a remarkable concept if it were created 25 years later.
Reviewer : Indefatigable Rating : 4
Review : An interesting episode. The idea of a spaceborne life form is a bit far-fetched. What would it eat? How would it breathe? However, it has been seen before, and the idea of a living ship existing symbiotically with its crew was rather fascinating (I wonder if this inspired "Farscape"). The model used looked nice enough, although the interior set was less convincing. It's also a bit odd that Tin Man/Gumtuu chose to commit suicide by sitting beside a star about to explode rather than flying directly into one (or a black hole if it could survive that). Still, a lot of the story focused on Tam Elbrun and what was happening on the ship. To imagine the way he has to live, imagine every single radio station in the world being beamed into your head simultaniously - I'd go mad in a few days. Harry Groener put in a convincing performance (as did most of the people he interrupted - theatrical interruptions often sound unnatural) and the writers gave him some good lines, a different look at telepathy from the one we saw in "The Price". The resolution worked as well. I've sometimes wondered what happened to Tin Man, it had some interesting capabilities and potential for more stories. One side note, I see the Romulan Warbird now has a proper class name, not a reporting code. Did Jarok let that one slip in "The Defector"? (If the writers thought of that, nice touch.)
Add your own review

© Graham & Ian Kennedy Page views : 9,057 Last updated : 26 Apr 2024