Spock and More
Two more Star Trek movies were aired these past two Sundays by GMA-7.
Following Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan were the sequels Star Trek III: The Search for Spock and Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home.
The latter is my favorite of the lot so far, because it had great humor and adventure, wherein the crew of the now-destroyed Enterprise starship went back in time, specifically into the 20th century. Their mission was to retrieve humpback whales, the only sentient form that could communicate with a space probe entity that was slowly ripping the planet Earth apart.
The Enterprise met its death in a self-destruct sequence activated by Admiral Kirk, Jackal and Scottie in Star Trek III: The Search for Spock to prevent alien terrorists from getting data on Project: Genesis.
I particularly loved The Voyage Home because of the depth it showed in the character of my favorite Star Trek character, Spock. He was the only non-human on the crew when they went into the time warp. Spock had to travel on land with Kirk in 20th-century San Francisco wearing a bandanna to cover his unusual eyebrows and ears, not to mention having a priestly-looking white robe as his daily garb.
This movie showed that he had knowledge of the 1900s earth from “(as) memory (serves)” as well as the ability to speak (telepathically) with whales, presumably among many other creatures. This special talent was demonstrated when Spock dove into a large aquarium and conversed with a whale couple, only to find out that the female was pregnant.
I very much envy that whale. She had Spock as her gyno.

The Diva Dragon. Shi. 





