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Hollywood.com said "Errand of Mercy" was among the best of Star Trek episodes about the Klingons, noting in this episode the war-craving Klingons thought the Organians were peasants. [5] [6] A ranking of every episode of the original series by Hollywood, placed this episode 25th out of 79 episodes. [7]
Warning: Major spoilers ahead.
HD-DVD was overall discontinued, so only season one was released on HD-DVD, although the later two seasons were still released as remastered DVD versions. By purchasing a HD-DVD player and a remastered HD-DVD Star Trek season one, buyers of this special promotion could acquire a remote control shaped like Star Trek original-series phaser prop. [9]
The teleplay for the episode was written by Berg, Harberts, and Craig Sweeny, based on a story by Fuller, Berg, and Harberts. [8] The writers structured the season so that the first two episodes would act as a prologue, with the third episode beginning the series' actual story arc and being considered by them to be more equivalent to a traditional pilot than the show's first episode is. [9]
In Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ Season 2 premiere — now streaming on Paramount+ — Spock & Co. absconded with the Enterprise to a mining planet on the edge of Klingon space, where they ...
This week’s Star Trek: Strange New Worlds asked another complex question: Does someone who committed horrific crimes in the past deserve a chance to start anew? Dak’Rah was a Klingon general ...
[2] For Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979), the Klingons were "reimagined", or retconned, and were depicted with ridged foreheads, new uniforms, and a distinctive Klingon language. Gene Roddenberry said that the movie-era Klingons are closer to his original vision but could not be realized in a low-budget television show. [3]
In 2020, SyFy recommended watching this episode for background on Romulans for Star Trek: Picard. [9] In 2020, ScreenRant ranked it as the 4th best episode of TOS to re-watch. [10] They note the similarity in the plot between this episode and season one of Star Trek: Discovery, although instead of the Romulans, the Klingons are shown. [10]