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・ Where Mankind Fails
・ Where Mathematics Comes From
・ Where Meager Die Of Self Interest
・ Where Men Win Glory
・ Where Moth and Rust Destroy
・ Where Mountains Float
・ Where My Christmas Lives
・ Where My Communist Heart Meets My Capitalist Mind
・ Where My Country Gone?
・ Where My Dogs At?
・ Where My Girls At?
・ Where My Heart Is
・ Where Myth Fades to Legend
・ Where No Fan Has Gone Before
・ Where No Life Dwells
Where No Man Has Gone Before
・ Where no man has gone before
・ Where No One Has Gone Before
・ Where No One Knows My Name
・ Where No Vultures Fly
・ Where on Earth Is Carmen Sandiego?
・ Where Once They Stood
・ Where Once We Walked
・ Where or When
・ Where or When (film)
・ Where Others Keep Silent
・ Where Others Wavered
・ Where Our Love Grows
・ Where Pigeons Go to Die
・ Where Quality Is Job Number 1


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Where No Man Has Gone Before : ウィキペディア英語版
Where No Man Has Gone Before

"Where No Man Has Gone Before" is the second pilot episode of the science fiction television series ''Star Trek''. It was produced in 1965 after the first pilot, "The Cage", had been rejected by NBC. Reportedly, Lucille Ball, who owned Desilu Studios (where the pilot was produced), persuaded NBC management to consider a second pilot, thereby exercising a special option agreement it had with Desilu, because she liked Gene Roddenberry and believed in the project. The episode was eventually broadcast third in sequence on September 22, 1966, and re-aired on April 20, 1967. On July 12, 1969, it was the first episode to be shown in the UK by the BBC.〔
"Where No Man Has Gone Before" was written by Samuel A. Peeples, directed by James Goldstone, and filmed in July 1965. It was the first episode of ''Star Trek'' to feature William Shatner as Captain James Kirk, James Doohan as Chief Engineer Montgomery Scott (later called "Scotty"), and George Takei as Lt. Sulu (the ship's physicist, whose character became helmsman in subsequent episodes). The episode title was adopted as the final phrase in the opening voice-over〔 which characterizes the series and has entered popular culture, though the voice-over debuts in the first season premiere, "The Corbomite Maneuver".
==Plot==
The starship USS ''Enterprise'' is on an exploratory mission to leave the galaxy. En route, a damaged ship's recorder of the SS ''Valiant'', an Earth spaceship lost 200 years earlier, is found. Its record is incomplete, but it reveals that the ''Valiant'' had been swept from its path by a "magnetic space storm," and that the crew had frantically searched for information about extra-sensory perception (ESP) in the ship's library computer. The recording ends with the captain of the ''Valiant'' apparently giving a self-destruct order.
Kirk decides that they need to know what happened to the ''Valiant'', and the ''Enterprise'' crosses the edge of the galaxy where it encounters a strange barrier which damages the ship's systems and warp drive, forcing a retreat. At the same time, nine crewmembers are killed and both helmsman Gary Mitchell and ship's psychiatrist Dr. Elizabeth Dehner are knocked unconscious by the barrier's effect. When he awakens, Mitchell's eyes glow silver, and he begins to display remarkable psychic powers.
Mitchell becomes increasingly arrogant and hostile toward the rest of the crew, declaring that he has become godlike, enforcing his desires with fearsome displays of telepathic and telekinetic power. Science Officer Spock (Leonard Nimoy) comes to believe that ''Valiant'' crew members may have experienced the same phenomenon, and destroyed the ship to keep the power from spreading. He advises Kirk that Mitchell may have to be killed before his powers develop further, but Kirk angrily disagrees.
Alarmed that Mitchell may take over the ''Enterprise'', Kirk decides to maroon him on an unmanned lithium-cracking facility on the remote planet of Delta Vega. Once there, the landing party tries to confine Mitchell, but his powers have become great. He goes on a rampage, kills navigator Lt. Lee Kelso and escapes, taking with him Dr. Dehner, who has now developed similar powers.
Kirk follows and appeals to Dr. Dehner's humanity for help. Before Mitchell can kill Kirk, the doctor attacks and weakens him. Mitchell fatally injures Dehner, but before he can recover from the effort, Kirk uses a phaser rifle to create a rock slide, killing Mitchell.
Back on the ''Enterprise'', Kirk makes a log entry that both Dehner and Mitchell gave their lives "in performance of duty," rationalizing that they did not ask for what happened to them. Spock admits to feeling sympathy for Mitchell too, and Kirk comments that there is hope for him.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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