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  1. Kirk, Spock, and McCoy are trapped in a planet's distant pasts, where Spock finds love with an exiled woman. A star shines with a reddish glow, and will soon destroy the planet orbiting it, Sarpeidon, in a supernova. Captain Kirk plans to go with a landing party to warn the inhabitants that...

    • 24 min
  2. The penultimate episode of TOS, All Our Yesterdays sees Kirk, Spock and McCoy beam down to the planet Sarpeidon, whose star is about to go nova. They discover signs of an advanced civilisation, but find only one inhabitant, a librarian named Atoz (Ian Wolfe).

  3. Dec 30, 2009 · All Our Yesterdays is my favorite episode of the orginal Star Trek; for so many reasons, a lot of them already mentioned in this thread. I know, there are some flaws in the logic of this episode. The reverting of Spock's behaviour is quite dubious, for one thing.

  4. 3.5 stars for "All our Yesterdays" -- the penultimate TOS episode is a winner. May not be considered one of the Star Trek classics but there's plenty to like about this especially that Spock/McCoy bond and how they go through the time portal together and return together.

  5. "All Our Yesterdays" is the twenty-third and penultimate episode of the third season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek. Written by Jean Lisette Aroeste and directed by Marvin J. Chomsky, it was first broadcast March 14, 1969. In the episode, Captain Kirk, Spock and Dr. McCoy are trapped in two timeframes of another ...

  6. Apr 24, 2007 · Mariette Hartley looking fetching in a skimpy outfit, Nimoy’s tough-guy delivery of Spock’s threats to McCoy and Kelley’s reading of the line “Five thousand years before you were born!” are chief...

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  8. We also get what must be the most abrupt ending in the series thus far. I dunno, there’s a lot of good things going on in this episode, but a tv episode is at its heart a story telling endeavour and there’s something off about the story here.

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