What's the difference between the Star Trek and the Buffy? Assuming you mean The Replacement, here -- weren't they the same principle of doubling bodies, splitting characteristics? Which is what I think it's to be.
Wash ,'Bushwhacked'
Boxed Set, Vol. 1: Smallville, Due South, Farscape
A topic for the discussion of Farscape, Smallville, and Due South. Beware possible invasions of Stargate, Highlander, or pretty much anything else that captures our fancy. Expect Adult Content and discussion of the Big Gay Sex.
Now that you mention it, ita, you're right - although agressive!Kirk seemed evil, it was still Kirk. Wow, memfaulting on TOS; that's new. What I meant was, are they going for straightforward good/evil, or will it be more like Trek/Buffy passive vs. agressive. Or, who knows, maybe it will be, sane/crazy.
I think there's a difference, primarily in intent. If the intent is to split Lex into his good and evil instincts, that has very different plot implications from splitting him into...I don't know..scientist Lex and Businessman Lex.
I'm betting on good and evil, though
There's a difference in execution depending on how you split them, but I don't think that Buffy didn't rip of Star Trek any more than Smallville would be ripping off Buffy. It's quite possible that sentence doesn't parse. And it may have happened before then, I'm not familiar enough to say.
Want to bet one of the Lex's finds out about Clark ?
Have we ever even seen Scientist!Lex on Smallville? I don't seem to recall it. I mean, I suppose his investigations into Clark could possibly count but that was mostly other people doing the work for him.
Also, what a shame they don't go for the Farscape option instead and keep two Lexes around for a while .
There's been the implication that he's knowledgeable in the field, but not that much hands on, I think.
Frank, do you know that they don't? I don't know how it wraps up -- I thought it might play into the sudden yet inevitable betrayal, if they wanted.
I think Buffy was certainly riffing on Star Trek, but that's different, to me, from un-attributed, apparent ripping off of plots.