TNG Characters in the JJ-Verse

Discussion in 'Star Trek Movies: Kelvin Universe' started by los2188, Sep 18, 2012.

  1. USS Triumphant

    USS Triumphant Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Yeah, I know the difference, but I still screw that up.
    :lol: Alright, so call me on some of what you had issue with. I'm game. Let's make this interesting.
     
  2. doubleohfive

    doubleohfive Fleet Admiral

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    :lol I didn't mean it like that; I just thought it was silly that Set read your post closely enough to notice the misuse of the word but not comment on anything else.
     
  3. trekkiebaggio

    trekkiebaggio Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Reading that post makes me think a really good Easter egg in the new movie would be someone having some of the Picard wine!
     
  4. Jerikka Dawn

    Jerikka Dawn Captain Captain

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    This is fantastic. Rather than directly giving Starfleet knowledge of events to come --- Spock Prime, while during the day he's helping to manage colonization of the Vulcan diaspora, by night he forms an elite team consisting of Guinan, Data, and Emony Dax, to deal with threats such as the Doomsday Machine, the Whale Probe, Khan, etc.

    [​IMG]
     
  5. USS Triumphant

    USS Triumphant Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Throw in a young Morgan Bates and you've got yourself what I consider a quality plan, there. ;)

    Sadly, nowhere near as cool as that.
     
  6. teacake

    teacake Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    I'd like to buzz cut that man. The shitlocks are too much.
     
  7. Temis the Vorta

    Temis the Vorta Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Beehive, perhaps? ;)
     
  8. Temis the Vorta

    Temis the Vorta Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    If he's referring to the Many Worlds theory, the probability should be 100% and therfore fair game for a movie. Abrams can point the camera anyplace he chooses, and with infinite parallel realities from which to choose, any sequence of events a screenwriter can think of will be happening somewhere, for him to film.

    Of course this is not how time travel has worked in Star Trek to date, but since when has logical consistency stopped the writers? They havent been particularly consistent before now.
     
  9. M'Sharak

    M'Sharak Definitely Herbert. Maybe. Moderator

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    Or a Yeoman Rand basket-weave? :lol:
     
  10. UFO

    UFO Captain Captain

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    I'm afraid not. The problem with Orci's "explanation" is that the JJverse was not a universe chosen form a near infinite number specifically because it matched what the writers intended.

    It’s a universe that was, of course, based directly on the prime reality, but was then significantly disrupted. The normal result of that is to almost certainly make the events that happened in the prime universe less likely, not hasten their occurrence (in the most implausible ways possible)!

    That means there is therefore nothing about the JJverse that implies a 100% probability that Kirk and Co will get together. In fact the opposite is obviously true. You would need to believe in fate or some form of Pantheism perhaps, for what we saw to actually occur.

    Or as Ryan8bit responded, rather more succinctly, to Orci's excuse: "That is, of course, total hogwash.". I could have sworn he said "BS". ;)
     
    Last edited: Oct 15, 2012
  11. Set Harth

    Set Harth Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Orci never said that there was.

    I don't get what you mean by "the opposite" here. You don't mean 0%, I hope. Because that is obviously not true.

    You would need nothing of the sort. What we saw was possible and thus required no divine intervention to occur.
     
  12. Ovation

    Ovation Admiral Admiral

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    Just to stir the pot:

    Doesn't Spock say something (in City on the Edge…) to the effect that time flows like a river, with currents, eddies, backwash? Couldn't such a perspective influence the "JJ-universe" in such a way as to cause these people to come together, despite the odds against it, as it caused Spock and Kirk to come together with McCoy?

    (I think the whole idea is errant nonsense if applied to the real world, but as it is a precedent in Trek, why not?)
     
  13. Ryan8bit

    Ryan8bit Commodore Commodore

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    I don't think there's a precedent. Spock's line in CotEoF referred more to where time travelers end up, not that events are fated to happen as a result of time travel (it's quite clear that the opposite happens in that episode). It would be more analogous to Spock Prime and Nero arriving relatively near to each other position-wise.
     
  14. USS Triumphant

    USS Triumphant Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Worth consideration is that Spock Prime was already back at Starfleet Command when the decision to leave Kirk in command of the Enterprise was made. Imagine a (obviously actually longer) conversation that goes something like this:

    Spock Prime, speaking to the Federation President and the Admiralty: "So, in conclusion, gentlebeings, we can go ahead and act to preempt all of the threats (V'Ger, Khan, the Whalesong Probe, the parasites planning to take over Starfleet, the Borg, etc, etc) that I have just outlined for you. Oh, and I'm sure you'll agree that the Enterprise command crew as I knew them needs to be kept together with Kirk in command, to sharpshoot any other problems that may arise or that can't be preempted."

    And if you think about it, this actually provides a REASON that the Enterprise may be "the only ship available", at least in this continuity: Starfleet is sending them on purpose.
     
  15. UFO

    UFO Captain Captain

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    If you have been following the thread you will know I was actually responding to Temis the Friendly Ghost and she did say that.

    Not the extreme opposite no. But I think it would be so close as to be hardly worth the qualification.

    "Possible" only in the sense that technically absolutely anything "might" happen (from our limited point of view), but is never-the-less so unlikely that we would normally attribute it to a deity etc, if it actually "did" happen. Indeed your use of italics seems to imply agreement thus rather undermining your: "nothing of the sort". Actually by saying something like the universe is trying to "repair itself" the writers are effectively endorsing Pantheism.
     
  16. Set Harth

    Set Harth Vice Admiral Admiral

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    The point is, this was not something claimed by the film or the writers.

    No, we would normally attribute it to something called "coincidence". No deity required.

    You're apparently reading too much into it.

    The quote I posted by Orci contains no endorsement of Pantheism. It speaks of probabilities. It's cast as science rather than religion.
     
  17. UFO

    UFO Captain Captain

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    A "point" that doesn't need making because nothing I said indicated otherwise. But if you are so concerned, why did you not point that out to Temis the Friendly Ghost yourself?

    I will say that your "point" is however misleading because Orci is obviously trying belatedly and unsuccessfully to make it appear the multiverse somehow makes it almost inevitable that the events of the movie would come about. To quote you quoting him: "Thus, the idea that Kirk and Spock and Bones come together is merely an indication that the probability assigned to such an event is very high in the multiverse." (We are not of course concerned with the multiverse, only with how likely it is in the JJverse).
     
    So from a pedantic point of view he is not saying 100% probability, just very likely. By all means make whatever technical point you can out of that distinction. To me Orci still looks to be mistaken.
     
    Only up to a certain point. Once things get too ridiculous many resort to superstitious explanations. The film, as I explained, appears to be no exception, whatever the writers may have intended.
     
     
    But that's not how it came across in the film and I believe his quote fails as science anyway. The phrase I referred to comes from the movie (if I remember it correctly) and implies a fantasy explanation of some sort, especially in the absence of anything else.
     
  18. Set Harth

    Set Harth Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Well, that's a relief.

    :lol: That didn't last long.

    It's possible you may be misinterpreting what is meant by "very high"; after all, he doesn't give a number.

    Good for them.

    As I explained, if the film depicts something that is possible, there is no need for superstitious explanation. You may see the film as "ridiculous", but you don't speak for everyone. Also, dodging writer intent isn't really going to do anything for your argument.

    Hardly. The film said nothing about "Pantheism". You seem to be projecting an interpretation onto it. What I saw in the film was Spock Prime trying to make something happen because he thought it was a good idea. No magic, fantasy, or superstition required.

    No, it doesn't.
     
  19. UFO

    UFO Captain Captain

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    Actually it's still in effect because I haven't said Orci stated the probability to be 100%.

    and
    :lol: The funny thing (apart from your redefinition of "very high" to mean "low") is that your quote of Oric is his attempt to make parts of the film look less "ridiculous" (I am not saying the whole thing is implausible of course). So, while there may be a few fans who are willing to overlook almost anything, it appears I speak for the writers! :eek: ;) After all, there wouldn't be any point in him saying anything if he thought his alternative "scientific" explanation had so low a probability that he had to resort to fate or mysticism etc. :vulcan: It seems he does, but he appears to believe otherwise.

    We are not talking about Spock Prime's actions. We are talking about the likelihood of all the original crew getting together almost a decade before they did in the prime timeline (and in particular event like the chances of Spock Prime meeting Krik and Scotty on DV) despite significant disruption.

    Thanks for quoting me out of context. :p I said "(if I remember it correctly)". It seems I didn't. And that's weird because I must have read it somewhere.

    There is a thread here that describes a deleted scene that contains that idea and Memory Alpha states it is still in the novelisation but neither explains why I thought it was in the movie, so perhaps somewhere there is a suggestion that it was?

    Anyway, in the above thread there is a quote from the screen play where Spock Prime refers to the crew of the Enterprise:
    Now this isn't canon but it does indicate the writer's intentions at that time (which you seem to value). Ie. It looks for all the world like some form of mysticism, fate, pantheism or whatever. Spock Prime also talks of destiny though that could be part of his smokescreen so he didn't have to go with Kirk and thus prevent Kirk from getting into the captain's chair.

    And of course the only way to avoid the relentless feeling that things are only happening because the writers need it to, is to suppose some form of destiny. Unfortunately that just makes the film look like a fantasy. So we know how things look. The only question is did the writers change their minds and try to later paint things in scientific terms?
     
  20. F. King Daniel

    F. King Daniel Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Having seen the Terminator films and TV series, where those damn machines keep eventually being built even when the company behind them changes (Cyberdyne in T1 and 2, Cyber Systems in T3), when the origin of Skynet changes (a big mainframe, then a internet software program from the US Air Force, then a chess computer merging with something-or-other in the TV series) and the date of the nuclear apocalypse keeps changing but remains a constant event.... yeah, I can see the Enterprise crew uniting in a ton of different timelines.