New Empire magazine STID photos

Discussion in 'Star Trek Movies: Kelvin Universe' started by SalvorHardin, Dec 24, 2012.

  1. SalvorHardin

    SalvorHardin Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    New Empire magazine STID photos & story info [spoilers]

    Enjoy...or not :p

    ..With Earth under terrorist attack from Benedict Cumberbatch’s ex-Starfleet employee John Harrison, Kirk is this time forced into a rash decision that breaks a critical Starfleet command, puts his crew in danger & costs him his captain’s chair. Now out of uniform and dressed down in space civvies of black leather jackets and boots, our three heroes have separated from the Enterprise and headed off on a mission to try and rectify his mistake…

    [LEFT]Abrams: He was within Starfleet and has now turned against the organization and is hell-bent on revenge. He’s responsible for a very violent, horrific attack in London and then one in the States. He believes he and others were wronged and is focused on destruction. He’s an incredibly brilliant strategist who is aware of various truths that Kirk is not privy to.[/LEFT]
    [LEFT]Pine: He is Kirk’s shadow of death, his Achilles’ heel. He is just a big mirror reflecting all of Kirk’s insecurities back at him. He is just as intelligent and logical as Spock, but is also one very bad motherf—er.[/LEFT]
    [LEFT]Cumberbatch: He’s sort of superhuman, pretty much unbeatable. Brainy and brawny. He manipulates situations. He’s incarcerated when Kirk is talking to him and yet he still gets Kirk to do his owrk for him. He pushes him into a corner where the only route to salvation is cooperation. There is a real Hannibal Lector quality to him.[/LEFT]


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    Last edited: Dec 24, 2012
  2. teacake

    teacake Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Gee whiz. Who would have thought..

    that James T. Kirk would break the rules, go rogue and save Earth?
     
  3. SalvorHardin

    SalvorHardin Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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  4. BillJ

    BillJ The King of Kings Admiral

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    They're really doing this less than a year after he takes command? It's disappointing.

    We know why Chekov is in red now...
     
  5. SalvorHardin

    SalvorHardin Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    More or less a year.
    Vulcan was destroyed at 2258.42, STID opens in London 2259.55
     
  6. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Actually it kinda makes sense. If someone were given command of the flagship right out of the Academy, no matter how heroic the circumstances, there'd be a lot of questions about his qualifications and a lot of second-guessing. It stands to reason that Starfleet Command would be watching him closely and ready to take his command away as soon as he screwed up. So this version of Kirk at this early stage would be far more likely to have his command revoked than the more seasoned Kirk of the Prime universe.
     
  7. F. King Daniel

    F. King Daniel Fleet Admiral Admiral

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  8. BillJ

    BillJ The King of Kings Admiral

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    But we just covered the bad boy angle in the last movie.
     
  9. SalvorHardin

    SalvorHardin Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Did Kirk ever stop being the "bad boy", defying orders and doing what he feels is right?
    Even in his old age.

    In any case, according to Pine:
     
  10. BillJ

    BillJ The King of Kings Admiral

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    Kirk of TOS and the image of the character in pop culture are two distinct things.
     
  11. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    True. The only time in TOS that Kirk ever overtly violated a direct order was "Amok Time." In other cases, he bent the rules from time to time, but generally obeyed orders even when he hated it -- he was ready to abandon Spock and McCoy in "The Galileo Seven" because the High Commissioner gave him a direct order, and was willing to leave McCoy behind on Yonada because an admiral ordered it. True, he was flexible in his interpretation of the Prime Directive, but that was his prerogative as the commander on the scene, in a time when it was often not feasible to get direct orders from superiors and captains were expected to use their own judgment to interpret the rules. And in most of TOS, Kirk was portrayed as a disciplined career soldier.

    The popular image of Kirk as a renegade and rule-breaker comes mainly from The Search for Spock and The Voyage Home. But again, as in "Amok Time," he only violated orders as an extraordinary measure for the sake of saving a friend and colleague. It wasn't his regular MO.

    Let's keep in mind, though, that the Abramsverse Kirk was intentionally given a very different, far more troubled backstory. This Kirk actually is the hotheaded maverick that his counterpart is only mistakenly assumed to be. They're the same at the core, with the same intrinsic leadership skills and virtues, but this Kirk's life history has led him to be more unruly, brash, and undisciplined. So they shouldn't be treated as identical characters.
     
  12. BillJ

    BillJ The King of Kings Admiral

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    I'm not saying that the movie will be bad. Just disappointed that we are following one movie where he was a bad boy with another. I was just hoping to see a movie where Kirk works within the system to solve the problem.

    This wouldn't be a complaint if it was the basis of the third movie where he'd been in command for five or six years.
     
  13. Mr Silver

    Mr Silver Commodore Newbie

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    Re: New Empire magazine STID photos & story info [spoilers]

    Cheers for posting these!

    Some really interesting details, although nothing "conclusive" (as is the JJ way). I'm starting to get Sector 31 vibes, given the talk about him being "within Starfleet" and being responsible for terrorist attacks.
     
  14. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    I think it's a logical continuation of his character arc. We've heard Pike's warning in the trailer that Kirk is still too lacking in humility and likely to make a critical mistake. The first movie was about how Kirk got command; this one is about testing his worthiness for command, as he makes mistakes and has to learn responsibility and humility in order to become truly deserving of the command he just stumbled into before. I'm glad they're actually confronting the questions we've been asking for four years about whether he was really ready to command the ship yet. I wouldn't just want that to be glossed over and have Kirk spontaneously become a more disciplined, by-the-book captain without showing how he earned that.



    But Section 31 isn't just the generic "everything bad done by members of Starfleet" group. They have their own specific set of motivations, believing their actions are justified for the good of the Federation. They might arrange terrorist strikes against groups they believed were threats to the Federation (and, if history is any guide, most likely exacerbate the threat by doing so rather than ending it), but against Earth cities? No way.

    I'm increasingly starting to suspect that Harrison is secretly the descendant of Augments who went to ground after the Eugenics Wars, and maybe he's striking against the UFP's laws banning genetic engineering (what we see in the teaser trailer, the "I can help her" line to Noel Clarke, might suggest that). That could explain why a human member of Starfleet would have such enhanced physical and mental abilities. Maybe he's even looking for Khan and the Botany Bay.
     
  15. Admiral Buzzkill

    Admiral Buzzkill Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    This isn't TOS and isn't meant to be. It's the result of five decades, more or less, of Trek's evolution as a narrative and in popular culture.

    One can draw a line anywhere in Trek's narrative history - including right down the middle of TOS - and say "on this side lies the original presentation of Star Trek and on this side lies later accretions/transformations/elaborations."

    One example is Spock's troubled relationship with his father, something invented well after the character had been fleshed out and portrayed by Nimoy for quite some time. To have that - including fairly explicit references to an animated story produced years after TOS finished - reflected in the 2009 movie is to accept changes and additions to the narrative understanding of the character.

    That movie also makes great use of the Kobayashi Maru test which was introduced in 1982 as an insight into Kirk's essential character.

    By the end of TOS Kirk had already become a (somewhat reflective) serial rule breaker. All of that is who Kirk is as a character now. To expect the producers and writers to discard everything about the character's evolution beyond some early line of demarcation is expecting them to hamstring themselves unnecessarily to no good effect in obeisance to a trivial sense of faux historicity.

    The only place you'll ever see the TOS versions of these characters is in TOS itself.
     
  16. Gojira

    Gojira Commodore Commodore

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    If I want to watch a Star Trek Captain just play by the rules I will watch Captain Picard. :bolian:
     
  17. Admiral Buzzkill

    Admiral Buzzkill Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Aside from all of that:

    Based on what we know now, it's virtually certain that the rule Kirk breaks which gets him into trouble is broken in order to save Spock's life. That doesn't make him a "bad boy" and it doesn't owe a thing directly to Kirk's current image in popular culture - it descends directly from similar behavior in TOS.
     
  18. BillJ

    BillJ The King of Kings Admiral

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    Why would Uhura and Scott also be separated from the Enterprise as well over the possible Prime Directive violation done by Kirk?

    If Kirk got the boot for saving Spock, then I agree that it is different than continuing the bad boy angle.
     
  19. Kruezerman

    Kruezerman Commodore Commodore

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    I'm thinking that Harrison is a bad guy but Peter Weller's character is THE bad guy pulling everybody's strings.

    Or something like that.
     
  20. Franklin

    Franklin Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Very well put. If anything, Kirk had a keen sense of duty and loyalty to his crew that sometimes conflicted with keeping the chain of command or following rules to the letter. Kirk sometimes lived by the the words of the late Admiral Grace Hopper, "If it's a good idea, go ahead and do it. It is much easier to apologize than it is to get permission."

    Kirk was a unique character who often put himself into (or found himself in) uncommon situations few other Starfleet officers experienced. These situations challenged conventional regulations and required imaginative solutions.

    Given how many TOS captains and officers did screw up planets, I'd say TOS Kirk was completely trustworthy and conscientious. But, the J.J. Kirk hasn't gotten there, yet.

    Also, I don't think the Nibiru planet incident is what
    cost him his command.
    That may have prompted the lecture from Pike, but the way the Empire article is worded
    some reaction by Kirk associated with the terrorist attack cost him his command.
    At least that's how I read it.
     
    Last edited: Dec 24, 2012