Fair enough.
Plus, even for out "heroes" like Kirk, prejudice and hate is a hard thing to let go of. "I've never trusted Klingons and I never will. I've never been able to forgive them... for the death of my boy."
^ I disagree, but that is ok. I think V is the out-of-character movie for Kirk.
To me VI is what needed to be seen to show how Kirk overcomes this pain he suffered. As all fans this is MHO.
Sure, fine, but that pain would never, under any circumstances, make him advocate racial genocide. That was just taking it too far. It was a gross mishandling of his character.
Being angry at the specific person who killed his son is understandable. Being angry at the entire Klingon military and government, the institutions that fostered such aggression and allowed it to happen, is understandable. But wanting, even for a moment, to see an entire species exterminated for it is quite simply racist, and I don't think that's defensible.
I'd agree with Enterpriserules's assessment. I think the "Let them die!" moment was Kirk losing his composure for a moment as his unresolved grief and anger reared up. He clearly regrets what he's said a moment after the words leave his mouth. I can believe that even a noble character like Kirk can have a moment of weakness and bitterness over such a personal hurt. The fact that he does not act on that dark impulse during the rest of the movie suggests it was only an isolated verbal slip, spurred by emotions run amok.
I'd agree with Enterpriserules's assessment. I think the "Let them die!" moment was Kirk losing his composure for a moment as his unresolved grief and anger reared up. He clearly regrets what he's said a moment after the words leave his mouth. I can believe that even a noble character like Kirk can have a moment of weakness and bitterness over such a personal hurt. The fact that he does not act on that dark impulse during the rest of the movie suggests it was only an isolated verbal slip, spurred by emotions run amok.
The moment of regret is what saves it. Otherwise I'd agree with Christopher.
He knows he's gotten irrational and immediately regrets it
I think there is such depth to this movie. Change like this is scary, whether it's a personal paradigm shift in thinking or a massive political change, it does not come easy. Kirk is facing both. I love that, in the end, the best part of Kirk wins out.AZETBUR
You've restored my father's faith.
KIRK
You've restored my son's.
When I initially read that line, I requested that Nick change it. I just couldn't imagine Kirk, even after the death of his son, being *that* rigid, *that* cold, *that* unfeeling. At the same time, you couldn't doubt for an instant the dramatic strength of Nick's scripted moment, and while I failed in my attempts to come up with an alternate line of equal strength, I nevertheless came up with a compromise that would've made me feel a lot better. Kirk would indeed say, "Let them die," but almost immediately, his face and hand movements would have made it clear that while those words had exploded out of his mouth, he didn't really mean them. "Oh shit, I'm sorry I said that," he'd imply visually, and with that addendum, I found myself much more comfortable playing the scene. I told Nick about it, he liked the idea, we shot it, and months later, when I'd come in to record Kirk's lines for a couple of scenes, I couldn't help but notice that Kirk's facial reaction to that particular line had been cut. I cornered Nick about it, and he immediately told me, "Okay, sure, we'll put it back in." I'm still waiting.
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