If the Nexus was really a place where you could live out your fantasies, Kirk would have been found on a Nexus version of the Enterprise.
Strictly from a fan's point of view, I would have thought Kirks Nexus existence would have placed him squarely back on the bridge of the original Enterprise, not a log cabin in the woods splitting logs for his fireplace.
If a cabin in the woods really was his "happy place" in the Nexus, at least it should have been a happy domestic life with Carol Marcus and David rather than with a woman we (as the audience invested in Trek) never met.
Generations needed a scene with Picard finding Riker and the crashed saucer, saying "What the hell did you do to my ship?!"
Carol Marcus? Why her of all the lovers Kirk has had through the years? Kirk probably parted company with her for sound reasons, and finding out later that Gray Mitchell engineered the whole thing might have soured Kirk's feeling of Carol in general.at least it should have been a happy domestic life with Carol Marcus and David rather than ...
^ I agree T'Girl, this idea of Carol Marcus being "the one" has IMO been rather over-stated over the years.
(And for those who'd say "But but but DAVID MARCUS", who are we to believe that David Marcus was Kirk's only spawnling? He's simply the only one we saw, and there's nothing in TWOK, TSFS or TUC that suggests anywhere that he's Kirk only son...)
It's like I said earlier, I could possibly have believed in this previously-unmentioned Antonia as being Kirk's long lost "The Girl I Wish I'd Married", if only the script had spent some time actually introducing her to us (or even introducing her at all, instead of keeping her off-screen). Instead, we just get told by Kirk that she was The One, without any evidence for why. We should've seen some evidence of their supposedly great relationship, instead of seeing Kirk and Picard making an omelette. But no, good storytelling is not what Generations was about.
![]()
![]()
The Antonia stuff and horse riding just seems a Shatner fantasy.
The Antonia stuff and horse riding just seems a Shatner fantasy.
Interesting you say that, because by some accounts (I think it might even have been in Shatner's own "Movie Memories" book) those aspects were enhanced after Shatner complained about the original draft that 'Kirk isn't integral to the script'. So they were very much a Shatner-pleasing measure.![]()
(I'd argue that Kirk still isn't integral to the script in the finished version, though.![]()
)
The problem is the movie is meant to be all about Picard's journey so they were never going to spend extra creative thought and time with Kirk's story.The Antonia stuff and horse riding just seems a Shatner fantasy.
Interesting you say that, because by some accounts (I think it might even have been in Shatner's own "Movie Memories" book) those aspects were enhanced after Shatner complained about the original draft that 'Kirk isn't integral to the script'. So they were very much a Shatner-pleasing measure.![]()
(I'd argue that Kirk still isn't integral to the script in the finished version, though.![]()
)
He wasn't.
The nexus scene is so flawed, even with the "Shatner enhancements." IMO, the woman could have been Marcus, or it could've been Rand as I suggested above (if it had been her, that would've been most likely the fulfillment of a real Kirk fantasy). Heck, it could've been Miramanee or Edith Keeler, and it would've probably created a more poignant scene than than what we got. (Though Shatner was able to get them to let him show us his horsemanship. So he at least got a certain amount of ego fulfillment.)
The problem is the movie is meant to be all about Picard's journey so they were never going to spend extra creative thought and time with Kirk's story.Interesting you say that, because by some accounts (I think it might even have been in Shatner's own "Movie Memories" book) those aspects were enhanced after Shatner complained about the original draft that 'Kirk isn't integral to the script'. So they were very much a Shatner-pleasing measure.![]()
(I'd argue that Kirk still isn't integral to the script in the finished version, though.![]()
)
He wasn't.
The nexus scene is so flawed, even with the "Shatner enhancements." IMO, the woman could have been Marcus, or it could've been Rand as I suggested above (if it had been her, that would've been most likely the fulfillment of a real Kirk fantasy). Heck, it could've been Miramanee or Edith Keeler, and it would've probably created a more poignant scene than than what we got. (Though Shatner was able to get them to let him show us his horsemanship. So he at least got a certain amount of ego fulfillment.)
If they were going to have the 'Nexus' I would just exchange Picard and Kirk with Data and Picard and have Data convincing Picard to give up the Nexus. That would have made a little more sense. Don't have Berman involve the TOS characters who he didn't care for (and frankly didn't need) in his first major screen TNG movie.
I think a few lines about a dead 'only' child could have bought the general audience in for say Carol Marcus.The trouble with brining in anyone like Rand of Marcus or Keeler is that it only makes sense to serious fans and not to general movie audiences. Sure, you could have the appropriate actresses there in place of "Antonia" and the fans would get it automatically but there'd be no foul for the rest of the audience, but it's a fine line to walk and make it work for both audiences without making a big deal out of it.
For me, the best thing about Generations was the appearance of Kirk, Scotty and Chekov. My favorite scene was the opening scene, with the TOS trio aboard the Enterprise B on her maiden flight. And I enjoyed the other scenes that Kirk was in.Kirk just isn't integrated into the story enough. That's one of GENS's fundamental problems. I know the story was basically constructed as being "the first TNG feature, with special guest William Shatner!", but that's a definite problem in itself: you just don't book someone like William Shatner as a guest star in Star Trek and then relegate him to the position of a glorified cameo.
The trouble with brining in anyone like Rand of Marcus or Keeler is that it only makes sense to serious fans and not to general movie audiences. Sure, you could have the appropriate actresses there in place of "Antonia" and the fans would get it automatically but there'd be no foul for the rest of the audience, but it's a fine line to walk and make it work for both audiences without making a big deal out of it.
I agree that I doubt it was Kirks fantasy to settle down because if it was then he was retired and had every opportunity to do it out of the Nexus.The trouble with brining in anyone like Rand of Marcus or Keeler is that it only makes sense to serious fans and not to general movie audiences. Sure, you could have the appropriate actresses there in place of "Antonia" and the fans would get it automatically but there'd be no foul for the rest of the audience, but it's a fine line to walk and make it work for both audiences without making a big deal out of it.
I don't quite agree with that, but it really doesn't matter anyway, because it was never Kirk who wanted to settle down. The movie itself builds the idea that it was Picard who regretted not settling down once he realized that the family name would stop with his dead brother and nephew. All Kirk wanted to do was get back in the center seat of the Enterprise. He never wanted to retire and settle down in some stupid log cabin with Carol, Antonia, or anyone!
Now with that said, one could speculate that Kirk isn't actually in the Nexus at all, and that he is just an illusion created by the Nexus for Picard's benefit (as was Guinan, who pointed Kirk out to Picard). That would explain why Kirk's fantasy makes no sense in the context of what we see at the start of the film, but in fact is analogous to Picard's similar fantasy about settling down and having a family. Which would mean that Picard never actually left the Nexus and is living in blissful ignorance in Nexus-land, and that Kirk really did die on the Enterprise-B.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.