On the other hand, Uhura strives to understand him and his way of being, doesn't judge him for it, and finally comes to accept and even appreciate it.
Everything is OK is Prime Universe does it, or if GR OKed it.
It works for me as a character-building thing. On the one hand, Spock has real emotional needs that can't be met by anyone else; he's too Vulcan to be accepted by humans and too human to be accepted by Vulcans so he faces social isolation from all but his closest friends (and sometimes even from them). On the other hand, Uhura strives to understand him and his way of being, doesn't judge him for it, and finally comes to accept and even appreciate it. This is something Spock Prime never really had: always dignified, always in control, always healthy and well-adjusted in working with his peers, but always, in the end, alone.
I've pointed out many times that ST09 had to update Star Trek's characterizations to deal with generational differences from the 60s. The retread of Kirk was a nod to the Fail Generation: kids and young adults who grew up surrounded by crumbling institutions offering a promise of mediocrity if they work their asses off and prison time if they don't. Christopher Pike tells Kirk "You can settle for a less-than-ordinary life, but you feel like you were meant for something better, something special." That line wasn't just meant for Kirk.
Spock/Uhura deals with the more intimate aspects of that generation from a lot of different angles at once. Spock is a highly talented person with extremely poor emotional intelligence; that's a blind spot for him, but for Uhura it's not a deal breaker. At the same time, he's a product of a social tug-of-war between two competing ethnicities that don't always (or even usually) get along together.
The running theme of the reboot movies is the Pursuit of Acceptance. Kirk is looking to achieve his full potential and be accepted as a professional; Spock, who is already a well-respected professional whose qualifications were never in doubt, wants to be accepted as a person. And they both find what they're looking for on the bridge of the Enterprise.
I love this. Well stated, Crazy Eddie.
Yes, that's called normal human concern for the well-being of a loved one when they're going into a dangerous situation.
Yes, that's called normal human concern for the well-being of a loved one when they're going into a dangerous situation.
Uhura is not Spock's wife sending him off to a war-zone. She's a fellow officer and you don't behave that way in a military "workplace" situation. It's embarrassing and distracting. At least the inter-office romances in the TNG era were mostly handled in the corridors during off-time or in quarters and not in the midst of crisis situations.
But Starfleet in nuTrek makes no distinction between on-duty and off-duty or public and private life. Everyone is 100% casual all the time in a very Trek V T-shirt and bomber-jacket sort of way.
I can't see TOS Spock having this relationship because obviously, he didn't.
Why this Spock should be so different from what we saw in TOS and the movies, I don't know. The new timeline shouldn't have changed much, or anything, for Spock.
It works for me as a character-building thing. On the one hand, Spock has real emotional needs that can't be met by anyone else; he's too Vulcan to be accepted by humans and too human to be accepted by Vulcans so he faces social isolation from all but his closest friends (and sometimes even from them). On the other hand, Uhura strives to understand him and his way of being, doesn't judge him for it, and finally comes to accept and even appreciate it. This is something Spock Prime never really had: always dignified, always in control, always healthy and well-adjusted in working with his peers, but always, in the end, alone.
I've pointed out many times that ST09 had to update Star Trek's characterizations to deal with generational differences from the 60s. The retread of Kirk was a nod to the Fail Generation: kids and young adults who grew up surrounded by crumbling institutions offering a promise of mediocrity if they work their asses off and prison time if they don't. Christopher Pike tells Kirk "You can settle for a less-than-ordinary life, but you feel like you were meant for something better, something special." That line wasn't just meant for Kirk.
Spock/Uhura deals with the more intimate aspects of that generation from a lot of different angles at once. Spock is a highly talented person with extremely poor emotional intelligence; that's a blind spot for him, but for Uhura it's not a deal breaker. At the same time, he's a product of a social tug-of-war between two competing ethnicities that don't always (or even usually) get along together.
The running theme of the reboot movies is the Pursuit of Acceptance. Kirk is looking to achieve his full potential and be accepted as a professional; Spock, who is already a well-respected professional whose qualifications were never in doubt, wants to be accepted as a person. And they both find what they're looking for on the bridge of the Enterprise.
I love this. Well stated, Crazy Eddie.
Why this Spock should be so different from what we saw in TOS and the movies, I don't know. The new timeline shouldn't have changed much, or anything, for Spock.
Yes, that's called normal human concern for the well-being of a loved one when they're going into a dangerous situation.
Uhura is not Spock's wife sending him off to a war-zone. She's a fellow officer and you don't behave that way in a military "workplace" situation. It's embarrassing and distracting. At least the inter-office romances in the TNG era were mostly handled in the corridors during off-time or in quarters and not in the midst of crisis situations.
But Starfleet in nuTrek makes no distinction between on-duty and off-duty or public and private life. Everyone is 100% casual all the time in a very Trek V T-shirt and bomber-jacket sort of way.
(emphasis mine)Yes, that's called normal human concern for the well-being of a loved one when they're going into a dangerous situation.
Uhura is not Spock's wife sending him off to a war-zone. She's a fellow officer and you don't behave that way in a military "workplace" situation. It's embarrassing and distracting. At least the inter-office romances in the TNG era were mostly handled in the corridors during off-time or in quarters and not in the midst of crisis situations.
But Starfleet in nuTrek makes no distinction between on-duty and off-duty or public and private life. Everyone is 100% casual all the time in a very Trek V T-shirt and bomber-jacket sort of way.
(emphasis mine)Yes, that's called normal human concern for the well-being of a loved one when they're going into a dangerous situation.
Uhura is not Spock's wife sending him off to a war-zone. She's a fellow officer and you don't behave that way in a military "workplace" situation. It's embarrassing and distracting. At least the inter-office romances in the TNG era were mostly handled in the corridors during off-time or in quarters and not in the midst of crisis situations.
But Starfleet in nuTrek makes no distinction between on-duty and off-duty or public and private life. Everyone is 100% casual all the time in a very Trek V T-shirt and bomber-jacket sort of way.
Is that what's really at the heart of your objection - that things aren't being presented the same way they would have been on squeaky-clean, "evolved" TNG?
Yes, that's called normal human concern for the well-being of a loved one when they're going into a dangerous situation.
Uhura is not Spock's wife sending him off to a war-zone. She's a fellow officer and you don't behave that way in a military "workplace" situation. It's embarrassing and distracting. At least the inter-office romances in the TNG era were mostly handled in the corridors during off-time or in quarters and not in the midst of crisis situations.
But Starfleet in nuTrek makes no distinction between on-duty and off-duty or public and private life. Everyone is 100% casual all the time in a very Trek V T-shirt and bomber-jacket sort of way.
Ahh, I was waiting for the Abrams hate to surface.
Uhura was in a committed relationship with Spock, and her actions were completely appropriate. Starfleet is not a purely military organization, nor has it ever been portrayed as a place where normal human interaction is not allowed or is "distracting."
By the way "distracting" is a long way from "emasculating", so nice claw back there.
The relationship between Uhura and Spock is one of my favorite parts of nuTrek, and its development really served to add some needed emotional depth to STiD.
I'm not an Abrams hater but I don't like the way the relationship is portrayed while on duty. I was fine with everything except the kissing on the transporter pad in NuTrek 1.
I was not a fan of the domestic in the shuttle in STiD. If they can't keep it professional while on duty, transfer to separate ships!
I'm not an Abrams hater but I don't like the way the relationship is portrayed while on duty. I was fine with everything except the kissing on the transporter pad in NuTrek 1.
I hope that if I was being sent somewhere, to possibly die, that I would get a moment with a loved one.
I thought it was entertaining. Especially, Spock's "Uncertain".I was not a fan of the domestic in the shuttle in STiD. If they can't keep it professional while on duty, transfer to separate ships!![]()
Successive generations within Western culture (and Trek is firmly anchored in that culture) have behaved in increasingly informal ways, such that going back a century (let alone three) would be a shock for someone today--and vice versa. The fact that a fictional representation of a quasi-military institution three centuries in the future happens to be a touch less formal than today is, if anything, a conservative estimate of the lack of formality that is likely to be the norm, should present trends continue. (Conversely, a far more rigid formalism may exist three centuries hence--history is not a linear progression and formal manners have waxed and waned throughout time.).
Most importantly, though--it's just a movie! (patent pending). It's fine to be annoyed with the choices made by the filmmakers. It's rather absurd to even pretend to have any clear notion what social norms regarding workplace behaviour three centuries from now will actually be like.
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