Just like in "Homefront" and "Paradise Lost"?
Foreign spies and that one Admiral concerned about the Defiant aren't the same as "lunatic psycho mass murderer with totally obvious dreadnought factory on Jupiter"
Just like in "Homefront" and "Paradise Lost"?
Back peddling, now.
Foreign spies and that one Admiral concerned about the Defiant aren't the same as "lunatic psycho mass murderer with totally obvious dreadnought factory on Jupiter"
Star Trek is Star Trek is Star Trek. You can see whatever you want, but Into Darkness isn't the first time an evil Admiral has subverted Starfleet for his own purposed.
Marcus is a complete cartoon. He's not as well developed as the other delinquent Admirals depicted in Star Trek. In fact, he's not developed at all. All the villains in the JJ films are poorly done cartoons. Which is frustrating because a courageous effort was made to bring some of the heroes to life but they just got lazy and went off to get pizza when it came to writing the antagonists.
I really want a good Star Trek again - but these ones are just too wrenching. I don't feel like these guys have earned the right to wipe out Romulans and Vulcan homeworlds and make Starfleet some sort of "save Saddam Hussein" metaphor.
I don't like the JJ outings either. I don't test them according to some metric of what Star Trek is or was, I test them as to whether they constitute good cinema. I don't lower my standards simply because someone slaps a Trek logo on them. I like the interplay between Kirk and Pike and bits and pieces here and there but I gotta be frank here; overall, it's a largely vacuous, unoriginal action romp/FX extravaganza. Cinema and Star Trek can be so much better than that. Let's have a degree of depth for the next one please.I'm apparently in a minority on my dissatisfaction on the new Treks. I watched Star Trek 2009 in theaters and was so impressed with it that I saw STID 2 years after its release on Netflix when it happened to pop up under recommendations.
I really want a good Star Trek again - but these ones are just too wrenching. I don't feel like these guys have earned the right to wipe out Romulans and Vulcan homeworlds and make Starfleet some sort of "save Saddam Hussein" metaphor.
Let's have a degree of depth for the next one please.
I'm pretty sure it's the first time one decided to mass murder starfleet officers just for the lolz.
Marcus is a complete cartoon. He's not as well developed as the other delinquent Admirals depicted in Star Trek. In fact, he's not developed at all. All the villains in the JJ films are poorly done cartoons. Which is frustrating because a courageous effort was made to bring some of the heroes to life but they just got lazy and went off to get pizza when it came to writing the antagonists.
If that's what you got out of it, then that's on you. I got "think before you lash out".
Myself and others have spelled out Marcus' motives in detail, and yet you still keep coming back with "he had no motivation" or "he did it for the lolz." You don't have to find his motivation plausible, but it comes across as not seeking genuine discourse when you keep ignoring people and beating a dead horse like that.I'm pretty sure it's the first time one decided to mass murder starfleet officers just for the lolz.
He makes it very clear he exists to do the dirty work no one else will do to live the lifestyle the Federation has come to expect.
As mentioned, Admiral Leyton was perfectly willing to sacrifice the 50+ crew of the Defiant to protect his coup attempt, which could have itself ended up costing countless more lives as Starfleet split itself apart between factions supporting the coup or not.
Captain Ben Maxwell was willing to unilaterally drag the Federation back into war with the Cardassians. They were up to no good, but that doesn't give him the right to go rogue and try and provoke a war.
Admiral Cartright was willing to assassinate the Klingon Chancellor, the Federation President, Cartright's two assassins, possibly the entire crew of the Enterprise if the Klingons shot back, and possibly start a war against the Klingon Empire.
Future Admiral Janeway wiped out an entire timeline to save a few of her dead crewmembers.
He's not as he needs to be. He's below the threshold. He mets the threshold of an antagonist in a Warner Brothers cartoon. Utterly sloppy characterisation. How this Yosemite Sam/Ted Bundy type with no "moral compass" got anywhere in life, still less runnin' Starfleet is a mystery. A genuinely menacing character is a guy with a moral compass, total conviction with a good sales pitch but is profoundly wrongheaded in his morality. That's what is genuinely threatening and how destructive people gain influence in contemporary terms. Marcus has none of that depth though.Not sure what you mean. He seemed genuinely surprised and terrified when Khan attacked that conference of officers. He also could've very easily ended up among the casualties.
He was as deep as he needed to be. A mash up of Lemay and the fictional characters Colonel Jessup and General Jack D. Ripper. He makes it very clear he exists to do the dirty work no one else will do to live the lifestyle the Federation has come to expect. He has no moral compass and little regard for anything other than the cause. If a few million people have to die in a war now to settle the Klingon issue, then that's better than tens of millions dying in a future war against a stronger Empire. At least that was my take on him.
Alright, whatever, this guy isn't believable - all of them are. I would certainly complain about Voyager given the time. If Orci weren't aiming for a "the US did 9/11" metaphor then I probably would be more willing to accept lectures from a foreign national on how evil Starfleet is.
The thing is, there is absolutely no balance in Orci's Trek - all of those evil admirals are balanced out by decent and sensible people somewhere within Starfleet. Admiral Marcus appears to be all there is in Starfleet other than the crew of the Enterprise. I don't remember how many people got shot during Khan's terror attack... was it all of them? Anyway - there's no hint of a President of the Federation, not another Starfleet ship in sight, no apparent other admirals wondering what Marcus is doing on all his secret trips to Jupiter.... etc..
He's not as he needs to be. He's below the threshold. He mets the threshold of an antagonist in a Warner Brothers cartoon. Utterly sloppy characterisation. How this Yosemite Sam/Ted Bundy type with no "moral compass" got anywhere in life, still less runnin' Starfleet is a mystery. A genuinely menacing character is a guy with a moral compass, total conviction with a good sales pitch but is profoundly wrongheaded in his morality. That's what is genuinely threatening and how destructive people gain influence in contemporary terms. Marcus has none of that depth though.
He's not as he needs to be. He's below the threshold. He mets the threshold of an antagonist in a Warner Brothers cartoon. Utterly sloppy characterisation.
If Orci weren't aiming for a "the US did 9/11" metaphor then I probably would be more willing to accept lectures from a foreign national on how evil Starfleet is.
The thing is, there is absolutely no balance in Orci's Trek - all of those evil admirals are balanced out by decent and sensible people somewhere within Starfleet. Admiral Marcus appears to be all there is in Starfleet other than the crew of the Enterprise. I don't remember how many people got shot during Khan's terror attack... was it all of them? Anyway - there's no hint of a President of the Federation, not another Starfleet ship in sight, no apparent other admirals wondering what Marcus is doing on all his secret trips to Jupiter.... etc..
I meant no moral compass as in being convicted enough to a cause to do whatever it takes to win or preserve it. Any means justifies the ends. He does have morality in the sense that he believes the cause for which he compromises his morals is moral. He sacrifices his morals for the greater morality of the cause (if that makes sense). His take on "the needs of the many..." if you will.
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