"Why does God need a starship?" It's almost become a running joke. The line is given to Kirk because Kirk is the HERO of this movie...never mind that every single other person in the film (especially Sybok) should have been asking that question from the get-go. I'm sure the audience was certainly asking it.
Then there's "Hold your horse, Captain."
Kor
So besides the fact that this is absolutely atrocious dialogue and the fact that Kirk actually did have a brother who died and didn't come back (as Khan 2.0 humorously points out above), I still fail to see how the revelation that Kirk realizes that he has an 'extended' family in Spock, Bones, et. al (which he should have already known about anyway despite the fact that they all betray him in this movie) is an example of how Spock and/or Sybok "saved" him from anything.
Really, the gist of this film comes down to one single quote, and it always has: "Why does God need a starship?" It's almost become a running joke. The line is given to Kirk because Kirk is the HERO of this movie...never mind that every single other person in the film (especially Sybok) should have been asking that question from the get-go. I'm sure the audience was certainly asking it.
So besides the fact that this is absolutely atrocious dialogue and the fact that Kirk actually did have a brother who died and didn't come back (as Khan 2.0 humorously points out above), I still fail to see how the revelation that Kirk realizes that he has an 'extended' family in Spock, Bones, et. al (which he should have already known about anyway despite the fact that they all betray him in this movie) is an example of how Spock and/or Sybok "saved" him from anything.
Really, the gist of this film comes down to one single quote, and it always has: "Why does God need a starship?" It's almost become a running joke. The line is given to Kirk because Kirk is the HERO of this movie...never mind that every single other person in the film (especially Sybok) should have been asking that question from the get-go. I'm sure the audience was certainly asking it.
The poor project management falls on Bennett and especially Winter, not Shatner.
Oh, the saving is literal.
Sybok jumped the God thing, then spock shot it with disruptors
The extended family thing is shown with kirk outright saying 'men like us don't have families' at the beginning of the film, so the true camaraderie (as opposed to Syboks cult family) wins the day, with Sybok calling kirk and Co. his friends just before jumping God.
And of course none of the people under Syboks glamour, or Sybok himself would ask why God needs a starship. One of the themes in the film is the lack of wisdom in blindly having faith in charismatic types or external forces without question.
The internal faith that Kirk has in his friends, and as he puts it, the human heart, is something even Sybok seems to realise too late.
The 'why does God need a starship' is probably, and in my experience certainly, because it's actually a cool scene. And the God being explains precisely why it needs one.
Their only fault was not controlling Shatner.
...to the previous film where apparently the smog of San Fran turns Spock into some kind of semi-coherent lobotomy act.
About the only scenes that don't need several more rewrites, are the observation lounge scenes where we learn about Spock and McCoy's pasts.
To be fair, Spock had just come back from the dead.![]()
Their only fault was not controlling Shatner.
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