@Yanks honestly this whole argument about s/u is pretentious. You should own the fact you are biased too because you hate them and move on instead of insisting that the rest of us are the ones who want to see things that don't exist. This is the only reason I even replied: your preaching about your biased out of context interpretation being a fact when it isn't.
There is a reason why the majority of people, including those who could care less about the romance, seem to understand they are together (I have friends who are bad with subtext and it was clear even to them) or at the very least are getting back together. There is no logical reason in narrative why the creative team would have that scene in the end. You are pretty much nitpicking here and holding onto a weak idea. Not to mention that in order to support your idea you have to essentially change the context of their break up, as you seem to have done when you implied the reason was not Spock leaving the ship, in spite of that being the only reason provided in canon by the character himself (you want to change it because the reason of the break up is deleted in the end by his decision to stay).
How do you see them back together, then ? Serioustly. This is Spock. Their whole body language at the party is that of a couple, frankly, but if not even SPOCK saying that he went there in spite of a work to do JUST to be with her is not enough for you (as well as her calling him old romantic, her playing with the necklace, her bringing him the drink and them staring at each other while their friends look at the ship) then I have to guess someone either needs the subtitles or the 'problem' is only the fact the they don't kiss or make cheesy declarations of love. And again, you have far less evidence of them not being together than the contrary because even when they are taking a break, the narrative still treats them as a couple and the characters themselves see them as one, including the one person who knows about their relationship issues. Heck, from what Spock said you could infer it wasn't over for him (his quote about how he had intended to talk with her more but didn't get the chance). Ditto for Uhura who kept wearing her 'ex's necklace hidden below her uniform in spite of her trying to give it back (and notice Spock's faith she'd still wear it. She could have put it away in her quarters on the ship. What's the purpose of still wearing his gift under the uniform and then openly visible in the end?)
I don't have the presumption to be a writer here but IMO the narrative was quite simple to get in all its elements. This is not Stanley Kubrick material.
There is a reason why the majority of people, including those who could care less about the romance, seem to understand they are together (I have friends who are bad with subtext and it was clear even to them) or at the very least are getting back together. There is no logical reason in narrative why the creative team would have that scene in the end. You are pretty much nitpicking here and holding onto a weak idea. Not to mention that in order to support your idea you have to essentially change the context of their break up, as you seem to have done when you implied the reason was not Spock leaving the ship, in spite of that being the only reason provided in canon by the character himself (you want to change it because the reason of the break up is deleted in the end by his decision to stay).
How do you see them back together, then ? Serioustly. This is Spock. Their whole body language at the party is that of a couple, frankly, but if not even SPOCK saying that he went there in spite of a work to do JUST to be with her is not enough for you (as well as her calling him old romantic, her playing with the necklace, her bringing him the drink and them staring at each other while their friends look at the ship) then I have to guess someone either needs the subtitles or the 'problem' is only the fact the they don't kiss or make cheesy declarations of love. And again, you have far less evidence of them not being together than the contrary because even when they are taking a break, the narrative still treats them as a couple and the characters themselves see them as one, including the one person who knows about their relationship issues. Heck, from what Spock said you could infer it wasn't over for him (his quote about how he had intended to talk with her more but didn't get the chance). Ditto for Uhura who kept wearing her 'ex's necklace hidden below her uniform in spite of her trying to give it back (and notice Spock's faith she'd still wear it. She could have put it away in her quarters on the ship. What's the purpose of still wearing his gift under the uniform and then openly visible in the end?)
I don't have the presumption to be a writer here but IMO the narrative was quite simple to get in all its elements. This is not Stanley Kubrick material.