Oh, so you're talking about the Kelvin timeline as opposed to what happened in Prime 2387?
Is there a difference? Regardless of Nero's intervention, an Uhura was born in the Kelvin timeline just as in the Prime one. Should not Nero and his wife be born as well, provided Nero "prevents genocide" and stops the supernova from happening?
(Hilarity will of course ensue when the two Neros struggle for the poor lass, but I'm sure they can sort it out like the gentlemen they ain't.)
Nero "definitely is early", right? Meaning the Hobus star is not supposed to go nova for another 129 years. So surely we can say that Romulus is not dead? Why would there be any reason for Romulus to be dead in the Kirk era of the Kelvin timeline?
It's not the "not yet dead" part that is interesting, but the "prevention" that Nero claims to have practiced. With 129 years of advance warning, he could well have rendered the star harmless. Heck, for all we know, the star is the one we see at the beginning of the movie (because why should time travel involve travel through space on this occasion when it almost never does elsewhere in Trek?), and later just barely fail to see when Spock arrives - and Nero immediately puts to good use the red matter he gets from Spock.
Plenty of ways? Don't you mean one specific way? What are the other ways?
He can use Spock's method for preventing the supernova (assuming the method works before D-Day). He can find alternate methods, such as the one known to Federation science ever since TNG "Half a Life". He can arrange for Romulus to be relocated (either in the sense of everybody important and wealthy being flown to a safer location, or in the sense of some of that Trek supertech pushing/teleporting the planet itself to safety), or protected from the blast (a much simpler feat, even if not trivial).
What counts is that he
has already achieved this by the time he kidnaps Pike. Or at least he believes so. Might be he has treated the nasty star with red matter. Might be he has left sealed orders or conferred with influential people.
He has had 25 years to do so, after all.
We know what he intended.
Fuck, no. We don't even know if he
achieved what he intended. First the "unthinkable" happens, suggesting he failed. But then he claims he still has "little time".
Succeeded in stopping the supernova? Yes.
He never says that much. He just prepares to set sail for home - whether in triumph or defeat, he doesn't tell.
Succeeded in saving the Prime timeline's Romulus? No.
He never says that much, either.
This makes no sense at all. How can the Hobus star be destroyed twice? If someone destroys the star at one point in time, how is there a Hobus problem for someone else to deal with at another point in time?
If this is
not possible and the two timelines are one and the same, then Nero acting in the past will have saved his wife (see above). If Nero does
not affect Prime by dealing with Kelvin (and saving Romulus there), then somebody else is free to mess with Prime (and save Romulus there).
So we need to take our pick. Points in time along a single timeline? Separate timelines? Doc Brown got it all wrong with authority in BTTF I and II, and only finally got it right in the last scene of III. Would the simple miner Nero have any chance of getting it right in his one and only movie?
Time travel was an unknown side effect of Red Matter. Spock and Nero's crew are simply caught up in the black hole's "wake".
Never established. For all we know, the black hole was an unwelcome side effect of the intended time-reversing use of red matter - it would make sense for Spock to use a "reversing potion" to stop the supernova, both in the scenario where it has already happened (and especially there!) and in the scenario where it is about to happen soon enough but the dying star has to be rejuvenated somehow to prevent it from happening in the lifetime of the Romulan Star Empire.
It's stuff like this that makes me wonder if you've actually seen the movie, or are going from rumours circulating about the plot in 2008.
Don't remember any relevant rumors. Was there perhaps an earlier plot treatise that actually made some sense?
Timo Saloniemi