I don't see why anyone has a problem with a personal project. If you don't like the purpose or motive behind it, then fine, don't watch / contribute, but that doesn't make his personal goal *wrong* or a waste of time.... everyone has their own head canon and personal takes on stuff or wishes things were slightly different, so they can better enjoy it. This is just physically making that a reality. If its for private use, who cares?
Op cares, or they wouldn't ask what others think and make a poll..
Generally speaking, when I read some trek fans claim that the kelvin movies aren't "trek", while their revisionism apparently is "something that feels more like Trek" , it comes across as that not being just a personal headcanon, but more like a statement of a fact that takes for granted other trek fans recognize too, in spite of that assertion alone being very up to debate for a million of reasons.
For instance, I see nothing in the ideas presented in this thread that is more "trek" than what canon provides; I only see a fanfiction made according to the personal taste of one person who doesn't like these movies (or likes very little of them) . It's fine, just call it with its name.
From what I observed in this fandom in, like, years, some people may misrepresent a bit what is just their personal taste as another thing and this so called "trek ideal" they constantly preach about. It seems like if you claim that something isn't "trek" your opinion that the movies aren't good has more validity than that of the ones who like them. In fact, it's not rare to read this argument being followed by an implicit or explicit questioning of someone's knowledge of "what is trek" on the basis of them enjoying a trek that doesn't fit with the idea of trek that those people like.
There are many styles, visions and types of Trek, and to each their own. Anyone can feel a special connection to a certain place in canon. Its all subjective. This project may give someone who currently (for whatever mental subjective reason) can not enjoy the newest movies a new perspective through which to find some viewing enjoyment in the material. I can't fault that ideal at all. I would never say there is something wrong with a current form of something, that many people enjoy, but I also can completely understand the reasons others may desire a "fix." I've been looking for the fan edit of "Man of Steel" that restores the Williams theme and bright colors to a movie I had a lot of problems with. I have a fan edit of TFF that removes most of the most disliked material. I think projects like this are creative, innovative and talented ways to show various visions through the recorded materials. I have a great edit of The Menagerie that removes the flashbacks, so when watching from the beginning, you're not watching the Cage twice during Season 1, for instance.
My experience is that the reboot movies are strongly disliked by hardcore TNG fans who don't like TOS.It doesn't seem to me that someone said it's "wrong" or, worse, they are not allowed to have preferences.
When people make certain arguments and ask for opinions, it seems a contradiction to get defensive when they do exactly that.
Honestly, a lot of criticism the reboot gets for not being "trek" seems to boil down to some people being like: let's keep things the same in perpetuity according to what a trek iteration from the 60s was allowed and not allowed to do..
but then, it begs the question what's the purpose of a modern reboot if you don't allow the narrative to explore different things too and ADD something new to the canon?
This kind of ideology doesn’t even seem to help this franchise stay relevant and thus give it a future. The last movie seemed, at the expense of this trek's integrity, tailored more on the desires of the fans who didn't like the first movies because of some things not being like tos. Result? Sure those people loved it but it's the least successful movie of the 3 and seems to have basically alienated that very audience, that includes trek fans, who liked the first movies for the differences too, and its being a bit more contemporany to our time rather than ostensibly keeping everything the same just because in the 60s certain character dynamics where everything we were allowed to get.
As much as some people may want to ignore it, this trek is now part of canon as well and it doesn't deserve less respect than tos and its fans; its integrity does matter too. After 3 movies, several comics and a video game, acting as if its purpose is just serving a tos fanfiction with different actors and better special effects - and thus its failure is not being one still - is annoying.
One thing is sure: people aren't forced to like any trek iteration. If there is so little someone likes in one particular iteration, so much that their "fix" essentially means changing the whole thing and delete its purpose until very little of its soul remains, I honestly don't see the point of calling it a "fix" when it's more like original fiction.
Feeling is subjective. When I said "Feels more Trek" it wasn't to go as far as saying "this is trek and this is not trek" but rather on the feelings of familiarity. Some of that is narrative choices and characterization, some of what I meant was as simple as runtime. For example, most of Trek is in the form of episodes. It isn't that there aren't movies, but they weren't the norm.so, in short, you want to delete the core purpose and all core narrative elements of the reboot, the fact it's another reality, and turn it into a completely different thing aka tos with different actors.
you mean, that feels more like TOS trek, or the trek you'd like to see.
There is nothing inherently 'non trek' in these movies. You may not like most of the changes and narrative elements, but it's pretentious to say they aren't trek. Define what is trek?
You mention canon 'deviations' 'traditional trek' and 'things that don't feel right' and yet, one of your main examples is Spock/Uhura representing an interpersonal relationship of romantic nature.
- From a tos canon perspective: Spock was attracted to Uhura and viceversa even in tos (cue first episodes) so exploring the possibility of them having a relationship INTO ANOTHER REALITY where they maybe met under different circumstances is not that 'outrageous' or sh*tting on the characters, nor anything other reboots hadn't done before (battlestar galactica literally changed the gender of one of the main characters, Discovery now retconned Spock having a human adopted sister from the start, and Sarek apparently is even worse a dad than we thought he was before). If that relationship is OOC because you think Spock should only embrace logic and can't show feelings.. then sorry to tell you but it's too late for that because if that were the case, he wouldn't/shouldn't have friends and express feelings for them either. There is nothing that inherently makes platonic relationships more 'needed' than non platonic ones; both serve a similar purpose in the story (making the characters more real). The rest is up to personal preference only.
- In terms of 'trek' ideals, I don't need to tell you how ironic it is for you to imply that an interracial and interspecies couple that couldn't be made canon in the 60s because of racism, but is made canon in a modern reboot, is 'not trek' or not 'idic'. If that isn't 'trek', then what is trek? It seems like in that case 'trek' means preserving the white men status quo, and make bromance the be all end all of interpersonal relationships representation STILL.
Things like the destruction of vulcan, Spock's ptsd, Nero, the romance etc etc are foundamental events that define this trek and its characters - so deleting all these things isn't just making little modifications on something you like, it's altering the whole thing turning that into your own thing and something foundamentally different. It's not a fan edit of Kelvin trek, it's an AU fanfiction using clips of kelvin trek. Or better yet, using kelvin trek to do your own thing.
ps:
which basically is the way Uhura is already presented in the movies. The fact that in the actual canon she's in love with that person (and yes, they probably are sexual creatures because they are adult people, and there is enough evidence in tos to suggest that unlike some people's headcanons Spock wasn't a monk) doesn't make her less 'an emphatic, warm, affectionate character who cares about her crewmates'
Perhaps, she doesn't need to be a mammy stereotype in order to show those qualities.
Enough so far for two 50 minute episodes, each with a distinctive plot and a clear story arch and resolution by the end, although certain plot elements are unresolved and cliffhangered.Seems like an interesting idea. I'm just afraid that in order to make these films watchable, very little of the original content would be left.
I initially liked those things too. But I feel there is a balance between paying the proper respects and homage to the original while also updating, making relevant and modernizing the franchise. I think as a whole the Kelvin Trek surprised me by the revitalization of Trek, and the positives of the new take on it. In a way, it did seem to revive the true spirit of the original. I grew up in the 1980s, so for me TNG was the standard bearer of Trek. But I don't mind the different takes on it. So far I am liking Discovery (although it is far from perfect).My experience is that the reboot movies are strongly disliked by hardcore TNG fans who don't like TOS.
As a TOS fan first and foremost, these movies took me back to the colorful, swashbuckling fun and adventure that I enjoyed in the original Trek, and away from the long-winded, sanctimonious talkyness of later Trek.
Kor
And yet, it's only through their relationship that Spock is allowed, in stid, to at least hint his ptsd as she is the only one who noticed he was being suicidal and challenged him about it.I like Uhura and Spock's relationship in the first movie, and it became a good addition to/vehicle for the plot for that first movie, but less so for the second. In and of itself, it was ok as a plot in the second, but overall I think a distraction rather than a plus.
Are we still at the "vulcans only mate every 7 years" fanon? I hoped people were over that. Even poor Dc Fontana still can't understand why fans are convinced that idea is canon in spite of them never saying that.I don't have problems with Spock being a sexual being, (even if for once every seven years!)
so by introducing the erotic relationship between Uhura and Spock it is another layer to this theme, but one that I don't think adds to the narrative positively,
For me, eliminating the destruction of Vulcan (another brave move that wasn't explored enough and didn't pan out in my view) and the willful negligence in the death of Nero means the cause for Spock and Uhura's relationship is largely removed. While there were interesting dynamics lost in the characterization and relationship between those two characters, its removal doesn't change I think the dramatic core of the story, just streamlines it.
If there was a way to keep Spock and Uhura's relationship without the destruction of Vulcan, then I might have kept it,
In fact, in this second episode she still shines as a competent member of the crew when she goes out solo to speak Klingon to the Klingons.
Is "fix" the word that is triggering you here? My use of it is casual. Obviously such an edit is by definition derivative, and by saying "fix" I wasn't trying to imply I am somehow greater or of greater vision than the folks who made this movie. I think you are misinterpreting me here, using the idea of editing and streamlining narrative elements as somehow getting myself all gassed-up and acting smug as if this is the real true Trek I am creating, but that is not the case. This is just a fan edit, a fun what-if. Not some nerdy claim of orthodoxy or something. I just get the impression that you assume I am taking this way more seriously than in fact I am. I have no pretensions about this, it is purely for fun.And yet, it's only through their relationship that Spock is allowed, in stid, to at least hint his ptsd as she is the only one who noticed he was being suicidal and challenged him about it.
His friend didn't. Because him and Kirk are strangers who barely know each other at this point. Plus, there is a certain level of intimacy and purpose in discussing some things with someone you are in a relationship with, versus people you barely know. The threat of losing her because of a misuranderstanding made Spock open to talk about something personal he wouldn't talk about otherwise.
It could be argued that their relationship is more pivotal to this Spock than bromance because it ties directly into what makes him a different Spock with its own integrity. It also ties back into the parallel it creates with his parents (not casual that this dynamic was Nimoy's fav thing about this Spock)
Of course, in order to appreciate Spock having a private life outside of his friend, one gotta care about Spock as an individual too and not just as Kirk's friend or part of the triad.
Your reasoning seems to suggest that Uhura is a threat to bromance, thus making different relationships mutually exclusive basically. I guess it's in true Greek ideal spirit too since - contextually - that, for the most part, boils down to 'women aint s*it' as well, but I'm not sure this is the kind of 'ideal' trek should be about, regardless that being an 'ideology' that no doubt colored certain choices made in a show from the 60s.
I'm not sure nowadays people can relate to a narrative that supports the "bros" as the only relationship that is based on a profound bond while women are just sexual objects. I only know that Uhura wasn't presented as being that, and if people only see her as the girl Spock has sex with in his spare time, it says more about people's double standards than the characters and how they are written.
Are we still at the "vulcans only mate every 7 years" fanon? I hoped people were over that. Even poor Dc Fontana still can't understand why fans are convinced that idea is canon in spite of them never saying that.
Let them vulcans have fun outside of pon farr!
Except, you are eliminating a core element of Spock's arc (that influenced even his dynamic with kirk) in all 3 movies. Not to mention eliminating the narrative element that makes him more equal to kirk as a protagonist (eg kirk is allowed to have a connection with bones, spock would have no connection outside of kirk thus become the hero sidekick again totally defined by him. You could make him and uhura friends but it would be pointless then to not keep the romantic aspect especially when their actions make more sense with such context)
You seem to be under the assumption that the spock/uhura relationship happened after and because of the vulcan diaspora, which is completely misuranderstanding basic narrative elements here.
They were already a couple before that event. That was the intention of the writers. That's why she acts that way in the turbolif, and why it's totally appropriate and welcomed by Spock. A friend would never kiss him that way, especially not a xenolinguist who knows about Vulcan culture. She did that because it wasn't the first time he embraced her and kissed her, she was familiar and comforting like only a significant other can be.
If you remove the death of his mother and the vulcan diaspora you simply remove the reason for the angst between them in the movies (his ptsd), but not the reason why they are together and were together before all of that happened. That reason remains. Just like, I suppose, changing an event in your life won't magically stop to make you love your significant other.
Ironically, you'd just make their relationship happier and easier by removing the only obstacle they faced in the movies.
Further, one could actually argue that if this Spock is open to friendships with the dudes way before he did in tos (where it took him ages to even admit friendship) it's because of the relationship with Uhura too, and how it changes this Spock making him embrace his human side more and making him more open to his feelings and less on denial, thus more open to relationships. Even his dynamic with Bones is different.
You can't have the cake and eat it too by keeping the accelerated emotional development for Spock because it makes the bromances easier, but on the flip side remove all the elements that give context, and are the reason why this Spock is more open about his feelings and open to friendship sooner he was in tos.
Yeah, but you are dehumanizing her, and Spock, erasing her personal life and Spock's for the sake of, basically, make it all about Kirk and make bromance, again, the be all end all of interpersonal dynamics like in sexist and racist 60s. I fail to perceive it as being more positive than what canon did.
Besides, even that scene with the Klingons has a subtextual narrative element in terms of her private life arc: it's a switch of roles where Spock is the one, in that instance, who has to see her put herself in danger for "the many" and she can't think about how worried he's for her...which in turns makes her understand his perspective better when he couldn't think about her in the volcano in that other scene.
The 'go get him' in the end when he sorta looks at her for permission to go after Khan is also the culmination of their narrative arc and what they both learn in the movie.
Relationships are foundamental, no matter the kind. There are human layers you simply can't add to characters who are only defined by their job.
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Tl dr: you seem to insist saying that your changes essentially are no big deal and don't really alter this trek in a foundamental way, but they totally do that lol^ that's my issue.
You believe that some things are useless just because you don't like them, but it's an easy debunkable argument by itself, especially in light of this trek's canon providing no reason why what you don't like has no purpose in the plot or is less important than what you are more interested about. In fact, what you deem as unimportant actually helps, in some aspects, even the stuff you like.
One thing is for you to say that you don't like 90% of the movies and want to do your own completely different thing inspired by some elements of this (which is totally fine), another is you making the argument that by completely altering foundamental narrative elements of this trek you are actually "fixing" and "their removal doesn't change the dramatic core of the story, just streamlines it".
See, and here is where I think you are missing my point, and even that of Spock when he and Uhura have that heart-to-heart before running into the Klingons. (which is now sadly edited out). Spock's actions are motivated by love, a great level of love, a love that extends beyond himself and his personal relationships, a love that extends to lives of beings he does not even know and who do not know him. That goes waaaay beyond bromance.Yeah, but you are dehumanizing her, and Spock, erasing her personal life and Spock's for the sake of, basically, make it all about Kirk and make bromance, again, the be all end all of interpersonal dynamics like in sexist and racist 60s. I fail to perceive it as being more positive than what canon did.
I didn't read the story as Uhura and Spock being involved before the destruction of Vulcan, but rather that Uhura was a star pupil that Spock definitely took notice of, and perhaps even a special liking to, and thus didn't want to show favoritism. My interpretation was that there were vibes between the two characters but nothing really happened between them until Vulcan was destroyed.
I just feel that there are so many stories out there where personally stakes are risked because of a romantic attachment, but not nearly as many stories where the stakes are not romance but friendship or the greater good. I think its easier, and almost cliche to see a hero risk danger to save that significant other.
Also, I don't really view Spock as being suicidal. I think this is kind of the dynamic that we are dealing with here around issues of love
Iam only editing it, and the agenda is not to make aracist, sexist bromance out of Trek.
The last movie seemed, at the expense of this trek's integrity, tailored more on the desires of the fans who didn't like the first movies because of some things not being like tos. Result? Sure those people loved it but it's the least successful movie of the 3 and seems to have basically alienated that very audience, that includes trek fans, who liked the first movies for the differences too, and its being a bit more contemporany to our time rather than ostensibly keeping everything the same just because in the 60s certain character dynamics where everything we were allowed to get.
Yes, which is why those elements are removed so it fits more with their Prime incarnations so this feels more like a prequel/retcon than a reboot.It took Spock years in tos to even admit friendship and embrace his feelings so no, I don't think you can keep the more emotional Spock these movies show in order to have the bromance sooner and better, all the while erasing every single reason canon provides why his emotional development is accelerated here, and why he isn't on denial about his feelings and human side like tos Spock was for reasons related to HIS own back story and journey - that possibly was different in the alternate reality (for instance, by the time he met Uhura here, tos Spock was already in space working with Pike. You have around 10 years of life experiences, for a start, that went differently for these characters. When he met Kik he was a different person than the Spock you see in the first pilot)
The way it the edit stands now is that Kirk meets Spock because he cheats the test. Then there is a six year gap when we resume at Nibiru in 2264, a year before the five year mission. The audience, as with the previous jumps in the back story, is asked one more time to fill in the gap. Not everything is spelled out, how they came to be a crew, but now that they are. In an of itself, the Nibiru mission isn't out of the realm of possibility as a prequel Prime adventure of the Enterprise. It is mostly self-contained, although it is used to further the other plots. Kirk and company save Spock. It is clear based on Spock's reaction to Kirk that Spock still doesn't express that he has friendship for them yet, so it still falls with the Prime depictions.If you want to turn this Spock into a character that looks more like prime Spock, you'll have to lose more than the romance. That will affect all his relationships, not just the one with Uhura. His dynamic with Kirk couldn't even be friendship at this point and he wouldn't act the way this revisionited version of kelvin Spock makes him act. You'd have to wait for the motion picture, basically.
True. But also the more they changed, the more they also seemed to place themselves in corner as well. That was my frustration for the series was how it seemed to open up so many possibilities but quickly abandoned them do to certain other narrative choices.For all people's criticism on the creative team, their choices were all mostly motivated and every change has, for the most part, a reason. Their narrative is made of pieces that make sense together and the more you remove, the more you paint yourself into a corner.
You don't have bais then? I don't see why my interpretation is invalid. I don't see the interaction of Uhura and Spock in the shuttle bay as proof positive of a full romantic relationship. And if it is, I actually have serious ethical problems with that because a teacher and a student should not be involved with each other romantically. I am a teacher who teaches young adult college students, and even though I am also still young, I would never be in a romantic relationship with a student. A former student is another question, but an active student, that is ethically wrong.your bias is maybe clouding your judgment, then.
In the movie it's clear that they were in love and in a relationship before the vulcan diaspora.
It is just viewed in a different context. I have platonic female friends who are very affectionate and it is not romantic. So those body language and actions are not nonsensical for me with he alterations.Delete that, and their body language and actions make no sense and the characters lose their integrity.
If that is the case, then I think its creepy personally. The Spock character that I know from Prime would have more class than to let his emotions take over with a student. But I honestly don't think that is the case, and what you call obvious is in fact your own bias.I get that it's maybe more convenient for you to imagine that their connection is "just too heavily reliant on the destruction of Vulcan ", and they thus got together only because Spock was emotionally compromised, or other excuses you want to rationalize the relationship away with, and I also get that them being a couple before the event you are removing "clashes" with your plan to find an easy way out and erase both relationship and the destrouction of Vulcan with one move, but it doesn't change the fact they were a couple already and, like I said, your view is inconsistent with canon because removing his ptsd just makes their relationship easier and sans drama, but it doesn't delete their feelings for one another.
In short, even in your edited version there is no reason why they can't still have the relationship they have. You already altered the origin of tos k/s too.
Honestly, I'm amazed that someone would rather make Spock ooc by pretending he'd act that way for someone he just "likes", than asknoweledge the most simple thing giving sense to his actions: he's in love.
It isn't graphic, but Hollywood like to up the sex and violence in narrative, even if they don't go R-rated with it. Kelvin Trek has sex and violence/revenge way more in the plot that tv Trek. I think the motivation is because that is what sells most of the time. As an idea Trek isn't like most stories or concepts though.It's not just the sex thing (when is that relantioship ever sexualized, anyway? They are barely even allowed to touch each other to the point of, frankly, the moviesame almost looking too conservative. Are you seriously comparing these movies to got? ) , it seems you have a hard time reconciling with the fact that he may be in love with the woman and this isn't a "detail" you can erase from his narrative by simply deleting a moment that happened when that fact was already established.
**FYI, what I'm saying is written in the script (you can google it, it's online), official comics and word from the creative team itself. For all intents and purposes, they created them as a couple and they actually were one since a year before the vulcan diaspora.
I had some of the essential elements, it had a lot of deviations.You can interpret it differently but I think most of the audience may know that they were a couple and would find your "fix" forced because the vulcan diaspora wasn't the reason why their relationship exists in the narrative, and quite frankly I find the whole idea silly.
You mean that the reboot essentially isn't like tos was.
There were a number of romantic relationships in Trek. Worf and Jadzia. Torres and Paris. Even Picard and Crusher. So Kelvin Trek didn't invent having main characters have romantic relationships.Because what you described is no innovation for trek. The innovation would actually be if we were allowed to see different kinds of relationships besides male friendship motivating the characters TOO.
I don't think you have understood what I wrote. Having a character sacrifice themselves for people they have never met doesn't qualify as bromance. It seems that you keep trying to put down the love of a cause and of all people as being inferior to erotic love.I'm also unsure why you think bromance being front and center is so rare in hollywood when it basically is everything you get in a lot of franchises that have no romance, of if they have it the female characters are only treated as love interests and sexual objects.
Well that is contradictory, because Spock's whole speech in Mudd's ship on Kronos to Uhura is basically a lie then. So not only is Spock is creepy unethical teacher but he is also a suicidal liar in that interpretation.He had realistic survivor guilt after what happened to him and his actions reflected that, which uhura noticed. JJ even described his efforts to save nibiru as an irrational obsessive desire to save that race at the cost of his life, and going against the prime directive, because he couldn't save his people. It has nothing to do with issues of love outside of his love for her simply being a vehicle the narrative uses to give him a realistic context where he could talk about his feelings and his loss with a person he'd feel more motivated doing that. Kirk isn't that person and couldn't realistically be in that moment.
Only if they glaringly contradict where things end up in Prime-TOS. That is the only reason things are taken out. It is a shame that so much of Kelvin Spock's characterization is forward by plot elements that are out of continuity with Prime-TOS, but that wasn't my choice, that was the director's choice. I don't have an anti-Spock agenda.Again, it seems you are more or less just erasing Spock's personal arc or bits of it for the sake of making Kirk the only real connection he has. Everything that doesn't advance that dynamuc is deleted, including important characters motivations and feelings.
Except you did say it, bring it up and author that idea/accusation. So its yours, not mine.You said it, not me.
Or because they aren't actual fans of Star Trek who saw an opportunity to make more money by dumbing the franchise down for explosions and sex and gritty revenge stories.However, I think even if I wouldn't accuse you of doing that it's still undeniable that most of your revisionism boils down to deleting everything that clashes with the bromance having to be the singlest most important thing of the narrative, and pretty much go backwards in terms of the few more contemporary and "trek" stuff jj&Co did. You want to go backwards to the lovely 60s where the writers weren't allowed to have other dynamics outside the bromance not because they didn't want to, but because the context of racism and sexism still influenced their narrative no matter how progressive the show was at the time.
The civilization and race of Nibiru are chalky white, but they aren't Caucasian. There are no scenes that really show the friendship of Kirk and Spock left in the cut. The crew rescues him, but it isn't shown as just Kirk, when Uhura and Bones all show concern for him. Spock does not return the verbal notions of friendship to Kirk in this cut. There is some friendship shown between Kirk and Bones, when they first meet and I also am adding the scene of Kirk's birthday with Bones from Beyond. But that's it in terms of the friendship storyline. The only real friendship that gets developed is the Pike/Kirk relationship, and that is more akin to a father/son relationship. To be honest, there is very little of the personal relationships left in this cut. It mostly streamlines the story to focus on the crew and their mission.If JJ hadn't already changed some things, and you weren't specifically using his trek to do your thing, people wouldn't notice you going backwards in your version by erasing certain elements. We wouldn't notice you essentially erasing a woc from the emotional narrative of the main guys just to make it all about bromance again.We wouldn't notice your double standard in that - regardless what this canon says - you consider the relationship with the woc unimportant compared to the by-default-superior white dudes bros stuff.
Again no. Seriously, you tell me how to have Uhura and Spock be romantically involved while deleting the destruction of Vulcan. I am all ears. Tell me where to edit around. Because I already looked at it, and the whole story can not be dissected, it must be removed all together or the story is too disjointed. But at this point, go ahead and provide me with he road map to include that plot and not have it contradiction Prime in a universe alternating way with Vulcan. If you can't, then please drop it already because it is not constructive at this point, its trolling.The result is a kirk/spock fanfiction where Spock loses most of his personal arc in the movies, and most of his integrity, just because you are unable to deal with some narrative elements unless they are only directly useful to advance the bros.
Just because you can't reconcile with a narrative where spock can have both a best friend and girlfriend.
Maybe to you it seems pretentious, but millions of people have fought and died for big ideas. They were much larger than bromance. To you, perhaps that is wholly unimportant, but I maintain it is not unheard of, even if cynics hate to be reminded of its existence as a motivation for people.If you don't like the term bromance it's OK but calling it differently and "decorating it" with pretentious meta about the greek ideal of love and other stuff doesn't change the point.
Yeah, it was so inclusive to take the one of if not the smartest villain of Trek, a person of color and make him a white dude. It was so progressive to have Carol Marcus strip down to her undies so Kirk can sneak a peak. Nu-Trek is not a radical bastion of progressivism, please stop pretending that it is.Doesn't make it, honestly, less the cliché of the fanboy who seems to perceive the woman and a relationship with her as a threat and wants it to be a "guys only" party. Who doesn't want to see the white dudes status quo getting challenged.
You have 50 years of trek canon and fanon that does fit with your "ideal" already, but you still need to "appropriate of" and change the one and only iteration of these characters that made an attempt to be a tad different and a tad more inclusive and contemporary.
I don't mind hearing your opinion, I even value it. What I don't like is when you author up motivations that I am not the author of and then assign them to me. You are not a psychic, so please stop doing that.And to reiterate, you are absolutely allowed to do that and absolutely allowed to make your own fanfiction according to your own wishes, desires and bias. No one is trying to tell you that you shouldn't do that.
What is happening here is that you motivated your changes using certain arguments and asked for opinions - and that's what you are getting, even if maybe my opinions don't make you as happy as I'd make you if I were saying that I liked your idea way more than the actual movies, or you made them better.
Sorry about that. I'm sure there are others who feel that way though and share your interests, just like there are others who will vote for the negative options in the poll without bothering giving you a motivation.
[CITATION NEEDED]
If you look at the box office trends of the entire summer season where Beyond came out, grosses were down almost across the board for anything that wasn't a Marvel production. Your inherent bias for the JJ-verse movies, however good they may be, is showing here, which doesn't do much to support the reams of critical responses against other members of this board you churn out any time someone has a differing opinion on this film series. Having a creative team behind Beyond that managed to effectively ride a the line between the new and old iterations of Trek does not, in any way shape or form, mean that it "basically alienated an audience" or that it affected the box-office receipts.
TL;DR - just let it go, and let this dude do his project - it's not doing anything to harm or change the movies you like in any way, shape, or form.
TL;DR - just let it go, and let this dude do his project - it's not doing anything to harm or change the movies you like in any way, shape, or form.
My experience is that the reboot movies are strongly disliked by hardcore TNG fans who don't like TOS.
As a TOS fan first and foremost, these movies took me back to the colorful, swashbuckling fun and adventure that I enjoyed in the original Trek, and away from the long-winded, sanctimonious talkyness of later Trek.
Kor
You don't have bais then? I don't see why my interpretation is invalid. I don't see the interaction of Uhura and Spock in the shuttle bay as proof positive of a full romantic relationship. And if it is, I actually have serious ethical problems with that because a teacher and a student should not be involved with each other romantically. I am a teacher who teaches young adult college students, and even though I am also still young, I would never be in a romantic relationship with a student. A former student is another question, but an active student, that is ethically wrong.
Again, that whole plot is out, but even as a fan of the original movie, I still don't see any inclination of romance between the characters until Vulcan. Before that what I see at most is friendship, or healthy respect, with some vibes if you read into it or choose to see it as foreshadowing.
It is just viewed in a different context. I have platonic female friends who are very affectionate and it is not romantic. So those body language and actions are not nonsensical for me with he alterations.
So Kelvin Trek didn't invent having main characters have romantic relationships.
I already told you why it is out. Can't have the destruction of Vulcan and have the story work as a retcon in Prime continuity.
I disagree. I see Canon as what happens on screen, and eve then there are a few exceptions (like "Threshold").of course, we are both biased here. Still, it's funny for you to call my assertion that they were a couple before the vulcan diaspora 'baseless biased interpretation' (<--summary, not a citation) when not only my interpretation is more supported by the narrative than yours, but it's the same opinion that the people who literally created this story and version of the characters have and it's, thus, canon.
Perhaps they wanted to convey that, but it is not conveyed. What is conveyed is ambiguous and open to interpretation.So, in a sense, biased or not I still - simply - correctly understood what they wanted to convey on screen
I don't consider those to be canon, I consider those to be apocrypha. Again, I will re-iterate this is a fanedit which will deviate from the movies in an attempt to curb the deviations from the Prime timeline (most of them).and read all their clues like they expected people to read them.
I guess you think the writers of the authorized novels and comics, including the one who did the official novelization, are biased too since they too understood the same exact thing I understood and wrote their relationship accordingly and not like YOU are interpreting it.
I don't accept your definition of canon. If it isn't on screen, I don't think it is canon. So let's just agree to disagree rather than trying to trump me with claims of orthodoxy.In either case, I think it's reasonable for me or others to use canon and the intention of the writers when explaining why I find your take is inconsistent.
Not on screen, therefor not obvious. We see Uhura wearing a cadet uniform and operating at the Academy. We see her confront Spock as her superior objecting to her assignment because of her superior abilities and skills that Spock has assessed. Viewing them as teacher and pupil I think is valid the way thing are conveyed ON SCREEN.as for the rest of your argument, there is no proof that they dated while she was still his student (I can already tell you that it wasn't the writers' intention anyway. If you read their bios, Uhura was already the teacher assistant of the course Spock was teaching, and he was a grad student himself),
Somewhat perhaps, but you do the same by saying TOS Uhura is a mammy stereotype as well as other assertions you have made.and even less there is any proof that such relationships would be unethical and forbidden in the context of the reality where the characters live that, for the record, is not your own. You are essentially projecting your personal bias on a fictional reality that might work according to completely different social rules, and where what you consider ethical or nor is completely invalid for the characters.
Former student, certainly. But seeing as Uhura was still in a cadet's uniform, my interpretation is she was also still a cadet, therefor an assertion of an off-screen romance between an instructor and a cadet seems to me to raise a great deal of ethical questions which should be fairly obvious.Even in our world and reality, there are contexts where it's deemed as completely ok for an instructor to date a former student of his.
That seems to be a strawman. I haven't said anything like that.What may actually be more inappropriate and go against starfleet's principles is if they were to subject Spock to human standards and expectations, and thus assume that he can't be unbiased towards his significant other, in spite of him being part of an alien race that deems favorism as illogical.
Well sadly because the destruction of Vulcan is out the scene where Bones gets Kirk sick to get him on board is now gone entirely from the cut. I enjoyed that scene, much how I generally enjoyed that first movie, but while retconning Kirk's origin and Pike's relationship to Kirk is not cannon, and therefor a retcon, it doesn't alter the entire Star Trek on a universe level, just individual characters' backstories. Leave the destruction of Vulcan in, it has to be a reboot alternate reality. Changing Kirk and Pike's back stories leave it at the level of retcon. Did Pike show favoritism? He sure did. But I think most people are familiar with circumstances where some one got an opportunity because they had the favor of someone who pulled strings, maybe to get them a job or admitted into a school or program. It isn't the most fair or by the book when pulling strings because of favortism, but as a teacher, getting involved romantically with a student is wholly unethical. To me an equivalent would be a shrink sleeping with their patient, a boss with a secretary and so on. It does not sit well with me, and I think it should be fairly obvious why.honestly, it sounds like making concern trolling excuses too because if you wanted to be all ethical and nitpick about what is appropriate or not appropriate for the characters to do, a lot of the stuff happening in these movies AND tos wouldn't happen then.
The Kirk/Pike dynamic poses the issue of favoritism even more than S/U didand paints Pike much worse. Pike DID show favoritism for Kirk in more than one instance in these movies e.g, making him first officer (I dunno how that even worked, it's just too much) in spite of Kirk not even being allowed to be on the ship because he cheated on an academy test (let's not forget he was aboard the ship only because his friend McCoy also showed favoritism towards him by abusing his position on the ship, and sneak his buddy aboard with him. and that for no other reason than Kirk being his buddy) Or my 'favorite', when in stid Kirk loses the ship because he violated the prime directive and lied in his report but surprise? Spock gets demoted and transfered to another ship in spite of him not lying in his report, and thus him doing his job and duty correctly, while Pike gives his role as first officer on the enterprise to his 'son' Kirk so that he doesn't really lose the ship. Seems totally fair and professional!
In this edit, Pike is injured, and based on what we know from the Managerie, he would then recover and go back to Starfleet sans being the captain of the Enterprise while he recovers. The end result was a temporary demotion of Kirk and Spock (while Kirk lied on the report, Spock took heat for it too because the plan to save the people of Nibiru was his idea as the context clues in Pike's exposition point to) which soon came to an end once Pike is injured.Of course, the whole thing didn't last anyway because they kill Pike and Kirk goes back to being the captain and Spock goes back to being the first officer, but had Pike not died Spock would be a victim of some serious injustice there namely Pike having a preference for Kirk in spite of the latter being the only one who really deserved any punishment.
Without the events in the film post their first meeting at the hearing, there is no obvious friendship between Kirk and Spock. Kirk goes to save Spock, but as we find out in his argument with Pike, Kirk never loses a crew member. It is clear Kirk cares about Spock, but in this cut they have more of a professional relationship, not a full friendship. Yet it is clear that Kirk likes Spock and cares about him. Those feelings have yet to be reciprocated and/or articulated by Spock at this point. I suppose Prime Spock would take until the movies to get there with Kirk and the crewbut I digress, if we wanted to nitpick for reals, Kirk himself - as the captain - wouldn't be allowed to work with his best friends especially when one of them happens to be his first officer.
Well, based on my cut, the only friendship Kirk has pre-existing is with Bones, which by the way is in keeping with TOS's portrayal. Sure, Kirk had met Uhura before, but they weren't friends, and the same with Spock. His recruitment of them would be from his professional interactions with them rather than his personal bias and friendship for them. Spock goes down with the cold fusion device into the Volcano because he is the science officer, designed the device, and because he is a strong Vulcan (stronger than humans) who can maintain his composure in high stakes situations due to his Vulcan training, all qualities that make him most qualified for such a mission.They'd have to constantly get a transfer and he wouldn't be able to truly cultivate deep relationships. For the captain to have any kind of relationship with his subordinates would pose too much conflict of interest because he can literally send people to their death, and he will favor his friends over crew members who aren't as important to him as his friends are. He's already inclined to take his friends with him in missions in spite of other officers and their skills maybe being more useful or pertinent to the mission (why did Bones go with him at the beginning of stid? Uhura speaks klingon, but why was Spock so needed in the away team too?)
There is no french kiss. The only interaction like that is when Uhura give Spock a peck on his helmet before going down into the volcano. I have on numerous occasions gotten a peck on the cheek and it was not sexual. That is also an example where I have to quote back to you your own words and caution you:you know, I'm not really here to dispute your private life and the idea that everytime you are sad, your 'friends' will french kiss you on the mouth and you kiss them back, and this is the way you show platonic affection.
I dunno, I see stuff like this all the time, in the sense that as I stated before, from my own Latin background these types of physical affections aren't sexualized and it can be a shock to those who come from more stoic cultures. Still, even when folks know that, it doesn't always mean that they are going to change their expressions of themselves and who they are based on another person's culture, often because it is deeply rooted in who they are. No offense is meant, and for the most part in my observations, no offense is usually taken. I imagine Spock as a very wise and enlightened character for the most part, even if he isn't fully acculturated with humans. I assume such a gesture would not be taken as an insult to Spock, because no insult was intended.The point is that you aren't Spock and you aren't half an alien race where touching someone and having feelings are a big deal, and not something you'd magically do just because you are sad. You aren't part of a race where the littlest hint of affection means a lot, let alone physical affection.
I'm talking about Spock here. And Spock's platonic friends would never act that way with him and he wouldn't act that way with them because the mere idea contradicts everything canon has established about him. Because canon has never showed Spock act that way with his 'friends', male or female.
First off, I don't know what OOC is or means.again, it seems you prefer to make him actually very OOC than just reconcile with the fact that he was in love and in a relationship with the girl already, and in spite of this simple concept giving the most beliable context to their scenes, and the most respectful of his, and hers, integrity as a character.
(honestly having a hard time, btw, reconciling the fact that you can write their interactions out as being just platonic friendship, in the same breath you are saying you don't like the fact the movies sexualizing these characters too much.. but that's ok)
That still happens in the story, she plays a pivotal role. She doesn't need to be sexualized for her to be elevated.we are not talking about other trek series here, let alone series that weren't limited by the context of the 60s; we are talking about tos and its characters.
And this trek is the first and only iteration using THESE CHARACTERS that challenged the white dudes status quo by elevating a woman, and a woc, to the original trio level
Because you are taking the concept of philia and reducing it to bromance, which is small in scope. You seem to put down all types of love which are not in the form of personal relationships. Philia is also familial love. It is also patriotism. It is also altruism.and allowing a different kind of relationship - that wasn't allowed in tos where everything was, pretty much, limited to bromance only and not for all pretty and 'progressive' reasons.
Hence, your idea is everything but innovative because it's just like the old thing. And again, no one would notice 'your trek' going backwards here if you weren't specifically using JJ's trek and keeping some of the new stuff unique to his reality, but also selectively erasing all the other new aspects that make it more contemporary and inclusive.
You seem to get defensive over me saying that you want to make everything about bromance again, and yet.. everything you said summarizes your edit as doing exactly that. I don't feel like I have much of a choice, honestly. You wrote it, not me.
Because the Kirk/Pike retcon doesn't break the rest of the Trek Prime universe the way the destruction of Vulcan does. It's not that I won't allow Spock the room to develop his character, it is that his development is heavily steeped in the destruction of Vulcan which goes beyond a retcon and makes the story a reboot because it has a major break with prime continuity.actually, it's interesting to note that you are already retconning tos using a lot of stuff that is unique to the alternate reality, and that relies on the context of the specific events from these movies. You are keeping things that clash with tos canon already.
It's surely valid for the new dynamics as well (or new aspects of the old dynamics such as K/S, that you didn't have in tos), but it's selective to Kirk only though.
For instance, while Kirk is allowed to still keep his new dynamic with Pike in a retcon of the Prime continuity, in spite of that relationship being unique to the alternate reality and influenced by the events in the movie even more than the spock/uhura relationship, Spock apparently isn't granted the same courtesy and somehow, it seems 'impossible' to recton HIS OWN new dynamics in tos too.
Unlikely, but not impossible. This is why it can fit with a retcon and not necessarily a must-be reboot.aside from altering K/S already adding stuff that wasn't in tos, it's unlikely that Kirk and Pike could have had, in the prime reality, the same relationship they had in this trek.
Most of the key story elements are preserved. Sure we lose the story line of Pike and Kirk fighting Nero, but we still have Pike recruit Kirk, and we see him reprimand Kirk but also fight for him with Starfleet. Much is lost, but the core elements are maintained.There is more than one aspect that conflicts with that retcon and makes it almost impossible for them to have that father/son relationship you want to keep for them.
Sorta. But it isn't an either or. Knowing that Pike recruited Kirk, and it is implied he selected him as his successor, does not erase the continuity where Spock actually serves as Pike's science officer before Kirk is given the Enterprise.In some way, you are retconning tos to make it so that Spock's relationship with Pike is more or less given to Kirk instead.
If you can tell me how to do it without blowing up Vulcan, I am willing to listen, otherwise you make this assertion that it can be done without elaborating how it can be done. If you don't give me an alternative but keep harping on it, you are just beating a dead horse. I know what yo think about that plot element, you don't need to keep telling me, all I want at this point is to hear how you would make it work without destroying Vulcan which then take this from Retcon to reboot, and once it is a reboot then there is no point to this fan edit anymore, just watch the movies as they are.However, Spock's dynamic with Uhura does have tos canon basis already and it would, honestly, be easier for someone to retcon THAT into tos than other kelvin trek changes you are keeping or borrowing for your reimagining.
Because the attraction existed in the original series or was at least hinted, however little they could do in context of the 60s, one could easily headcanon that maybe S/U dated before the five years mission started, or they kept their relationship a secret on the ship so it simply was never mentioned. It no more far fetched than retconning a relationship between characters who maybe didn't even know each other in tos at the time because they were in two completely different places.
Not really. I am a TNG fan first and foremost. Data is my favorite character in Trek. The issue is that I really like JJ Abram's Kirk origin. I think in some ways it is the origin Kirk deserves. I like aspects of his Spock origin too. Again, the issue is that in order to further develop the character of Spock, JJ Abrams blows up Vulcan (and then uses this rather predictably in character development and misses the opportunity to explore more deeply the world-building implications of this major event). That changes the Federation and its history on a large scale, thus altering the universe, versus retconning certain character's backstories which have little universal changing impacts.I get the feeling maybe you just are more a Kirk fan than a Spock fan, which would explain a bit why you want to keep more stuff for him and add to his existing dynamics and personal story. You seem to respect his story more while, on the flip side, you don't seem to find much a reason to equally respect kelvin Spock's story in the same way.
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