Maybe in the Kelvin timeline, the Constellation isn't attacked by the Doomsday Machine at all, and therefore no need for Decker.
Maybe in the Kelvin timeline, the Constellation isn't attacked by the Doomsday Machine at all, and therefore no need for Decker.
Despite what Spock Prime said in STID about vowing not to give out future information that would alter people's destiny, I've always believed he should've made an exception for extinction-level threats like the planet-killer, Nomad, V'Ger, etc.
If you can stop WWII from happening, for example by killing Hitler and saving roughly 50-60 million lives; or the gulf war?A situation like that is worth exploring.
Would you let a catastrophe happen to ensure history unfolds so that all the chess pieces are in place for a later crisis?
Or do you also try to mitigate its effects so that history books are satisfied but people’s lives spared?
So much more intriguing than guy with a vengeance.
Maybe he really just didn't want to give anyone the information because he believed that he (and possibly a team he planned to assemble?) would be the best to deal with those problems, rather than handing the info over to people who might screw it up.Despite what Spock Prime said in STID about vowing not to give out future information that would alter people's destiny, I've always believed he should've made an exception for extinction-level threats like the planet-killer, Nomad, V'Ger, etc.
I've always thought he was debriefed by Starfleet after the whole Narada incident was resolved (hence his presence at Starfleet Command at the end of the movie), and divulged the biggest threats there - which is probably why Khan was discovered years before the Prime Timeline's version of events. After the meeting, Spock was probably bound to a confidentiality agreement, so what he told the Enterprise bridge crew was true in a way.Despite what Spock Prime said in STID about vowing not to give out future information that would alter people's destiny, I've always believed he should've made an exception for extinction-level threats like the planet-killer, Nomad, V'Ger, etc.
But it's a dice roll. When conversations like this come up, I always think of the "Red Dwarf" episode where the accidental prevention of the assassination of JFK created a worse future. They had to go back in time and actually see that the assassination was carried out to restore the timeline to normal.If you can stop WWII from happening, for example by killing Hitler and saving roughly 50-60 million lives; or the gulf war?
But it's a dice roll. When conversations like this come up, I always think of the "Red Dwarf" episode where the accidental prevention of the assassination of JFK created a worse future. They had to go back in time and actually see that the assassination was carried out to restore the timeline to normal.
I had no problem with "Into Darkness" re-using Khan. That was fine by me, in fact, "Kirk having to team up with Khan to escape the Klingons" was a genuine exciting new angle I thought they would explore for a second. It's an established franchise - they are allowed to use the well-known players (Klingons, Gorn, Enterprise...).
They just have to tell new STORIES. New scenarios. THAT was the biggest problem with "Into Darkness": Not that Khan appeared again. But that, despite everything being "new", the goddamn FINALE of the goddamn movie was the exact. same. scenario as the previous time those characters met.
It's a feeling I don't want to revisit, and that has forever tainted my enjoyment of the Kelvin-timeline franchise ("Beyond" was the first Trek movie I didn't check out in Cinema, like apparently a whole lot of other fans as well - the movie was fine, but I was just so much burned by the previous one, I just didn't care anymore...).
But, alas, they are never going to re-use the Doomsday device anyway. Why? Simple: No antagonist actor. They are never going to make an action movie whithout a badguy showing his face. They didn't even do that for the Borg. They are never going to have a movie not featuring a clear and obvious villain in the forseeable future. Not with this current iteration of the franchise...
I basically agree. I think STID was a good Khan story -- a better one than TWOK, because it was about the sane, nuanced Khan of "Space Seed" rather than the over-the-top madman version. It suffered mainly from the reuse of TWOK elements. Although it's an overstatement to say it had the same ending. Once they got past the stupid rehash of the death scene, they went back to telling a new story and giving it a different outcome, one where Khan survived.
Well, that's kind of unfair, since Beyond had an entirely different team of writers and director than STID did. The rehash elements of STID were evidently Damon Lindelof's idea -- over Roberto Orci's protests -- and Lindelof had nothing whatsoever to do with Beyond. It's a fresh start from a fresh creative team and it makes a clean break from the previous two movies in a lot of ways.
Not that I would want them to redo "The Doomsday Machine," but since reading this paragraph, I've already thought of two ways they could work a villain into the story.
But TWOK was definitely the better Khan story!
Which is really a shame - I LOVE the actors, and the aesthetics, and even the style. I'm just burned out on this particular iteration of the characters.
DO IT. Write it down. And then change a the Doomsday machine itself a little bit to another type of superweapon with a different backstory - and voilá! Entirely new, not-rehashed Trek story created!![]()
Whale probe is still out there somewhere in the Abramsverse..But, alas, they are never going to re-use the Doomsday device anyway. Why? Simple: No antagonist actor. They are never going to make an action movie whithout a badguy showing his face. They didn't even do that for the Borg. They are never going to have a movie not featuring a clear and obvious villain in the forseeable future. Not with this current iteration of the franchise...
Not necessarily, the Botany Bay isn’t.Whale probe is still out there somewhere in the Abramsverse..
. The first two films were an origin story, giving us younger versions of the characters who are still feeling their way toward the people they'll become. I think Abrams's original intention was always to make the whole trilogy an origin story ending up with the characters in basically their TOS form. But Beyond sort of skips over that thanks to the time jump and the change of creators, and it gives us characters who have already matured into their TOS versions, especially Kirk. He's not the hotheaded young rogue anymore, but the seasoned captain weighted with the weariness of command and questioning his career path. Also, Spock and McCoy are finally paired off with each other throughout the movie rather than just having token interactions as in the first two, the Spock-Uhura romance is largely a non-issue, and Scotty gets a major subplot rather than just being the comedy relief (unsurprising given that Simon Pegg co-wrote the film). The one thing that's really consistent with the prior films, character-wise, is that Sulu and Chekov, played by the two best actors in the cast, are still underutilized. But hey, that's pretty consistent with TOS too.
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