Just making the point that TUC was consistent with what we saw on TV
Might be interesting for someone to compile a list of instances in which the movies contradicted the canon of the original series. Like Khan and Chekov.
Just making the point that TUC was consistent with what we saw on TV
Unless she's a savant like Sato, Uhura and most linguists would have a slow going of it trying to decipher an unknown language from scratch. The Federation must employ entire teams of first contact specialists who would do a better job of it than the communications officer on a Starship.But there may be times when it isn't functioning or when there are other circumstances involved, such as the 'personalization' thing....some cultures might be offended by communication being filtered through a machine....and such.
Unless she's a savant like Sato, Uhura and most linguists would have a slow going of it trying to decipher an unknown language from scratch. The Federation must employ entire teams of first contact specialists who would do a better job of it than the communications officer on a Starship.
Yes, but the point is, it take a very long time and would be done by expertsMy thought was that by the time of TUC, Uhura would have had the time to follow the work of those others and would have by then learned the language.
Diplomacy alone would have meant learning each others' language. Machine translations can miss important nuances and I'm not even going into A. I. because the Universal Translator concept never mentioned anything like that.
Yes, but the point is, it take a very long time and would be done by experts
Usually in real life there are translators who speak both languages. I'm sure Marco Polo didn't speak much Chinese and Columbus couldn't be bother to learn Arawak.With the necessity of diplomatic interactions and such, it might not take so very long. Both sides would also actively pursue each other's language for surveillance and intelligence reasons. So, the experts begin immediately but others may quickly follow and learn as well.
Usually in real life there are translators who speak both languages.
Lets be realistic here, there are threads that go into great detail on how the decks as shown on TOS, TOS films, TNG, etc can not fit the size of ships as given by the producers of the show.Abrahms movies for me.
I know its a controversial position to take but here goes.... again
Its not a reboot, it's a divergent timeline which is supposedly only what? 25 years from the divergent point.
Yet I'm supposed to buy that starfleet has in just 25 years "militarized" due to the naradas attack resulting in the connie being a dreadnaught that's bigger than a galaxy class ship.
Jeez in 80 years when we meet the dominion thats just gonna be a curbstomp in our favour when our super star destroyer sized oddesy goes through the wormhole and their ships havent changed at all.
There was NO need to upscale the ships whatsoever, the only time you'd even know was in their engineering dept which looked rubbish.
I forgive it though cos its just a big dumb action movie
No only bringing up the JJ verse films isn't a rational point, when it has existed for the run of the entire franchise. It should equally bother you in every aspect of the franchise's run.
I'm wondering where something like 'poetic license' might come into all of this.
Consider the following example. They wanted to show the D at space dock, it would have been prohibitively expensive to build a new space dock model, so they re-used the one they had on hand. It should perhaps not be taken as literally what happened, but as representative of....thus a type of poetic license. That explanation could work to explain a lot in Trek. Colorful metaphors.
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Man, those shots are still sexy today aren't they?
Unfortunately, it doesn't and never has. It's a cognitive bias for focusing on the positives of the things that are liked, and sensitive to all the negatives of things that are not liked.No only bringing up the JJ verse films isn't a rational point, when it has existed for the run of the entire franchise. It should equally bother you in every aspect of the franchise's run.
Looking around, it seems to be a lesson that needs repeating.I don't feel insulted personally but sometimes I think those behind Discovery think we're all stupid misogynistic racist bigots who need to be schooled in what diversity is. After 50 years of Star Trek I suppose that's insulting not only to the fanbase but Star Trek itself.
The idea Uhura was linguist was from the unmade Phase II series, to expand Uhura's role. It was used in loads of novels through the 80's and 90's (Diane Duane's earlier Trek works for example, which were set in a Phase II-ish world)To be fair, the "fact" that Uhura was "deep into linguistics" is mostly fanon and had NOT been established at the time they made TUC. It's a neat idea, but it was NEVER actually stated on the original TV series. She was an accomplished expert on communications technology, like the chief radio operator on a military submarine, but the widespread assumption that she was also a super-linguist didn't become "canon" until the reboot movies.
Yeah, sure, you can make the case that it would be valuable for a Starfleet communications officer to be fluent in Klingon, but never once on TOS was she actually shown to be fluent in Klingon, Romulan, or whatever. That was a fan theory that somehow became taken for granted, kinda like the false notion that Spock was the first Vulcan in Starfleet, etc.
So the movie was not in error in that respect.
It's probably more accurate to say that a lot of people involved are trying to make the most marketable and profitable Star Trek they can. That's by no means the same as the best. It means trying to attract the broadest possible audience, which means dumbing some things down, which unavoidably will insult the intelligence of some viewers. It's the age-old tension between art and commerce; nothing wrong with pointing it out. it's certainly been an issue for Trek since literally before day one, given the infamous network complaints that the first pilot was "too cerebral."Every single person involved is trying to make the best Star Trek they can. Why wouldn't they? What possible motive would there be to spend multi-millions on "insulting our intelligence"?
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