No, on both countsSure. 09 version just is terminally stupid. But that was kinda the defining feature of that film anyway.

No, on both countsSure. 09 version just is terminally stupid. But that was kinda the defining feature of that film anyway.
Karl Urban is going to die from it?Sure. 09 version just is terminally stupid.
I've explained ad nauseam why it is stupid. At this point we can agree to disagree.Why was it dumb? I thought it was a clever way to bring the nickname into the 21st century.
I've explained ad nauseam why it is stupid. At this point we can agree to disagree.
He also knew how to make a fantastic Mint Julep.But McCoy went to medical school. If universities in the future are like they are now, he probably studied some history too. It's not implausible that he would be aware of historical terms for his profession that have relevance to the history of where he was from, however many centuries before it happened. In TOS, McCoy seemed proud of being from Georgia, and he also knew that, hundreds of years before his time, people were sewn like garments.![]()
It was one of the best lines in the whole film.Why was it dumb? I thought it was a clever way to bring the nickname into the 21st century.
"It wasn't what I wanted" doesn't make it stupid.I've explained ad nauseam why it is stupid. At this point we can agree to disagree.
Usually what criticism against ST 09 boils down to. It wasn't what I wanted from "Star Trek.""It wasn't what I wanted" doesn't make it stupid.
No, ignoring etymology of a word like that would have been stupid in any film.Usually what criticism against ST 09 boils down to. It wasn't what I wanted from "Star Trek."
The word "bones" or the slang term "sawbones"?No, ignoring etymology of a word like that would have been stupid in any film.
Both have been used to refer a doctor for ages.The word "bones" or the slang term "sawbones"?
So?Both have been used to refer a doctor for ages.
Surgeons originally. Though I think using just "bones" might be original to Star Trek.Both have been used to refer a doctor for ages.
No it isn't.Though I think using just "bones" might be original to Star Trek.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.