I think it's frustration that Kelvin Universe Trek never escaped the shadow of TOS. While on an individual basis those references were all justified (Spock rebooting the universe, coming up against Khan and then Spock/Nimoy's death and the wallet photo), it's frustrating that they never got a chance to do their own thing. And it's further annoying that all talk about future Treks revolve around Shatner cameos and whatnot. Orci couldn't make it happen in 2009 or 2015, and now rumours are Tarantino Trek mixes up Chris Pine, William Shatner and Patrick Stewart.
Basically.
Abrams was vague on purpose. He didn't want this to be a different universe because then it's not the "real" Kirk and crew. It's another universe, just like the mirror universe. But he also didn't want to simply rewrite everything and get the fans' ire. So he tried to have both. Personally, I feel that in the absence of a clear and concise line stating it's another universe, the presumption has to be that Kelvin overwrote Prime.
Kelvin Spock and Uhura explained it's an alternate reality in the first movie. They did.
You also have the existence of prime timeline TV shows further confirming that tos is still there and so are the original characters. No one cancelled it.
Spock, the time traveler, would be one of the only people who would know. The only safe place from a timeline change would be the nexus or the Guardian planet or something like that. Q of course would know.
What bothered me was that it would be very out of character for Spock Prime not to try to fix it.
Personally, I think it would be out of character for a scientist like Spock to not understand quantum mechanics, and thus not understand it's another reality he got access to through the black hole. You would rather him believe in some entity with magic powers instead?
it makes perfect sense for me that he gets it's another reality and he respects that. He did the one thing that he could do: help the vulcans of this reality rebuild their home world into another planet.
It's no fairytale but it's realistic facing the consequences of things you have no power changing.
It's going by what's onscreen, and flat out said. It was pretty clear. Sarek and Amanda have nothing to do with Spock, especially when Spock was at the same age/time period where he was in that "relationship" from This Side of Paradise. In fact, when Spock was hit by the spores, it caused him immense pain. Abrams didn't just go in a different direction, he wrote things out of character. If you aren't going to use the characters, why bring them in?
Spock is an unreliable narrator of himself at times. If he didn't have feelings, he wouldn't have tried to purge them in the motion picture, only to realize it was silly to deny who he was.
I find it an inconsistent argument to assume that just because tos Spock didn't love Leila or Chapel back (didn't, not couldn't), then he couldn't love other people and the same is valid for an alternate reality version of him who is more in touch with his human side and had different life experiences.
If you use discovery to add layers to the discussion, it further explained the differences between the two Spock.
Maybe kelvin Spock never had a sister who hurt him and made him want to reject human and feelings, hence why without that trauma he grew up as a biracial man who is more honest about his dual heritage and he doesn't pretend he is just vulcan. It would be ooc for him to do that.
His parents are relevant because his own full blood vulcan dad fell for a human and he admits that eventually (so kelvin spock doesn't even really live the 'vulcans have no feelings' illusion) Spock is his unique person but it isn't out of the realm of possibilities that he shares some things in common with his parents.
This is a fair question. But here's the thing--in Star Trek, the BTTF style is far more prevalent. And since no one has actually traveled in time, a modern theory is no more valid than an older one. When Abrams makes a new franchise, he can interpret time travel in any way he chooses, but in the Star Trek sandbox, he should be limited by what has come before. The only thing real about time travel is that until it's done, we don't know what's real. So yes, we can fault this creative team in this situation.
But I thought trek wasn't like star wars; trek more than anything tries to create a realistic deciption of the future, even in the limits of something that is still fictional and not factual. Trek should keep things..up to date with new discoveries and theories about space. Even the ship warp effect was changed in beyond as they are still trying to figure out the most realistic way to represent it.
And again, jj didn't invalidate the other device. He used another that also takes inspiration from another trek device (different realities).
The Vulcan thing was terrible if you consider this the prime universe overwritten, but Spock/Uhura is out of character. Not just for Spock, but for Uhura. It was Chapel that had the crush on Spock. Spock is a Vulcan, and this is out of character. Why use Spock if you aren't going to write Spock?
Come on now, you are ignoring scenes but then you complain JJ is the one that didn't watch the series?
Bold of you to think they would be allowed to explore something like s/u in tos too, beyond the subtext (or text, as the attraction was).
And yet, Roddenberry himself had wanted to. And Nimoy didn't find it ooc at all, he actually said it was his favorite thing about the movie (don't tell Dales..^ ) abd he was jealous of Zachary Quinto.
First, TOS is not outdated.
OK then.
Great stories stand the test of time, and while it may be VISUALLY outdated, the stories and writing of TOS are MUCH better than anything Abrams did with his little explosions and lens flares.
My argument wasn't about one being better or worse than the other, this is subjective. My argument is about context and thus being realistic enough to understand that the 60s influenced tos. Context matters when you are discussing a modern reboot and complaining things must be like the old thing no matter what.
Roddenberry&co didn't do some things because they couldn't, not, necessarily, because they didn't want to or never planned to.
We can't use nostalgia as an excuse to keep things the same even in a modern iteration, or nothing ever evolves.
First, that's actually not true. It was a 5 year mission. We saw 79 episodes. There are literally hundreds of stories they could still tell, set in the original timeline. The only thing that they wouldn't be able to do is kill characters that didn't die. But killing characters is weak writing.
JJ didn't kill any of the main characters (technically, since he killed Kirk for like, 2 seconds) , but still complain.
You are complaining he explored a relationship that didn't happen in tos, I don't see how you can suggest they are so free to ADD new stuff even if they were to fill in the holes of tos and tell all the stories
they didn't tell in the original.
All of this, complains about whether jj got or respected trek canon, still feels like a moot point to me in context of you giving a pass to Tarantino, and basically saying that it doesn't matter if he makes pulp fiction in space, and ignores the canon of the very reboot he wants to work for. He either makes his own reboot, or he's at fault for doing the very thing you accuse jj&co of doing, just worse.