ST:IV invented some revisionist history claiming the genesis planet was for the Klingon people. Really??? In the sh*tfest movie ST:III Kruge and his band of retards wanted to steal it or conquer it or something ridiculous, and David never stated on the Grissom the planet was for the Klingons. The "I can never forgive them for the death of boy" jibber jabber was odd--since he killed the ones responsible for it.
Yeah, I agree. Before TSFS it was more they were our sworn enemies sort of thing, like the US/USSR Cold War (though the Klingons were obviously more ruthless and deadly). I mean, you could define it as hatred in the sense that Kirk wanted to protect the Federation, but it wasn't personal. It was in a soldier sort of way. In TSFS it became personal, and yes, while it's true it was only a few Klingons who were actually responsible, Kirks hatred became personal and visceral. I think partly because he had just mended fences with his son. After years of being separated and even hated by his son, they had began anew and I think Kirk was looking forward to getting to know his son. Then he was brutally taken away from him. The Klingons took it personally too. Before they wanted to beat and even kill Kirk because it would have been a great honor. But after TSFS they wanted him for not only beating Kruge, but for embarrassing him and stealing his ship--and they felt threatened by Genesis. But no one 'gave' Genesis to the Klingons. The Federation abandoned the technology because it was unstable, as Saavik said, Genesis was a failure. Eventually, like transwarp in TSFS, Genesis was forgotten.
Thank you for pointing this out and you are correct. And yet, I've always perceived Vulcans as living austere and ascetic lives. Sure there's some ornamentation on their clothing and I don't find it too difficult to accept the large IDIC decoration in Spock's quarters in TWOK given its cultural significance.
However, I always seen Spock, and Vulcans in general as monks. They are interested in training their minds, shutting out emotions, giving their lives to logic and learning and science and understanding the universe.
That's why I found it so jarring that this Spock owns a copy of a Chagall painting on his wall depicting The Garden Of Eden or mixing a drink of some kind in a very shiny, very expensive looking, very ostentatious silver cup. I know that this version of Spock is different than the Spock we knew from the TV show. This Spock who has died and has come back to life and has come to terms with his human half. Even accepting all that, I still feel that the Spock we see in TUC feels very out of character.
This film would have been 10 times deeper if Saavik had been the traitor. What a colossal missed opportunity.
The Klingons are taunting the humans.
It still wouldn't help with the main issue, which is that the new character obviously dunnit. Using Saavik would solve that fairly elegantly.
Given that Saavik had such a minimal role in IV and acted real differently between II and III, having her back in a prominent role in VI and acting more like she did in II than III would be pretty awkward. I believe Meyer wanted returned Saavik to be not at all like or influenced by the intermediate Curtis version and Cattrall didn't want to be the third actress to play a character, both are fine reasons to just have a new character.
And also it is pretty drastic, arguably too drastic and shock value-y, for a beloved-by-some character, who the film would expect us to feel nostalgic about her return, to resort to multiple murders or massacre and trying to have a militant conquest just out of fear of rather than hope for the future (or bitterness, just like Kirk, about David being killed).
I think this sentiment sums up why the idea was nixed.I love Saavik and would hate for her to have become an evil character.
Even if Saavik was the traitor, I doubt having her in the movie would make her less obvious. The way the movie played out it could only lead to her. Watching the movie I knew the traitor wouldn't have been one of the TOS cast.Absolutely. Hell you could still have had Cattrall play her at this point for all I care, maybe change the hairstyle and her performance a little maybe - she was probably the right age still, and there's already been two actresses play the character, plus it could be explained away easily with the decade or so that had passed at this point in the story.
It would have given so much more dramatic weight to the movie.
I love Saavik and would hate for her to have become an evil character.
Even if Saavik was the traitor, I doubt having her in the movie would make her less obvious. The way the movie played out it could only lead to her. Watching the movie I knew the traitor wouldn't have been one of the TOS cast.
The position of the 'bad' guys in TUC is not necessarily an 'evil' one - from their point of view they are protecting their respective empires, they are morally ambiguous at best, some of their actions you could describe as evil but their motivations certainly aren't.
I agree that it would've been a cool and unexpected ending for Saavik, and it certainly would have made TUC's ending more surprising. But considering that Cattrall would have been the third actress to play Saavik over the course of just five movies, I can certainly see why they decided to go in a new direction.Yeah, the shifting of characters there is one of the worst mistakes in the film franchise. It would have had such an impact, and capped off the entire series.
I think that any romantic subtext between them was likely either a red herring to keep us from suspecting Valeris, a reflection of the recasting, or both. If you have a new actress playing what's now a new character, why not play the scenes differently than you would have with the previous actress?If it was still Saavik, do you think it was intended as a romantic interest? Perhaps because of STIII? Or do you think the closeness would just be more warranted with more history involved, if he was a father figure to Saavik?
<Shrug> They couldn't get Kirstie Alley back and Nicholas Meyer wasn't interested in having Robin Curtis play the part. And Kim Cattrall wasn't interested in just being "The Third Saavik" when she could create a new character instead. What else could they do?This film would have been 10 times deeper if Saavik had been the traitor. What a colossal missed opportunity.
Considering how different TMP was from TOS and how different TWOK was from TMP after that, I don't see why. If we fans could roll with and accept all of those radical changes in looks and characterizations, Saavik going back to how she was in TWOK wouldn't have been that big of a deal.Given that Saavik had such a minimal role in IV and acted real differently between II and III, having her back in a prominent role in VI and acting more like she did in II than III would be pretty awkward.
Even if Saavik was the traitor, I doubt having her in the movie would make her less obvious. The way the movie played out it could only lead to her. Watching the movie I knew the traitor wouldn't have been one of the TOS cast.
Chang might be trained to fight humans, a soldier first and a person second, but the person beneath the training doesn't dislike humans, and is not ignorant of humans in the way the humans are repeatedly shown to be ignorant of Klingons....
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