Kirk is my favorite character in any form or genre. Absolutely my #1 hero and role model.
I had no problem with his death or the way it was handled.
I've sometimes thought that the prologue with the Enterprise-B is in the wrong place in the film. It's hard to argue that it shouldn't be there -- the last movie ended with the maroon jackets, and this movie opens with the maroon jackets -- but I occasionally feel that the prologue would have worked better as a flashback, either after Riker says, "That's the mission where James Kirk died" or, better, when Picard goes to Guinan's quarters to talk about Soran.
Knowing that the prologue could have been even more crowded with cameos, with most of the original cast getting a single line or two, I'm okay with what we got. I don't mind that Scotty and Chekov get Spock and McCoy's dialogue. I only wish that Scotty's dialogue didn't sound like TNG-esque technobabble, since that's not the way Kirk's crew spoke.
My big problem is that not enough is really done to introduce the TNG crew to these audiences. The moment it jumps to 78 years later or whatever it is, the movie simply assumes you're au fait with Picard and crew, and their myriad of backstories, and makes very few concessions to the casual cinema-goer. First Contact does that a whole lot better.
Had Shatner said no maybe George Takei's phone would've been ringing..Yeah, the movie has got some good things about it, but it also had some serious flaws. Not the smallest of which is it's handling of Trek's first leading man. Shatner tells in 'Movie Memories' of his own readings of the first draft, that his gut instinct was that "Kirk isn't integral to the story", and while the writers did subsequently rewrite to keep him happy (although the scenes in question ended up on the cutting room floor anyway), it's hard to deny that Shatner's assessment of that early draft applies to the finished film too. Kirk really Isn't integrated into the movie very well, is treated in a perfunctory manner, and as @JonnyQuest037 says, one gets the feeling the movie expects us to care more about Data finding Spot, than it does about Kirk's death, more or less just brushed aside in the previous scene. There's no investment in Kirk as a character here. He really is nothing more than a function of the plot. Nimoy recognised this about their plans for Spock and neglected to return. I wonder what the film-makers would have done if Shatner had likewise turned them down? Part of me likes to think they'd be up shit creek without a paddle, but another part of me feels like they would've just shrugged it off and replaced the character with someone else, just like they did with Spock and McCoy in the opener. That's how un-integral to the story Kirk really was.
If they'd killed off Sulu instead, he would've had the same last words — but delivered a little differently.Had Shatner said no maybe George Takei's phone would've been ringing..
25years since the most disappointing Trek movie of all time
I still consider this the worst Star Trek movie of all time because of Kirk's death, and how the TNG writers took a dump on the original series in what could have been an epic crossover.
I think with a few tweaks, “All Good Things” could have accomplished what they wanted for Generations. Just have the E-A stand in for the Encounter at Farpoint era E-D.
Yeah, the movie has got some good things about it, but it also had some serious flaws. Not the smallest of which is it's handling of Trek's first leading man. Shatner tells in 'Movie Memories' of his own readings of the first draft, that his gut instinct was that "Kirk isn't integral to the story", and while the writers did subsequently rewrite to keep him happy (although the scenes in question ended up on the cutting room floor anyway), it's hard to deny that Shatner's assessment of that early draft applies to the finished film too. Kirk really Isn't integrated into the movie very well, is treated in a perfunctory manner, and as @JonnyQuest037 says, one gets the feeling the movie expects us to care more about Data finding Spot, than it does about Kirk's death, more or less just brushed aside in the previous scene. There's no investment in Kirk as a character here. He really is nothing more than a function of the plot. Nimoy recognised this about their plans for Spock and neglected to return. I wonder what the film-makers would have done if Shatner had likewise turned them down? Part of me likes to think they'd be up shit creek without a paddle, but another part of me feels like they would've just shrugged it off and replaced the character with someone else, just like they did with Spock and McCoy in the opener. That's how un-integral to the story Kirk really was.
It really makes you wonder how excitedly Trek fans would have lined up at the cinema for the "epic" team up of Captain Picard and Commander Kyle![]()
It really makes you wonder how excitedly Trek fans would have lined up at the cinema for the "epic" team up of Captain Picard and Commander Kyle
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