Would Into Darkness have worked better if Kirk had stayed dead at the end, with Spock in command, and Kirk had only been revived what later became Beyond?
So, I have been debating on this answer for a while. I could go overly long, as I think Kirk's arc is probably one that best reflects the challenges of the stages of psychosocial development that Erikson postulated. So, I would say a committed relationship is the next best step. He had to figure out his identify first (outside of his dad's shadow) to be able to move in to the intimacy stage and a develop a relationship, long term and romantic or just a better friendship. I would say that Kirk and Spock wrestling with this "Where do I go from here?" stage in Beyond sets the stage for both of them to become more interested in families rather than always running around as explorers. And I think Kirk would strive to balance both.What is left to be afraid of for Kirk, then? Fatherhood? Daring to love someone in a committed relationship and risk losing them (not just pining for what he never had)?
I was always of the opinion that they should have used Garth of Izar instead of Khan. He had been altered genetically so that he could change form and would have been a better infiltrator. The changes made him mentally unstable. The changes to his body could give his blood magical powers but with the risk of side effects. The consequences of those side effects could have been rolled into Kirk's story in Beyond.
Why? Further small universe syndrome. Also, people (though not I) complained about Khan appearing when a major benefit of another timeline was to avoid repeats of characters (beyond the actual crew). Having Garth would be subject to the same issue.Maybe it should have been Garth instead of Krall.
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