I always thought that McGivers was a lousy historian. She really didn't contribute much to what they needed as far as information. Spock dug up more information by using the computer.You are quite correct and yet it persists.
That's far more my frustration. To me the John Harrison storyline is far more interesting and could be an exploration of the mission creep that Marcus was engaging in by illegally augmenting humans to fight Klingons.That's very fair. I should have probably not utilized that particular verbage. I more meant the augment storyline. He didn't need to be a genetic superman from the 20th century to get the point across.
Yeah, she was not very good.I always thought that McGivers was a lousy historian. She really didn't contribute much to what they needed as far as information. Spock dug up more information by using the computer.
So, Star Trek?I think the magic blood thing is exacerbated by the fact that, even if it is scientifically realistic and feasible, no other Trek work ever mentions or utilizes it ever again.
Indeed. In fact, the transporter is a better cure, including curing Pulaski of aging from the Darwin station children. Why not use that more often?So, Star Trek?
In any case, only one other Kelvinverse story has been made since then, so opportunities to bring it up again have been…exceedingly rare.
The needs of the story outweigh the needs of consistency and verisimilitude.Indeed. In fact, the transporter is a better cure, including curing Pulaski of aging from the Darwin station children. Why not use that more often?
I did not know that. It certainly sheds a different light on it.Because Roberto Orci said he didn't want to cast a person of color in the role of a terrorist in his "9/11 was an inside job" film.
It’s gotten that label because, apparently, Orci is a 9/11 “truther”. But you’re right. It reads much more like your description.As many times as I've seen it, I still cannot parse STID as a "9/11 Conspiracy" story - rather obviously because the precipitating incident which sets Starfleet on its militaristic course is Nero's incursion, destruction of the Kelvin and genocide against Vulcan, none of which was part of any conspiracy organized by Marcus or anyone else.
It's rather obviously the story of how terribly the United States went astray in its response to 9/11, with the rise of the security state and including the curtailment of the rights of enemy combatants be they citizens or foreign soldiers, etc.
And it works far better to me as a commentary on the US overreach in response to 9/11. While there are other films that do this far better, this Star Trek take is still one of my favorites, and using John Harrison as an augmented solider would have added on top of the drone warfare commentary as well. I thought it could have worked extremely well.It’s gotten that label because, apparently, Orci is a 9/11 “truther”. But you’re right. It reads much more like your description.
They were looking hard at Hispanic actors. Probably because of Montalban.agreed, they wanted some one with name recognition and a certain pedigree and they were on a tigth schedule. if my memory is correct, we heard the Gael Garcia Bernal rumors around the time, one would expect in a production cycle. When Del Toros name leaked it was actually already relatively late in the preproduction process. I absolutely believe it was a panic reaction and last minute decision
So it's on a very long list.I think the magic blood thing is exacerbated by the fact that, even if it is scientifically realistic and feasible, no other Trek work ever mentions or utilizes it ever again.
It may be why he's been silently removed from Trek while Kurtzman's still there...It’s gotten that label because, apparently, Orci is a 9/11 “truther”. But you’re right. It reads much more like your description.
Healing Blood is a problem yet Dr. McCoy gives a lady a single pill and she grows a new kidney and hardly anybody complains.I think the magic blood thing is exacerbated by the fact that, even if it is scientifically realistic and feasible, no other Trek work ever mentions or utilizes it ever again.
You've just equated something that may be possible after three centuries of steam cell research with resurrecting the dead.
MCCOY: Oh, don't be so melodramatic. You were barely dead. it was the transfusion that really took its toll. You were out cold for two weeks.
KIRK: Transfusion?
MCCOY: Your cells were heavily irradiated. We had no choice.
Yeah, that's been my impression - people don't like Orci for one reason or another, and the fact that he's a conspiracy nut is irresistible. But whether he intended it or not, STID is not a 9/11 Truther story. In fact, while heavy-handed, it's one of the few Trek movies with anything substantial to say.It’s gotten that label because, apparently, Orci is a 9/11 “truther”. But you’re right. It reads much more like your description.
Does he? ""Sivan" is a name that appears in both India and Israel.Interesting to note, the child cast as Kid Khan for Strange New Worlds comes from a Latino background just like Montalban.
How is it disappointing if it's just now a nearly identical parallel universe?
And I'm still waiting for a modern production company to make a 60s era reproduction of this vision of the future. I want to see if modern audiences, outside of detail oriented fans, will buy it.
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