Bok wouldn’t have really appreciated the gesture from his hypothetical daughter. She’s a feeemale…
Admiral Quinteros?So who would be Homer?
But man, if the TNG movies attempted an sentient oil slick as a villain in 1994, they'd have been laughed off the screen. It didn't even work well on TV in 1988.
This also describes the Denevan Neural Parasites from TOS Operation: Annihilate! The Wrath of Flying Vomit?If they'd portrayed him the way that they did in TNG - just an impotent, sentient puddle of oil - then yes, of course they would have, and I'd be laughing too.But I'm not suggesting anything even remotely of the sort.
I'd always thought of it as an opportunity to give Armus a revamp akin to how the Klingons got upgraded for TMP, making him into a truly horrifying organism with the ability to infest/infect every sentient being it touches, using them as his limbs and senses; his limitless personal army, spreading across the galaxy like a sentient plague... Think Borg collective, except it really is just one organism speaking and acting through meat puppets, so the issue of there not being an antagonist to face off against -or a sticky pond of black goo- is done away with.![]()
This also describes the Denevan Neural Parasites from TOS Operation: Annihilate! The Wrath of Flying Vomit?![]()
I’m not alone! Those really did look like fake vomit.This also describes the Denevan Neural Parasites from TOS Operation: Annihilate! The Wrath of Flying Vomit?![]()
I have thought from time to time about a Generations with Spock, but as Ambassador Spock, and only in the 24th-century part of the film. Like, he's on the Enterprise for a diplomatic mission for some reason, possibly involving Romulans, and all of the trilithium/Nexus stuff goes down.I think the story should have had a villain that wasn't central to the story in terms of driving it, like Soran, and one that was simply an obstacle to be overcome. The story should have been Spock rounding up McCoy and Scotty and asking Starfleet to assign the Enterprise-D to them for the purposes of locating James T. Kirk, lost since the tragic maiden voyage of the Enterprise-B. A new Romulan commander (perhaps played by a well-known actor) could have been after Spock and the Enterprise because this commander believes Spock has left Romulus to take secrets back to the Federation.
I struggled with that for years as well, until I realized that what Spock does is risk everything (his work toward reunification and more) to call on Starfleet to assign Picard's Enterprise to the mission of rescuing Kirk. In my take, Kirk doesn't get swept into the Nexus; instead, he disappears in a spatial rift while saving innocents also caught in that rift, one that Scotty and Spock recognize is very similar to the interphase from "The Tholian Web." When Kirk's shuttle explodes and he's believed dead, Spock very strongly feels that Kirk is still alive, but questions those feelings and ultimately allows logic and the evidence to the contrary to sway him into believing that Kirk is really dead. When the anomaly that puts Kirk into interphase reappears over eight years later, Spock realizes he was wrong, Kirk is alive, and that he must risk everything to try and save his friend.I have thought from time to time about a Generations with Spock, but as Ambassador Spock, and only in the 24th-century part of the film. Like, he's on the Enterprise for a diplomatic mission for some reason, possibly involving Romulans, and all of the trilithium/Nexus stuff goes down.
The problem is, I've never exactly worked out what Spock does in this scenario, because audiences would want to see Kirk and Spock together one more time, so the climax of the film would be wildly different.
Those parasites and even Armus allow for great body horror…Armus would even be great for cross-overs…the Venom symbiote…the black goo from PROMETHEUS…or Species…Engineers having left Armus behind.However, I would have been fine with bringing back those "Conspiracy" parasites and really go to town with a starfleet takeover
Would have been a better villain but would have been too much of a Khan rehash.I'd like to see what kind of mayhem Armus raises if he ever gets a ride off-planet.
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