But I think my issue is there is no way Kirk would have known because they attacked (and completely destroyed a planet) first. I look at it the same way I look at Janeway's decision to ally with the Borg against Species 8472 and Arturis's condemnation of that in Hope and Fear. A Captain has to go on the information he/she/they have. I just wish there was a stronger case on why he should feel guilty because that part of the episode was great (Pike and Kirk talking).
Correct. Star Trek often gets this wrong but chain of command is not just an episode title; it's extremely real and demands adherence. The Farragut's chain of command is established by its commanding officer, and Kirk cannot be relieved unless by someone senior in that chain.Kirk in this episode is now a lieutenant-commander on the command track and is officially posted as the Farragut's Executive Officer. Lieutenant-Commander Kirk literally outranks Lieutenant Spock and is part of the Farragut's chain of command. Kirk is the ranking officer and per protocol, command of the Farragut is his until Captain V'Rel returns to duty or Starfleet appoints an officer of command grade to replace him.
The saucer of the Farragut is 1:1 identical to the Connie's, so it would be weird if it didn't look identical.The Farragut reusing the Enterprise sets really hurt this episode. Previous Trek series often had a "spare" bridge (TNG used the Excelsior bridge, DIS the Shenzhen one) to make it more believable
I think it's supposed to be smaller.The saucer of the Farragut is 1:1 identical to the Connie's, so it would be weird if it didn't look identical.
Curious, why would one impact the other?There were other silly things in this episode (the telephone stuff, the skull-shape on the ship, how the ship was able to destroy planets, but was disabled by being hit with two nacelles & a few torpedoes.
No, the saucers are the same size.I think it's supposed to be smaller.
Those torpedoes hit a Klingon D7 that was inside the ship, causing a warp core explosion which blew it apart.& a few torpedoes.
You missed a lot of the episode, the monster ship was a clump ship, assembled over hundreds of years by humans using whatever salvage they could find or steal.I like they let a lot of mysteries open (the monster ship is clearly of alien origin, and the alien suits have magical alien crystal tech).
The ship was able to destroy planets because it had a giant ass tractor beam.There were other silly things in this episode (the telephone stuff, the skull-shape on the ship, how the ship was able to destroy planets, but was disabled by being hit with two nacelles & a few torpedoes.
So Kirk got Spock on the basis of first time impressions without needing to know anymore. Sounds like Kirk to me.Kirk having such a close relationship with Spock already does imply he grabbed him for first officer without really reading his personnel file, making it slightly more believable he still didn't know Ambassador Sarek was Spock's father in Journey to Babel
The skull and easy disabling were the only two things in this ep. that actually bugged me. The first is silly and the second too simple. I think the idea with the nacelles was they tricked the ship into attacking itself, e.g. it was its own tentacles that did it, but it didn't quite play for me.There were other silly things in this episode ... the skull-shape on the ship, how the ship was...disabled by being hit with two nacelles & a few torpedoes.
Thank you, I think this is me overpromoting Spock and assuming he's already a Lt Commander!Captain Garrovick has been dead for roughly five years before the events of this episode.
There's no real weird naval tradition involved. Spock is a lieutenant in the science division. Kirk in this episode is now a lieutenant-commander on the command track and is officially posted as the Farragut's Executive Officer. Lieutenant-Commander Kirk literally outranks Lieutenant Spock and is part of the Farragut's chain of command. Kirk is the ranking officer and per protocol, command of the Farragut is his until Captain V'Rel returns to duty or Starfleet appoints an officer of command grade to replace him.
Now, if Captain Pike or Commander Chinn-Riley were commanding the rescue party, there's probably a regulation that would allow them to assume command of the Farragut and bigfoot Kirk out of the command chair, but Lieutenant Spock doesn't have that authority or position.
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