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Which timeline after the upcoming movie?

^ Yes, I realize that. This is only my opinion obviously, but I think horror and sci-fi movies are really suffering from a lack of new ideas. I have suffered through a lot of awful re-makes of some of my favorite older movies in recent years. I don't sit around and fume about it, it isn't like they ruin the older ones I loved..I just wish more time and resources were put into new ideas.

These newer remakes don't tend to be well done like John Carptenter's The Thing for example. Most of them seem to have little respect for what came before them, other than tacking on a famous name, a lot of bad computer animation and recruiting a bunch of Dawson's Creek esque actors. I know a lot of people will probably disagree on this, just how I feel about it.

JJ Abrams is no John Huston.
 
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However, if the future TOS books are based around the new and seemingly awful characterizations of Kirk/Spock etc. (Kirk and Uhura having some sort of an affair, Kirk as a rockin' rebel driving his car off a cliff, an actor who believes Kirk should be 'more like Han Solo' :rolleyes:) then I won't be buying any Trek books other than the TNG/DS9 ones.

1) There's no Kirk/Uhura affair. Young Kirk hits on Uhura without success, and there's a shot in the trailer that some have assumed shows Kirk and Uhura in bed, but it's clearly not Uhura and appears to be an Orion woman, probably Rachel Nichols's character.

2) The Kirk who drives his car off a cliff is twelve. Who's to say what Kirk was like at that age?

3) The actor can say whatever he wants, but he didn't write or direct the movie. This isn't improv.
 
On #1, good to know. I stand corrected.

On #2, a 20th century car, Kirk as a young rebel, a robot cop on a hoverbike..Just doesn't work at all for me.

On #3 very true, but I think he still will bring a lot of that to the character. Don't you think that Shatner affected the Kirk character in a HUGE way, especially in the later movies? Only time will tell.

If I end up being wrong about this movie I will own up to it and admit it. All I can say is that based on what I've seen everything about it feels wrong to me, including the entire idea of even doing it in the 1st place.

We have the books to read about the TOS/TNG/DS9/VOY/ENT characters. I want something new onscreen or nothing at all and I'm not psyched about tired rehashes by less talented people.

Anyway, sorry for getting this thread off track.
 
Well, as per Orci's latest comments, Harold still exists even after this film is released. From the point of view of characters in Harold, Nero and his gang go back in time and are never seen again - but the original timeline continues. That makes me feel better.
 
On #2, a 20th century car, Kirk as a young rebel, a robot cop on a hoverbike..Just doesn't work at all for me.

Stars, no. Every time the cop pulls into view, I keep expecting it'll be John Travolta and he and Pine will break into a duet. You'd think "Crybaby" would have killed the '50s bad boy fetish.

Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
 
Has it been confirmed that the cop is a robot and not a guy in full body armour, including some kind of helmet/mask to keep the dust out of his face?

I'm still looking forward to the movie and I will reserve judgement until the end credits roll.
 
Has it been confirmed that the cop is a robot and not a guy in full body armour, including some kind of helmet/mask to keep the dust out of his face?

No. Here's what Orci said in part 1 of the interview:
TrekMovie: Is the cop in the trailer a robot or a guy in the mask?

Roberto Orci: In my mind, there is a person under there. But there is nothing in the movie that says one way or another. But in reading some of Roddenberry’s thoughts and dissertations about Star Trek, there was always a hesitance to deny the human spirit and deny the human side of it. There is a small part of me that thinks an android cop would be against Roddenberry’s instincts. However, Mr. Data is clearly a central canon figure, so you can argue it either way. I don’t think there is anything in the movie that commits it one way or the other. It is in the eye of the beholder.

Given how backwards Federation robotics seemed to be in the 23rd century, I agree with Orci that it's probably a person. Maybe it's a humanoid alien who needs that helmet to breathe in Earth's atmosphere.
 
Given how backwards Federation robotics seemed to be in the 23rd century, I agree with Orci that it's probably a person. Maybe it's a humanoid alien who needs that helmet to breathe in Earth's atmosphere.

Or just a human with some form of HUD set up in the helmet.
 
In a world where Greg Cox can conjure a "Eugenics War" into the 1990s of our own history, I don't doubt that Trek writers will cleverly and seamlessly resolve whatever contradictions arise in this movie into the overall fictional Trek narrative.
 
My first thought after reading Orci's interview was: "It's going to be really fun in the coming years to see how those Trek lit writers cleverly explain how the butterfly effect caused by what happens to the Kelvin creates all these interesting changes, from Kirk's troubled childhood to the new Enterprise design and technology upgrades to the dramatic changes for the trajectories of various characters' early careers, etc.". I honestly find the whole notion fascinating!
 
^^Yeah, it would be fun to extrapolate the future of the new "Abramsverse" timeline. However, I expect we novelists (and comics authors) will be somewhat constrained in our ability to do that by the likelihood of sequels. Anything we extrapolated about the Abramsverse timeline would run the risk of being contradicted by ST XII or XIII.

But hopefully once the sequels do come out, we'll at least be able to extrapolate (or rather, interpolate) stuff between the extant films. Maybe even explore how certain events in the original timeline happened differently (or similarly) here.
 
Has there been any word that there are sequels planned following Star Trek XI or do you guys figure, that if the new movie hits off well that there will be automatically follow-ups set in that timeframe using the 'new' crew?
 
Fair enough, but that interpretation gives a lot of credence to those who would say that this is "some other Kirk," the same way that the crews in the Mirror Universe or "Yesterday's Enterprise" aren't "the" crews.
Well, the Picard, Riker, Guinan, Tasha, etc. in "Yesterday's Enterprise" are definitely the same people, just having different life experiences. That's what's happening here. It's not like Galactica where you have a totally new cast of characters with similar names. These are supposed to be the same Kirk, Spock, McCoy, etc. that we know, with the same genetics and the same personalities, just living their lives under modified circumstances.
I suppose, but that distinction doesn't mean that a story set in the "Yesterday's Enterprise" timeline would've been what the casual viewer was looking for in a TNG film. Much like your comments in another thread about how tie-ins are meant to evoke the same feel as the source material, fans (and even licence-holders, as you say) want to see stories that "fit."

Whereas Trent sees Orci's explanation as an elegant way of having it both ways, I can also see how it's an answer which doesn't satisfy anyone by having it both ways:

The writers want the fans who are actually thinking about this to "relax, it's an alternate timeline," but that gives us an origin story where those same fans would presumably want the origin story of the Kirk et al. they already know--not merely "the same genetics and the same personalities," but also the same circumstances--and not some sort of hybrid where we'd have to work out which bits could fit into the original and which absolutely can't.

OTOH, the writers also (presumably) want the casual or new fan who's not thinking about this to perceive their version of the crew as the crew, i.e. "This is the 'True Story' of how that crew you all at least vaguely know about got together." They don't want viewers to think that well, this is one way they could've gotten together, but not the way the crew as seen in TOS actually got together in the original timeline.

In other words, they want to do a reboot without having most people realise it's a reboot.

Although I'm not so sure about Chekov. He does seem to be older than his original-timeline counterpart. If he was conceived years sooner, he couldn't be genetically identical, just similar, like an older brother. Which is possible, given the change in actors. Although that makes it ironic that Yelchin resembles Walter Koenig so strongly.
Even though the writers have clearly given some thought to the changed circumstances, I doubt they thought about this much beyond the desire to have The Big Seven all appear in the movie.

Anecdotally, I know I encountered initial resistance from people I know because Chekov's presence seemed implausible from an age perspective. On the flip side, at least one other person I know said that Chekov "looks about fourteen," so maybe there isn't any discrepancy. ;)

To be honest, my initial reaction is somewhat along these lines. Unless the story is about restoring the original timeline (and Orci didn't say one way or the other), it's going to matter less to me how this turns out--much like how I'm not particularly invested in the fate of the Marty McFly who grew up with Biff as a stepfather.
So how do you feel about the Myriad Universes stories? Or the Shatnerverse? Or the hundreds of Trek novels that are no longer compatible with the canonical timeline as it now stands? Trek Lit is full of alternate histories.
That's sort of like asking how I feel about Dr Who and the Daleks or Death Comes to Time or Scream of the Shalka--they're not necessarily inferior stories qua stories, but they're comparatively shunted to the side in the face of the meta-narrative. Even you said you're putting the movie with those alternate-timeline stories and not with your (presumably much larger) ST Chronology file.

Anyway, I think it's a given that the story isn't about restoring the original timeline, because if this film is at all successful, there will be sequels with the same cast, continuing the same continuity. And Orci said outright that the original timeline still exists; it hasn't been erased.
Right, but the advertising for the movie isn't trying to convey that this is a timeline where, as Rom would say, "Everything's alternate;" it's trying to evoke TOS (despite the changes) in a way that implies it's the same timeline. If the trailer is all you've seen of the movie, you don't even know that there's time travel in it, let alone that this is a new, alternate history.

How much the movie itself acknowledges this is still an open question--it depends a lot on how the older Spock explains his reasons for needing to travel through time. As others have asked, why does it matter, if the other timeline just continues along Nero-free?

Other people have used comic-book characters for comparison, but that seems like a limited analogy. This is more like what would have happened if The Phantom Menace had come out and Lucasfilm said that from this point on, there'd still be Jedi and Skywalkers and Han Solo and everybody else, but the events of The Original Trilogy don't happen in this new timeline...

...and now that I think about it, this whole explanation puts a lie to the writers' other explanation that there was "no way" to fit Kirk into the movie because he died in Generations. If this is an alternate timeline, why not have an older, alternate Kirk who didn't experience those events?

To use my Doctor Who analogy again, it could be that the novel lines end up on parallel tracks, too, but occasionally reference this situation. Some of the DW tie-ins have implied that the Big Finish fiction and the BBC Books fiction lead to different versions of the Ninth Doctor, for example, and the existing ST continuity may end playing around with similar notions as well.
Like I said, the Trek novel line already encompasses parallel histories, thanks to the Shatnerverse and Myriad Universes. I'm not in a position to say what specifically will happen, but there's certainly well-established precedent for the sort of thing you propose.

Personally, I'm just glad to know where to put the movie in my personal ST Chronology file. It'll go on the Alternate Timelines page along with the MyrU novels and the like. Though eventually, if sequels and movie-specific tie-ins accumulate sufficiently, it'll no doubt get a separate list to itself, like the Mirror Universe does.
From a TrekLit perspective, I can see how a successful movie would lead to separate lines (probably distinguished through logos, actor likenesses, and so forth), and really, I'm okay with a franchise that "encompasses parallel histories."

(I mean, look at my online activities...you can hardly say I'm not into multiple timelines. ;))

Even though I said that using comics in general as an analogy doesn't quite work, Ultimate Marvel is actually pretty close to what I can foresee happening--stories in both continuities continue to come out, even though they're not compatible. There's no reason to suddenly stop writing in the continuity presently developed by TrekLit.

Conversely, however, one common criticism of the Ultimate Marvel universe is that it spends much of its time retelling stories which already occurred on "Earth-616" rather than truly charting a new direction. If the Abramsverse tie-ins end up being dominated by "a new version of 'Space Seed,'" "a new version of 'Amok Time,'" etc. I (at least) won't feel that satisfied.

For me, personally, I just wish this whole movie (which is intended to be the "face" of the franchise for millions of people now) could be part of that existing "Harold" ST-Prime meta-narrative.

But as discussed, there will no doubt be ideas from the movie that we can assume are part of the main continuity's history as well.
I imagine that future novels will try to incorporate as much as will fit into the continuity of "ST-Prime" after the movie comes out...or at least, they will if people like the movie. If not, the novels may end up just preferring to go with the idea of ST-Prime chugging along and ignore the events of the film.
Heck, people didn't like NEM or ENT much, but the novels have gotten a lot of material from incorporating their ideas. Good or bad, this movie is part of the Trek canon, just as much as the Mirror Universe is part of the canon. Anything it establishes about the larger background of the universe -- the history of Starfleet, Earth, Vulcan, and the characters before the changes, the existence of planets or species we haven't seen before, physical laws or particles or elements -- is going to be applicable to the main timeline as well. And that means it's part of the overall tapestry we novelists have available to build on, regardless of which timeline our novels may be set in.
When I wrote that, I was actually thinking of those situations where the novels have "explained away" canonical events by reinterpreting them--Wesley Crusher in a Starfleet uniform, Trip's death versus his "death," etc. If there's an element of the movie's version of the ST universe which is rejected to that extent, I can see the novels coming up with similarly inventive explanations for how the history/planets/characters/species/physics aren't "really" that way.
 
The writers want the fans who are actually thinking about this to "relax, it's an alternate timeline," but that gives us an origin story where those same fans would presumably want the origin story of the Kirk et al. they already know--not merely "the same genetics and the same personalities," but also the same circumstances--and not some sort of hybrid where we'd have to work out which bits could fit into the original and which absolutely can't.

From what I've seen, most are just happy enough to have a new Trek film. I think more fans would be pissed if the movie actually did overwrite the received history of Trek so far with 'the' origin story than to begin a new narrative, which, as I've mentioned, is something a lot of them will be familiar with from associated genres.

OTOH, the writers also (presumably) want the casual or new fan who's not thinking about this to perceive their version of the crew as the crew, i.e. "This is the 'True Story' of how that crew you all at least vaguely know about got together." They don't want viewers to think that well, this is one way they could've gotten together, but not the way the crew as seen in TOS actually got together in the original timeline.

I honestly don't think the general public, unused to such notions, will be able to make such a distinction or care to. Kirk, Spock... these a broad, vague concepts for most, like 'Batman'. They'll want a good story with familiar (in broad terms) characters, not a lesson in quantum mechanics.

In other words, they want to do a reboot without having most people realise it's a reboot.

Actually, I think it's the other way around: they want people to think it's a reboot since it is so visibly different, even though mechanically, in-universe, it's something altogether different.

Right, but the advertising for the movie isn't trying to convey that this is a timeline where, as Rom would say, "Everything's alternate;" it's trying to evoke TOS (despite the changes) in a way that implies it's the same timeline. If the trailer is all you've seen of the movie, you don't even know that there's time travel in it, let alone that this is a new, alternate history.

Again, though: why would the general public care? That's something to satisfy the fans, and I'm happy they did so, because honestly they could just as easily have rebooted the whole thing, no time travel or alternate history involved, and squashed everything that had come before.

...and now that I think about it, this whole explanation puts a lie to the writers' other explanation that there was "no way" to fit Kirk into the movie because he died in Generations. If this is an alternate timeline, why not have an older, alternate Kirk who didn't experience those events?

Because older Spock begins in our timeline (i.e. Harold), where Kirk is dead. To have an older, alternate Kirk, you would have to go into the future of the new timeline created by the film, which would be spoiling storytelling possibilities for the alt. timeline.

Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
 
Has there been any word that there are sequels planned following Star Trek XI or do you guys figure, that if the new movie hits off well that there will be automatically follow-ups set in that timeframe using the 'new' crew?

The actors are signed for three movies, but that's standard these days. If the film does well, there will be sequels. Heck, there have even been sequels to Trek films that didn't do so well, so I figure this movie would have to perform disastrously at the box office and on DVD in order for there not to be sequels.

And I would assume that there will be tie-ins set in the continuity of the film. If that's the current face of Star Trek, then it only makes sense to tie into it. Although since it has been declared a parallel timeline that doesn't replace the old, I'm sure that such tie-ins could coexist with the current Trek-lit continuity or other books/comics set in the original history.


Well, the Picard, Riker, Guinan, Tasha, etc. in "Yesterday's Enterprise" are definitely the same people, just having different life experiences. That's what's happening here. It's not like Galactica where you have a totally new cast of characters with similar names. These are supposed to be the same Kirk, Spock, McCoy, etc. that we know, with the same genetics and the same personalities, just living their lives under modified circumstances.
I suppose, but that distinction doesn't mean that a story set in the "Yesterday's Enterprise" timeline would've been what the casual viewer was looking for in a TNG film. Much like your comments in another thread about how tie-ins are meant to evoke the same feel as the source material, fans (and even licence-holders, as you say) want to see stories that "fit."

A casual viewer isn't going to care in the least whether Kirk went to the Farragut or the Enterprise after the Academy, or whether Sulu was an astrophysicist before he was a helmsman. All that matters to the casual viewer is whether the characters' personalities and relationships are the ones they know. That actually is what I'm saying in the other thread: that what matters most isn't the nitpicky details of consistency between stories, but the overall flavor and feel. I didn't say "stories that fit." Detailed continuity matters to geeks like you and me, but to most viewers, all that matters is that Kirk's heroic, Spock's logical, McCoy's acerbic, etc.


The writers want the fans who are actually thinking about this to "relax, it's an alternate timeline," but that gives us an origin story where those same fans would presumably want the origin story of the Kirk et al. they already know--not merely "the same genetics and the same personalities," but also the same circumstances--and not some sort of hybrid where we'd have to work out which bits could fit into the original and which absolutely can't.

OTOH, the writers also (presumably) want the casual or new fan who's not thinking about this to perceive their version of the crew as the crew, i.e. "This is the 'True Story' of how that crew you all at least vaguely know about got together." They don't want viewers to think that well, this is one way they could've gotten together, but not the way the crew as seen in TOS actually got together in the original timeline.

In other words, they want to do a reboot without having most people realise it's a reboot.

Well, yeah, but that's not gonna matter one damn bit to the casual or new fan. For that matter, it probably won't be an overriding priority to the majority of existing fans, because I'm sure that most fans out there still remember that this is fiction, that there is no "True Story" because it's all made up, and that what matters most is whether a story is enjoyable and intelligent, not whether it "fits."

And yes, it's a tradeoff, but that's the fault of Trek fans for getting so obsessive about continuity in the first place. You just know that if they'd gone for a full reboot, a lot of fans would've been screaming for blood, and if they'd tried to pass it off as being in the original continuity, a lot of other fans would've been crying foul at every tiny inconsistency and retconning it into an alternate timeline anyway, like some have done with ENT. We're a difficult audience to please. I think this is a reasonable tradeoff. Sure, I would've been happy with a totally in-continuity origin (so long as it was consistent), and I would've been happy with a total new-universe reboot (so long as it retained the spirit of ST), but this is an approach that has its merits too.

In fact, as a novelist, I think I'm happiest with this approach. Not only does it mean that the movie won't supersede the existing novel continuity, but it also means that there will be elements of this movie that can potentially be folded into the existing novel continuity (i.e. things like historical events, planets, species, ships, etc. if not specific story events). So it's a source of new material, but one that doesn't jeopardize old books. From a novelist's perspective, that's probably the best outcome we could've gotten.


Even though the writers have clearly given some thought to the changed circumstances, I doubt they thought about this much beyond the desire to have The Big Seven all appear in the movie.

And that's a very reasonable desire for the filmmakers to have. After all, a film does have to be made with the casual audience in mind. The mass of moviegoers don't want to see Kirk, Spock, Piper, Mitchell, Kelso, and Alden. They want to see the crew they know from decades of cultural osmosis.

Remember, Vonda McIntyre did the same thing when she wrote Kirk's first mission in Enterprise: The First Adventure. She had Mitchell injured so he wasn't available for the mission. She had McCoy instead of Piper, Uhura instead of Alden, Sulu at helm instead of astrophysics, and Chekov aboard on the night shift.

Anecdotally, I know I encountered initial resistance from people I know because Chekov's presence seemed implausible from an age perspective.

That does bother me. I would've preferred it if they'd saved Chekov for the sequels. But then, I never liked Chekov much anyway. And I can understand their reasons, as discussed above.


That's sort of like asking how I feel about Dr Who and the Daleks or Death Comes to Time or Scream of the Shalka--they're not necessarily inferior stories qua stories, but they're comparatively shunted to the side in the face of the meta-narrative. Even you said you're putting the movie with those alternate-timeline stories and not with your (presumably much larger) ST Chronology file.

But that's not a value judgment, merely a cataloguing convenience. My Alternate Timelines page is part of the overall Chronology file. Putting a book there doesn't mean it's inferior, it just means that it isn't consistent with the main timeline. (Heck, my own Places of Exile is in the Alternate Timelines page for obvious reasons. And my own "Empathy" is in the Mirror Universe page. That doesn't mean I consider those stories inferior to my other works.)

Right, but the advertising for the movie isn't trying to convey that this is a timeline where, as Rom would say, "Everything's alternate;" it's trying to evoke TOS (despite the changes) in a way that implies it's the same timeline.

I would submit that the ad campaign is decidedly not trying to evoke a sense of sameness with TOS; on the contrary, it's aggressively saying "This is a new Star Trek, this is a whole new approach you haven't seen before." But that's got nothing to do with "timelines," because most viewers don't care about "timelines" one way or the other. They just want to be entertained.


Other people have used comic-book characters for comparison, but that seems like a limited analogy. This is more like what would have happened if The Phantom Menace had come out and Lucasfilm said that from this point on, there'd still be Jedi and Skywalkers and Han Solo and everybody else, but the events of The Original Trilogy don't happen in this new timeline...

Except he wouldn't have needed to. That's a bad analogy, because the OT is only six hours or so of content. The existing Trek continuity set in the 23rd and 24th centuries is closer to six hundred hours' worth of material. That's a lot more restrictive to a storyteller attempting to do a prequel. If Lucas had had that much canonical material to contend with, he very well might have chosen the alternate-timeline route.

Because continuity is not the reason why stories are told. It's a secondary or tertiary concern. The key concern of a storyteller is having the freedom to tell a story in the best possible way. And if continuity gets in the way of that, then you toss it right out the window and tell the damn story the way it needs to be told.


...and now that I think about it, this whole explanation puts a lie to the writers' other explanation that there was "no way" to fit Kirk into the movie because he died in Generations. If this is an alternate timeline, why not have an older, alternate Kirk who didn't experience those events?

That doesn't make sense, because Old Spock is from the same timeline where Kirk died in GEN. What you're proposing would require bringing in an old Spock from one future and an old Kirk from a completely different future. That would be prohibitively confusing and would serve no story purpose.

Besides, they didn't just leave out a Shatner cameo because they couldn't find a technically workable way to do it -- they left him out because there was no dramatically meaningful way to do it, nothing that would've actually served the story rather than just being a contrived, gimmicky cameo.


Conversely, however, one common criticism of the Ultimate Marvel universe is that it spends much of its time retelling stories which already occurred on "Earth-616" rather than truly charting a new direction. If the Abramsverse tie-ins end up being dominated by "a new version of 'Space Seed,'" "a new version of 'Amok Time,'" etc. I (at least) won't feel that satisfied.

I think that's a valid point. Although I'm curious about how certain events might happen differently, I wouldn't want that to be the overriding thrust of such a book line.

On the other hand, some events would be likely to happen in both timelines -- the Klingon invasion of Organia, Spock's pon farr, the attacks of the Doomsday Machine and V'Ger, etc. It would be unbelievable to leave things like that completely out. (When the Witchblade TV series reset time at the end of the first season, I was frustrated that the second season totally ignored first-season events that should've been happening again, yet gave no explanation for why they didn't.) So hopefully a balance could be struck. Though it's really too soon to speculate.

For me, personally, I just wish this whole movie (which is intended to be the "face" of the franchise for millions of people now) could be part of that existing "Harold" ST-Prime meta-narrative.

Well, it begins in "Harold" (I'm coming to regret starting that joke), and is a consequence of events that happen there (Nero's past, Spock's pursuit of him), so at least it's definitively linked to the prime continuity. It's not a totally disconnected thing. But I think there's merit in a fresh start.
 
Whats also interesting is how the events in the movie will affect the timeline, where the current books take place in.

From what I've read (and please correct me if i'm wrong here), "our" Spock follows Nero into the past and that alternate timeline he created, gets somehow rejunivated, and from that point on, will be the Spock played by Quinto.

So, maybe the writers of current Treklit will have to deal with the fact, that Spock is no longer on Romulus working towards Reunification.
I mean, nobody will miss Nero. But Spock?
 
Whats also interesting is how the events in the movie will affect the timeline, where the current books take place in.

From what I've read (and please correct me if i'm wrong here), "our" Spock follows Nero into the past and that alternate timeline he created, gets somehow rejunivated, and from that point on, will be the Spock played by Quinto.

So, maybe the writers of current Treklit will have to deal with the fact, that Spock is no longer on Romulus working towards Reunification.
I mean, nobody will miss Nero. But Spock?

Haven't they just stated that he was "future Spock" portrayed by Leonard Nimoy and the "future Spock"'s time ship originates from the TNG era post Star Trek: Nemesis? Or have they said specifically that "future Spock" was from the 24th?

Nimoy looks so ancient in the trailer that I hope that the Spock character is also ancient in terms of the lifespan of the Vulcans. The Star Trek novelists may have decades to play with before reaching the time of Spock's depature? If the 24th specifically, they might have almost twenty years before the events of Star Trek.

The Vulcans and the Romulans may already be re-unified in some manner during this period? Or the Romulan Star Empire might even have joined the United Federation of Planets?
 
"our" Spock follows Nero into the past and that alternate timeline he created, gets somehow rejunivated, and from that point on, will be the Spock played by Quinto.

No, they are two different Spocks, from different points in history. The only way in which one 'becomes' the other is that Quinto's Spock will, eventually, live long enough to age naturally into the version played by Nimoy.

I don't know if they ever meet face to face in this film, but it is possible.
 
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