Late to the thread, but has anyone done a full blown plot summary post?
It does seem that way sometimes (although the review that was Posted indicates that it may be pretty lightweight), which is why I said it's a shame they didn't apply all this effort to the traditional characters and setting.Sure, I'm not averse to action if the substance is there, as in TWOK et cetera.
Sounds to me like redemption, tragedy, heroism, and other issues of "substance" will indeed be explored in this very movie--at the very least to the extent they were in TWOK.
It does seem that way sometimes (although the review that was Posted indicates that it may be pretty lightweight), which is why I said it's a shame they didn't apply all this effort to the traditional characters and setting.Sure, I'm not averse to action if the substance is there, as in TWOK et cetera.
Sounds to me like redemption, tragedy, heroism, and other issues of "substance" will indeed be explored in this very movie--at the very least to the extent they were in TWOK.
What's this I hear about Spock turning Kirk in for cheating? Does Kirk still get his commendation for original thinking?
What's this I hear about Spock turning Kirk in for cheating? Does Kirk still get his commendation for original thinking?
Who says he ever did? That was Kirk's "spin" on the story when he was trying to impress Saavik; it'll be fun and much more believable if it turns out that behind his self-created legend was a rather harrowing and humiliating learning experience for a young man who'd made a mistake.![]()
What's this I hear about Spock turning Kirk in for cheating? Does Kirk still get his commendation for original thinking?
Who says he ever did? That was Kirk's "spin" on the story when he was trying to impress Saavik; it'll be fun and much more believable if it turns out that behind his self-created legend was a rather harrowing and humiliating learning experience for a young man who'd made a mistake.![]()
Well, we're assuming events unfolded the same way, too, which is a false assumption. This is still Kirk, so he will probably chafe at a "no win" scenario. But so many circumstances are different that the "hows" and "whys" of his cheating are probably different. He may have received a commendation in the prime timeline, but not in this one. In this timeline, his method of winning may not have been so commendable.
What it does go to show, however, is that this is still Jim Kirk, and he'll do what he needs to do to win. Act first, apologize later.
I think the results of his cheating would still have played out largely as they did in the prime timeline, despite the alterations that've been made. He gets suspended for this, but his superiors could grudgingly admire him for his ingenuity.
BTW, what do the Klingon ships look like in the Kobayashi Maru sequence? Are they the classic D7 battlecruiser type?
Well, it couldn't be any more difficult to establish the traditional characters and setting than it was to create alternate ones. The general audience-- if they even show up for something called Star Trek-- is unlikely to care either way.It does seem that way sometimes (although the review that was Posted indicates that it may be pretty lightweight), which is why I said it's a shame they didn't apply all this effort to the traditional characters and setting.Sounds to me like redemption, tragedy, heroism, and other issues of "substance" will indeed be explored in this very movie--at the very least to the extent they were in TWOK.
The difficulty is that, with Batman, you essentially had one character to flesh out with a backstory, same with Iron Man. The secondary characters are truly secondary.
With Trek, not only do you have "the big 3" in Kirk, Spock and Bones, and then well-established secondary characters to introduce, you also have to set up the Trek universe and include Nimoy and pass the baton and...
Well, that's a lot more to do in 2 hours than was the case for Batman and Iron Man. Plus you want to reel in the general audience.
The Supreme Court bit off a hell of a lot here, and man has it had to chew.
Pass 'em a napkin and give 'em a pat on the back, because that plate is clean, baby...![]()
If its a straight up prequel then how would they have gotten around using the cheesy looking old sets and ships and so forth? There is no way they could use those, they'd look like a joke in todays big budget summer blockbusters.Well, it couldn't be any more difficult to establish the traditional characters and setting than it was to create alternate ones. The general audience-- if they even show up for something called Star Trek-- is unlikely to care either way.It does seem that way sometimes (although the review that was Posted indicates that it may be pretty lightweight), which is why I said it's a shame they didn't apply all this effort to the traditional characters and setting.
The difficulty is that, with Batman, you essentially had one character to flesh out with a backstory, same with Iron Man. The secondary characters are truly secondary.
With Trek, not only do you have "the big 3" in Kirk, Spock and Bones, and then well-established secondary characters to introduce, you also have to set up the Trek universe and include Nimoy and pass the baton and...
Well, that's a lot more to do in 2 hours than was the case for Batman and Iron Man. Plus you want to reel in the general audience.
The Supreme Court bit off a hell of a lot here, and man has it had to chew.
Pass 'em a napkin and give 'em a pat on the back, because that plate is clean, baby...![]()
I think the results of his cheating would still have played out largely as they did in the prime timeline, despite the alterations that've been made. He gets suspended for this, but his superiors could grudgingly admire him for his ingenuity.
BTW, what do the Klingon ships look like in the Kobayashi Maru sequence? Are they the classic D7 battlecruiser type?
Yes but there could be different people running the Academy- what one smart prof will discipline but also commend as original thinking another may be more of a by the book type and only discipline and not commend
Just what exactly is Spock doing at the academy when Kirk takes the Kobayashi Maru test? Isn't he supposed to have already graduated by this time? Any indication of how long he's served in Starfleet proper? Has he served with Pike prior to the launch of Enterprise?
Oh, and just how much detail do they go into as to how "brand new" the Enterprise is? Is there any room for the possibility that it's only undergone a brand new upgrade, so it could have seen prior action under Pike (& April?), in an earlier form?
If its a straight up prequel then how would they have gotten around using the cheesy looking old sets and ships and so forth? There is no way they could use those, they'd look like a joke in todays big budget summer blockbusters.Well, it couldn't be any more difficult to establish the traditional characters and setting than it was to create alternate ones. The general audience-- if they even show up for something called Star Trek-- is unlikely to care either way.The difficulty is that, with Batman, you essentially had one character to flesh out with a backstory, same with Iron Man. The secondary characters are truly secondary.
With Trek, not only do you have "the big 3" in Kirk, Spock and Bones, and then well-established secondary characters to introduce, you also have to set up the Trek universe and include Nimoy and pass the baton and...
Well, that's a lot more to do in 2 hours than was the case for Batman and Iron Man. Plus you want to reel in the general audience.
The Supreme Court bit off a hell of a lot here, and man has it had to chew.
Pass 'em a napkin and give 'em a pat on the back, because that plate is clean, baby...![]()
You know, that's a funny concept when you think about it - taking what was described as "a test of character" three times because he failed it the first two. I mean, so what do they expect him to do - pull an all-nighter before the exam building character?![]()
Each time he took the test he was trying a different solution to "win"... It wasn't a test of character to him but a simple matter of solving the problem.
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