You say that as if it was a bad thing.The shuttle launch "interiors" felt a little BSGish though![]()
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I wasn't thinking "Star Wars" listening to music, I was thinking "1980s instrumental scores". Just a "Feeling" I got from the clip.I thought everything about the shuttle launch simply seemed persuasive and real - the environment has a lot of texture to it, both visually and in terms of the sound. A good thing, all around, for Star Trek.
I also thought the music in this sequence was surprisingly reminiscent of Star Wars more than any previous Trek movie.
There's something about the music just over the exterior shot of the shuttle exiting the hangar deck that reminds me of the early "Tatooine" scenes in Star Wars. I'm not musically sophisticated enough to identify it any better than that.
So, if the Kelvin is destroyed in 2230 and Kirk is 28 during the later part of this movie - and I haven't seen it, so that's an assumption - this puts his first service aboard the Enterprise in 2258, about six years before TOS supposedly begins.
You say that as if it was a bad thing.The shuttle launch "interiors" felt a little BSGish though![]()
![]()
There's something about the music just over the exterior shot of the shuttle exiting the hangar deck that reminds me of the early "Tatooine" scenes in Star Wars. I'm not musically sophisticated enough to identify it any better than that.
There's something about the music just over the exterior shot of the shuttle exiting the hangar deck that reminds me of the early "Tatooine" scenes in Star Wars. I'm not musically sophisticated enough to identify it any better than that.
So, if the Kelvin is destroyed in 2230 and Kirk is 28 during the later part of this movie - and I haven't seen it, so that's an assumption - this puts his first service aboard the Enterprise in 2258, about six years before TOS supposedly begins.
There's something about the music just over the exterior shot of the shuttle exiting the hangar deck that reminds me of the early "Tatooine" scenes in Star Wars. I'm not musically sophisticated enough to identify it any better than that.
So, if the Kelvin is destroyed in 2230 and Kirk is 28 during the later part of this movie - and I haven't seen it, so that's an assumption - this puts his first service aboard the Enterprise in 2258, about six years before TOS supposedly begins.
Well, he gives the stardate as "223304", so possibly April of 2233?
There's something about the music just over the exterior shot of the shuttle exiting the hangar deck that reminds me of the early "Tatooine" scenes in Star Wars. I'm not musically sophisticated enough to identify it any better than that.
I think it's the flute portion of clip as they exit the hanger
That may be it.
That clip is my favorite of the new ones - there's just so many little things in it.
Kirk's attitude, for one. He's sizing up the two guys he's on this mission with, and whether he's in charge or not (I've no idea) he's the one who's clearly concerned. He's nervous, but there's more there - it looks to me like he's disturbed to realize that the engineer is all bravado and doesn't have a realistic sense of what they're in for. And he wants to know what Sulu's specific training is. In his mind, he's taking responsibility for getting this done.
Okay, maybe that's a bit much to get out of the clip.But I do like Pine's performance there.
I thought everything about the shuttle launch simply seemed persuasive and real - the environment has a lot of texture to it, both visually and in terms of the sound. A good thing, all around, for Star Trek.
I also thought the music in this sequence was surprisingly reminiscent of Star Wars more than any previous Trek movie.
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