Sorry, but 'he was very, very, very sad' is not an excuse ...
it was never an excuse.
Sorry, but 'he was very, very, very sad' is not an excuse ...
Sorry, but 'he was very, very, very sad' is not an excuse ...
it was never an excuse.
From what I gathered in Countdown, Nero fell out with Spock because he perceived Spock as too sympathetic to the High Council's reasons for rejecting Nero's proposal (they didn't trust the Romulan Empire with all the advanced tech they would have had to share). Add to that a heavy dose of garden-variety racism (Nero blamed all Vulcans for letting Romulus die) and there you go.
In any event, as Salvor has already pointed out, Nero and the other Romulans are, well, emotionally compromised by having witnessed the destruction of Romulus. Indeed, even the act of shaving their heads and tattooing their faces, a variation on an ancient Romulan mourning custom (according to Nero they normally just painted their faces, and the paint would fade along with their grief), was meant to keep them in a permanent state of anger toward the Vulcans and the Federation. People who let their emotions dominate their thinking can do some strange and otherwise unthinkable things. Just ask Spock.
That's kind of a stretch isn't it? Besides 99% of the people who are going to see this film have no idea the Countdown comic even exists.
He had more reason to be angry at Spock than Khan had to be angry at Kirk.
..He tried to help save Romulus but failed, and now I will destroy every planet in the Federation because of this!...
I just thought of another angle in Nero's thinking: Spock made everyone trust him, using his reputation (both personal and with the federation backing him presumably) in an arrogant way to persuade the Romulan leaders to go with his plan.
Now that arrogance rather insensitively overlooked the possiblity of Romulus being destroyed before the plan could be realised and in Nero loosing everything he cared about. Therefore Spock and all that helped him must die or be humbled into how it feels to be on the receiving end of that kind of betrayal. QED![]()
Khan was supposed to have a superior intellect, and yet he was too stupid to see that not only was his exile his own fault, but also that Kirk was neither his baby-sitter, nor responsible in any way for his fate. He hadn't promised to look after those people, in fact he hadn't promised them shit. Blame the Federation if you must, but ultimately, he should have blamed himself for being too stupid to shut his trap before everyone was onto him.
I just thought of another angle in Nero's thinking: Spock made everyone trust him, using his reputation (both personal and with the federation backing him presumably) in an arrogant way to persuade the Romulan leaders to go with his plan.
Now that arrogance rather insensitively overlooked the possiblity of Romulus being destroyed before the plan could be realised and in Nero loosing everything he cared about. Therefore Spock and all that helped him must die or be humbled into how it feels to be on the receiving end of that kind of betrayal. QED![]()
Of course, that's not what the movie implies, and it still requires several jumps through illogical hoops and generally discarding how science actually works just to move the plot along.
Nero needs to man up and take blame for his part. He left his wife on Romulus, instead of taking her off the planet to be safe.Basically, Nero just felt fucked over and wanted the person he held responsible to pay for it.... which might also be because Spock was the only one who was left to blame.
Nero needs to man up and take blame for his part. He left his wife on Romulus, instead of taking her off the planet to be safe.Basically, Nero just felt fucked over and wanted the person he held responsible to pay for it.... which might also be because Spock was the only one who was left to blame.
My only real quibble with the film was how Abrams handled Nero. Traditionally in film your main villain either explains his motives and his nefarious plot on screen to some hapless captive (a la Khan in Star Trek II), or as they story unfolds you get to witness the event that triggers his descent into evildoing... Nero never really got that opportunity.
At 1/3 of the way through the film you get some vague references to his wife's death when he's interrogating Pike, but most of his motivations are revealed by a third party (Spock... aka Basil Exposition)... That's a bad storytelling contrivance. All the film needed was about 3-4 minutes of screen time to set up his character arc.
I would have rather have had the film start with a pre-credits sequence of the Narada racing to Romulus as Nero tries in vain to rescue his family. Nero could have an on screen farewell with his loved ones. At that point he learns from her that a Starfleet vessel is supposed to be on it's way to save them...
Suddenly, Romulus star goes supernova... Nero loses communications with his wife
The Narada picks up Spock's small Starfleet vessel (even though we don't know who's on board at this time). On board Spock's ship he picks up Nero's pleas to save Romulus... the unknown (at this time) science officer works frantically to launch the "red matter" and save the planet...
The Starfleet vessel releases the red-matter.... but too late Romulus explodes... Slowly the singularity comes to life and begins to draw in the Narada.
We cut to one final shot on board the Starfleet vessel as a garbled transmission comes in from Nero as he vows to destroy Starfleet and avenge his family.
The Narada disappears into the singularity... Fade Out... Opening credits... and the rest of the film goes as presented. At max that takes up 4-5 minutes of screen time, and it at least sets up Nero's story arc and gives him a solid, well-defined motive.
One of the biggest film making problems I had with the film was the finale. As the Narada is being torn apart we cut to all of these close ups of Nero with mixed expressions of fear, hate, and resignation to his fate. If Nero had a real backstory that had been told either on screen, or by himself there would have been some dramatic weight behind the close ups... but as it stands there was nothing... just the one-dimensional baddie getting his due.
Otherwise a fantastic film and a great re-launch of the franchise!
Yancy
But Nero's just an ordinary Joe like me, he wouldn't have thought that formulation mitigated any blame from Spock et al because he wouldn't be able to accept the science over his emotional loss.
I guess its an oblique comment on how people in general may not trust science for objective answers and rather rely on something subjective like astrology instead for their answers.
Basically, Nero just felt fucked over and wanted the person he held responsible to pay for it.... which might also be because Spock was the only one who was left to blame.
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