Hopefully, the next movie will explore any jealousy that other officers might have over Kirk's rapid rise in command. Or maybe one of the upcoming novels will get into it as well.
Maybe...

Hopefully, the next movie will explore any jealousy that other officers might have over Kirk's rapid rise in command. Or maybe one of the upcoming novels will get into it as well.
I like how you'll include a laundry list of wacky notions (and wacky promotions) that we're meant to accept in Star Trek movie history, but somehow, this is where you draw the line.Doesn't follow. Archer would already have been 121 years old when Nero arrived. If new advances in longevity came as a result of that change (and I can't imagine why they would have), they probably wouldn't have come along for at least a couple of decades (enough time for developing and testing any new medical breakthroughs), and would've been too late to do any good for someone that elderly.Alternate timeline. New meds. Nero's fault. Yada, yada, yada.
I guess you could use the same reasoning that made the NuEnt over twice the size of Ent-Prime.
Hopefully, the next movie will explore any jealousy that other officers might have over Kirk's rapid rise in command. Or maybe one of the upcoming novels will get into it as well.
Maybe...![]()
Similarly, a personnel reallocation could explain why Andrei Chekov and his wife were in a position to have a baby four years sooner.
^ Dude, we get it. You didn't like the movie.
I'm reminded of the time my wife and I went to see the premiere of Terminator 2. We've got time traveling cyborgs from the future, other time traveling cyborgs that can assume any shape or identity, and the part the guy in front of me takes issue with? The moment he can contain his fanboy rage no longer? When the T-1000 drives the semi tractor off the overpass into the viaduct, and the truck is able to keep moving after slamming into the concrete. I quote: "That's bullshit!"
I'll never forget that as long as I live.![]()
I like how you'll include a laundry list of wacky notions (and wacky promotions) that we're meant to accept in Star Trek movie history, but somehow, this is where you draw the line.![]()
I'd be going for it all out, if it was me.
Would you try to rationalize the 78 decks on the Enterprise-A
thumbtack said:You mean it's not you? I thought you were writing one of the four?
I'd be going for it all out, if it was me.
You mean it's not you? I thought you were writing one of the four?
I'm reminded of the time my wife and I went to see the premiere of Terminator 2. We've got time traveling cyborgs from the future, other time traveling cyborgs that can assume any shape or identity, and the part the guy in front of me takes issue with? The moment he can contain his fanboy rage no longer? When the T-1000 drives the semi tractor off the overpass into the viaduct, and the truck is able to keep moving after slamming into the concrete. I quote: "That's bullshit!"
I'll never forget that as long as I live.![]()
Reminds me of a moment when I was in a theater watching Independence Day. The alien saucers switch on their gigantic destructor beams, laying waste to entire cities, killing millions. Will Smith's character's wife is in a crowded tunnel as a wave of flames cuts through, engulfing dozens more.
She hides in some sort of maintenance closet to avoid the blast. Her dog is with her and just barely jumps in at the nick of time. The audience lets out a huge sigh of relief and gives a little cheer for the dog, whereas there was no reaction whatsoever to the carnage that preceded it.
Interesting stuff. Probably the explanation lies in the audience's expectations for certain kinds of fiction being so strongly conditioned that really outlandish things will go unnoticed, while a relatively minor detail will stand out.
What I find surprising is that you, as an author, dismiss something like that as "fanboy rage", when it's clearly just a natural reaction of the audience that is to be expected (no offense). Some people are willing to accept everything, others are not.
What I find surprising is that you, as an author, dismiss something like that as "fanboy rage", when it's clearly just a natural reaction of the audience that is to be expected (no offense). Some people are willing to accept everything, others are not.
I think most people had issues with Kirk being promoted to Captain right out of the academy but the difference between a "natural reaction of the audiene" and "fanboy rage" is how long the person is upset. If you're still carping about it months later and using that as some starting point for complaining about the novels, you're probably suffering from "fanboy rage".![]()
What I find surprising is that you, as an author, dismiss something like that as "fanboy rage", when it's clearly just a natural reaction of the audience that is to be expected (no offense).
Total agreement.Some of it didn't do much for me, either, but it wasn't as bad as all the "funny" bits in Star Trek V that mocked Scotty ("I know this ship like the back of my hand!" BONK), Uhura (suddenly in love with Scotty, doing a fandance), Chekov (the navigator can't find his way out of the woods), and Sulu (can't fly a shuttlecraft). Not to mention the way they all fall under Sybok's spell.
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