I will agree on that. Kirk did say he always known he die alone because Spock and McCoy would not be there to save him. We all would know if Spock and McCoy were present at that time, they would try everthing they could from Kirk geeting badly hurt or worse. They probly would'nt be able to stop it, but they would try. We all know Spock and McCoy way to well.Agreed. I think Generations is pretty consistent with Kirk's line from Trek V.Kirk died on some unknown planet 100 years after his time period, with his only company being a bald captain he barely knew. Sounds pretty alone to me.
Generations begs to be invalidated. Geez what an abortion of a movie.
How about this for audience surprise:If a character makes a dramatic prediction, it can only be for two purposes:
- A future turn of events will prove him right, making the audience all nostalgic about the suddenly remembered past prediction, or
-A future turn of events will prove him wrong, surprising the audience.
I'd say that surprise is always the better approach to drama. Kirk said one thing, events showed another, the audience was surprised - that's good drama. There wouldn't be much surprise if Kirk were proven right, except perhaps the "Huh?" factor of Kirk possessing paranormal abilities...
Timo Saloniemi
Pretty much the definitive take on that line, yeah.Which is...what...for those of us that haven't read the book?
As I recall, when Kirk was a boy and witnessed the massacre on Tarsus, Kodos found him and was about to kill him, but Sarek (who was present for reasons I don't fully recall) protected him. Kodos then threatened Kirk that, when he least expected it, when he was completely alone, Kodos would kill him to guarantee his silence. Sarek removed that memory with a mind-meld, and all that was left behind was a unshakable conviction in Kirk that he'd die alone.
Pretty much the definitive take on that line, yeah.Which is...what...for those of us that haven't read the book?
As I recall, when Kirk was a boy and witnessed the massacre on Tarsus, Kodos found him and was about to kill him, but Sarek (who was present for reasons I don't fully recall) protected him. Kodos then threatened Kirk that, when he least expected it, when he was completely alone, Kodos would kill him to guarantee his silence. Sarek removed that memory with a mind-meld, and all that was left behind was a unshakable conviction in Kirk that he'd die alone.
Small Universe, ain't it?Pretty much the definitive take on that line, yeah.As I recall, when Kirk was a boy and witnessed the massacre on Tarsus, Kodos found him and was about to kill him, but Sarek (who was present for reasons I don't fully recall) protected him. Kodos then threatened Kirk that, when he least expected it, when he was completely alone, Kodos would kill him to guarantee his silence. Sarek removed that memory with a mind-meld, and all that was left behind was a unshakable conviction in Kirk that he'd die alone.
And a great example of trying to explain something that needs no explanation
Too small for two of us!Small Universe, ain't it?
I'm still not sure why folks are taking Kirk's line so literally. To me, Kirk didn't mean that there wouldn't be another person within 20 miles of him when he died. He ment that he would be alone in the sense of not having his friends, his crewmates, his family around him when he died.
Sure, Picard was a major character in TNG and was part of the Trek family to us, but to Kirk he was a stranger. Spock, McCoy, Scotty, Antonia, Carol, David -- everyone he had ever known and cared about were gone. He was, in his mind, alone.
He was under a bridge. Close enough?I'm still not sure why folks are taking Kirk's line so literally. To me, Kirk didn't mean that there wouldn't be another person within 20 miles of him when he died. He ment that he would be alone in the sense of not having his friends, his crewmates, his family around him when he died.
Sure, Picard was a major character in TNG and was part of the Trek family to us, but to Kirk he was a stranger. Spock, McCoy, Scotty, Antonia, Carol, David -- everyone he had ever known and cared about were gone. He was, in his mind, alone.
He should have died alone on the bridge -- in battle.
A warrior's death!
He was under a bridge. Close enough?I'm still not sure why folks are taking Kirk's line so literally. To me, Kirk didn't mean that there wouldn't be another person within 20 miles of him when he died. He ment that he would be alone in the sense of not having his friends, his crewmates, his family around him when he died.
Sure, Picard was a major character in TNG and was part of the Trek family to us, but to Kirk he was a stranger. Spock, McCoy, Scotty, Antonia, Carol, David -- everyone he had ever known and cared about were gone. He was, in his mind, alone.
He should have died alone on the bridge -- in battle.
A warrior's death!
Which is...what...for those of us that haven't read the book?
As I recall, when Kirk was a boy and witnessed the massacre on Tarsus, Kodos found him and was about to kill him, but Sarek (who was present for reasons I don't fully recall) protected him. Kodos then threatened Kirk that, when he least expected it, when he was completely alone, Kodos would kill him to guarantee his silence. Sarek removed that memory with a mind-meld, and all that was left behind was a unshakable conviction in Kirk that he'd die alone.
I've heard being with Picard is like being alone.He was under a bridge. Close enough?He should have died alone on the bridge -- in battle.
A warrior's death!
Thanks for reminding me!
He actually died with Picard and the twisted remains of that bridge...so he was quite un-alone.![]()
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