* grumbles *
I think this needs to get back on topic, which is the Haynes Enterprise Manual. I've been without power for nearly two days, and I have to leave for work soon so I'll take another look at this later.
If it has been cancelled, this would be only due to two things:* grumbles *
I think this needs to get back on topic, which is the Haynes Enterprise Manual. I've been without power for nearly two days, and I have to leave for work soon so I'll take another look at this later.
I agree.
Hope this book hasn't been lost in the editorial personnel shuffling at Pocket books of late.
Have Kirk and Spock both driven by the desire to destroy Nero utterly...
... and then turn that on its ear. Instead of "killing the bad guy," have Kirk and Spock both agree that the way to resolve this is to take the "jellyfish" to the star which will eventually go "super-hyper-masso-humongo-nova" (and destroy Romulus), and "pre-empt" the event. Kirk, commanding the Enterprise, sacrifices himself and his crew to delay the Narada so that Spock, in the Jellyfish, can get to the star and do what has to be done...
... and he succeeds, thus, actually SAVING Nero, well as reversing everything else that was "turned on it's ear" by Nero's arrival.
End the movie showing Nero, in the late 24th century... the one we know... as the first Romulan to serve as a starship captain in Starfleet... being congratulated by his mentor, Nimoy's Spock.
Well, this all depends on how you view "time travel."Have Kirk and Spock both driven by the desire to destroy Nero utterly...
... and then turn that on its ear. Instead of "killing the bad guy," have Kirk and Spock both agree that the way to resolve this is to take the "jellyfish" to the star which will eventually go "super-hyper-masso-humongo-nova" (and destroy Romulus), and "pre-empt" the event. Kirk, commanding the Enterprise, sacrifices himself and his crew to delay the Narada so that Spock, in the Jellyfish, can get to the star and do what has to be done...
... and he succeeds, thus, actually SAVING Nero, well as reversing everything else that was "turned on it's ear" by Nero's arrival.
End the movie showing Nero, in the late 24th century... the one we know... as the first Romulan to serve as a starship captain in Starfleet... being congratulated by his mentor, Nimoy's Spock.
I had to register here so I could point out this doesn't make sense. The timeline has already been altered, and nothing they do will make "evil nero" disappear BTTF style or alter their new timeline in anyway.
They can save nu-Romulus and nu-Nero, but not prime-Romulus or prime-Nero, etc.
What I proposed makes perfect sense. If Kirk and Spock destroy Hobus, doing so will cause the "future Nero" to never have gone mad... and thus never have returned to the past. Suddenly, all you have is the classic, unaltered Trek universe, with one minor change - an obscure star deep inside Romulan space, with no inhabited planets, undergoes an inexplicable destruction... and puzzled scientists would debate "what happened to Hobus" for decades to come, never knowing the true reason.
The entire "ST'09" reality would be a brief causality loop which would "wink out" once Hobus was destroyed. A new, and much less different, version of "trek history" would unfold, with the only difference being that premature Hobus destruction, and the eventual lack of the consequences of the later "super-hyper-nova." Which, after all, would have effectively NO impact on the Trek universe we know.
Marty: Right, so we go back to the future, and we stop Biff from stealing the almanac.
Doc: We can't! Because, if we travel into the future from this point in time, it will be the future of this reality! In which Biff is corrupt, and powerful, and married to your mother; and in which this has happened to me!
Doc shows Marty another paper. The headline says "Emmett Brown Committed"
Doc: No, our only chance to repair the present is in the past, at the point where the timeline skewed into this tangent. In order to put the universe back as we remember it, and get back to our reality, we have to find out the exact date, and the specific circumstances of how, where and when, young Biff got his hands on that sports almanac.
Have Kirk and Spock both driven by the desire to destroy Nero utterly...
... and then turn that on its ear. Instead of "killing the bad guy," have Kirk and Spock both agree that the way to resolve this is to take the "jellyfish" to the star which will eventually go "super-hyper-masso-humongo-nova" (and destroy Romulus), and "pre-empt" the event. Kirk, commanding the Enterprise, sacrifices himself and his crew to delay the Narada so that Spock, in the Jellyfish, can get to the star and do what has to be done...
... and he succeeds, thus, actually SAVING Nero, well as reversing everything else that was "turned on it's ear" by Nero's arrival.
End the movie showing Nero, in the late 24th century... the one we know... as the first Romulan to serve as a starship captain in Starfleet... being congratulated by his mentor, Nimoy's Spock.
These people made a movie that more than a couple of thousand pre-programmed fans could enjoy. Your proposal is smug, trite, self-congratulatory crap - more a matter of creative typing than writing as such. There's not a chance that anyone would greenlight that for anything but a fan film.
Have Kirk and Spock both driven by the desire to destroy Nero utterly...
... and then turn that on its ear. Instead of "killing the bad guy," have Kirk and Spock both agree that the way to resolve this is to take the "jellyfish" to the star which will eventually go "super-hyper-masso-humongo-nova" (and destroy Romulus), and "pre-empt" the event. Kirk, commanding the Enterprise, sacrifices himself and his crew to delay the Narada so that Spock, in the Jellyfish, can get to the star and do what has to be done...
... and he succeeds, thus, actually SAVING Nero, well as reversing everything else that was "turned on it's ear" by Nero's arrival.
End the movie showing Nero, in the late 24th century... the one we know... as the first Romulan to serve as a starship captain in Starfleet... being congratulated by his mentor, Nimoy's Spock.
These people made a movie that more than a couple of thousand pre-programmed fans could enjoy. Your proposal is smug, trite, self-congratulatory crap - more a matter of creative typing than writing as such. There's not a chance that anyone would greenlight that for anything but a fan film.
And it would have been just another use of ye olde reset button.
BTW: I e-mailed Haynes a few days ago about this book but haven't gotten an answer back (don't think I ever will).
And it would have been just another use of ye olde reset button.
Oh, and because Hercules on AICN likes it, it MUST be good, right?
The plot was hackeneyed,
amateurish pap,
the science was embarassingly ignorant,
the characterizations were a disgrace to the entire cardboard and plywood industries,
and the direction was straight out of the Michael Bay "Directing Big Budget Popcorn Flicks for Dummies" playbook.
Best reviewed piece of utter crap in the history of the movie industry.
Oh, and because Hercules on AICN likes it, it MUST be good, right?
Picked up the book today, myself. I'm actually a little saddened in places where it was clear that designs were GOING to be more TOS influenced, and nixed at high levels. The schematics of the ships are wanting, but it's pretty obvious in several places that someone was using feet and meters interchangably... the shuttles, actually shown in shot to be around 24 FEET, are listed here as 24 METERS.
I'd prefer a Haynes guide on the original ship. Hell, I'd even help write the thing.
I'd prefer a Haynes guide on the original ship. Hell, I'd even help write the thing.
http://www.licensing.biz/company-profiles/133/Haynes
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