Had they allowed Data to grow emotionally through FC and INS, as you would have assumed would have happened after the events of GEN, then his self-sacrifice at the end of NEM could have had much more of an impact...
One can quibble about such incidental details, but the point I made in my essay was that the emotion chip as a device for character growth was abandoned by INS.
But why else would he say: "Saddle up... LOCK AND LOAD!"
"Saddle up, lock and load", "Oh shit", "Yeah!", "To hell with our orders", that's all stuff he only said because of his emotion chip. Unless you want to argue that his behavior in Generations was also just the type of imitations that he always did throughout the show.
But I agree that in Nemesis, it was totally ignored, if not forgotten about. But then again, Nemesis ignored a lot of stuff, from Worf's job as ambassador to Picard having an artificial heart.
How was Picard's artificial heart ignored? You mean where he says to Shinzon "Your heart, your hands, your eyes are the same as mine?" Come on, you've never heard "heart" used in a metaphorical sense? I mean, earlier Picard says his toast was from the heart. Here he's saying to Shinzon that they have the same origins and the same essence -- the same "heart." He's not going to spoil a perfectly good metaphor by throwing in a totally irrelevant factoid about his medical history.
It would eliminate the impact of his self-sacrifice to bring him back as much as Star Trek III eliminated Spock's self-sacrifice.
Frankly, I miss Data. You feel his absence in the TNG books. He added a great deal of humor to the show and the movies. I never understood killing him off as that was the last TNG movie. I also don't understand not bringing him back (in one form or another) for the books. Spiner was great. He really made Data a gentle soul. And he, like Spock had no pretense. He was also so full of good intentions and that was a great source of humor. So I miss that unique combination.
Picard's artificial heart is the result of a life changing event that made him the person he is. With such an experience in mind, all that talk by Shinzon about how similar they are wouldn't have impressed him a bit. In my opinion. And since Picard is a person who uses to listen very carefully to what other people say, and a person that is very well aware of himself, he would have definately reacted to the "Your heart, your hands, your eyes are the same as mine?" line or the various similar attempts by Shinzon to invoke sympathy.
http://www.chakoteya.net/movies/movie10.htmlPICARD: Look at me, Shinzon. ...Your heart, your hands, your eyes are the same as mine. The blood pumping within you, the raw material is the same. We have the same potential.
SHINZON: That's the past, Captain.
PICARD: It can be the future. Buried deep within you, beneath all the years of pain and anger there is there is something that has never been nurtured. The potential to make yourself a better man, and that is what it is to be human. To make yourself more than you are. ...Oh yes, I know you. ...There was a time you looked at the stars and dreamed of what might be.
In the movie, Data had to tell him why Shinzon was different compared to him. I always felt that was unneccessary because of Picard's history and self-awareness. But either they forgot about his heart or ignored it.
Same way they chose to ignore or forgot about Lore (which for example leads to the crew being totally ignorant about a possible threat coming from another Soong-type android, so they just download all of Data's memories into B-4, something they would have never done had they remembered Lore).
Speaking of Lore... since Lore's positronic brain is very well designed, and not flawed like B-4's, they could attempt to download B-4 into Lore and see what happens. But that would kill Lore. Hm.
Data was established as second lead character after Picard
But I didn't really feel anything at his death...
Great post on your blog, Christopher - even though I don't quite agree that nuSpock's already achieved that serenity that Spock Prime's displayed since the end of TMP.
I just hope the don't pull the Countdown stunt and make Data come back through B4. Not only would it make his heroic sacrifice in Nemesis lose all value, but the moral complications of sacrificing one sentient being over another would be enormous. Even if he's "slow" by human standards, B4 is still a sentient being ,and should have the same rights Data had.
Jonathan Frakes was second lead.Data was established as second lead character after Picard
Great post on your blog, Christopher - even though I don't quite agree that nuSpock's already achieved that serenity that Spock Prime's displayed since the end of TMP.
No, you're right about that, but by the end of the movie he does seem to have come to terms with his emotions somewhat more than Spock Prime would for years to come.
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