I thought Prime-Kirk got command in 2264 at the age of 30/31? If he had the Enterprise in 2262, wouldn't his 5YM have ended in 2267? And TMP would then be pushed to 2269/70 instead of 2272/73 as per Decker's line about Kirk not logging a "space hour" (or some such thing ) in two and a half years...
Only if you assume the 5YM started when Kirk took command of the Enterprise. He could have had other shorter missions before being deployed on the 5YM
The Making of Star Trek postulated that as of the second season, Kirk had been in command of the Enterprise for four years. That's where the idea comes from that Kirk took command two years before the 5-year mission of TOS began.
Lessee, over ten years rising up through the ranks on various starships, facing all sorts of unknowns, versus being a third year cadet who stows away, gets his ass kicked repeatedly, picks a fight with the senior officer in command, and isnt even the guy who ultimately saves the day (that'd be that same senior officer that he picked the fight with).
Yeah, what's the big difference?![]()
Still doesn't qualify him for command of the newest and biggest ship in the fleet. That we're supposed to sit back and accept something that ridiculous probably says more of the writers than the fans, but the fact that so many fans are willing to accept it is equally disturbing.
I tend to agree that the Kelvin is already in a different universe than the Prime one. Whether it diverged from the Prime one or always was different from the Prime universe is up for discussion.
Ummm, if you say so....Still doesn't qualify him for command of the newest and biggest ship in the fleet. That we're supposed to sit back and accept something that ridiculous probably says more of the writers than the fans, but the fact that so many fans are willing to accept it is equally disturbing.
Still doesn't qualify him for command of the newest and biggest ship in the fleet. That we're supposed to sit back and accept something that ridiculous probably says more of the writers than the fans, but the fact that so many fans are willing to accept it is equally disturbing.
Oh, yeah, it's disturbing when a fan is willing to just disregard his disbelief for the sake of enjoying a thoroughly entertaining movie.
Yeah, disturbing is the right word.![]()
With the number of parallel universes that have been established in Trek, I really don't see why it's such a reach to think that this was a separate uni to begin with. After all, Team Abrams was looking for a clean slate upon which to tell stories.
With the number of parallel universes that have been established in Trek, I really don't see why it's such a reach to think that this was a separate uni to begin with.
Still doesn't qualify him for command of the newest and biggest ship in the fleet. That we're supposed to sit back and accept something that ridiculous probably says more of the writers than the fans, but the fact that so many fans are willing to accept it is equally disturbing.
Oh, yeah, it's disturbing when a fan is willing to just disregard his disbelief for the sake of enjoying a thoroughly entertaining movie.
Yeah, disturbing is the right word.![]()
3) Because there's no need for it. Once more, the discrepancies between this movie and what's come before are no greater than the discrepancies that already exist among various different Trek series and films from various different creators. They're differences of interpretation, matters of artistic license. They're differences we gloss over in order to accept the conceit that it's all one reality. If we can do that with the huge continuity errors in TWOK, why not here?
Still doesn't qualify him for command of the newest and biggest ship in the fleet. That we're supposed to sit back and accept something that ridiculous probably says more of the writers than the fans, but the fact that so many fans are willing to accept it is equally disturbing.
Oh, yeah, it's disturbing when a fan is willing to just disregard his disbelief for the sake of enjoying a thoroughly entertaining movie.
Yeah, disturbing is the right word.![]()
Suspending your disbelief for concepts like a faster-than-light starship is one thing.
Accepting that a third-year cadet can blunder his way into command of that starship isn't suspending your disbelief, it's delusional.
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