lawman said:
Glad you found the film thought-provoking. Perhaps my problem is that I'd read a lot about those subjects long before I saw this film, and kept wishing the writers had done the same.
Why do you assume they didn't? They are on record as being inspired by the many worlds theory of quantum mechanics...
Because nothing in the film gives the slightest indication that they understand any basic science, much less quantum mechanics. Even the writers' interviews don't suggest that they grasp the "many worlds interpretation" at any level that exceeds scanning a Wikipedia article to put a gloss on their view of an old TNG episode.
Frankly, the film's treatment of black holes and supernovae isn't just mistaken in some minor way, it's cringe-inducingly bad. It's literally embarrassing to watch. Supernovae simply do not "threaten the galaxy," and black holes are not the same as wormholes and do not look or behave remotely as depicted. And never mind scientific consistency; it's not even internally consistent
within the story, since any explosion that could "threaten the galaxy" and wipe out Romulus as shown would have to be propagating at superluminal velocity, and any force propagating at superluminal velocity wouldn't be defeated by a black hole, since the event horizon would present no barrier.
I don't mind artistic license, but the point is that any reasonably scientifically literate writer could have written around these things and achieved the same effect without the whoppers. Diane Duane invented a threat that could propagate between star systems at subspace velocity in one of her Trek novels, for instance, and I didn't bat an eye, because it made sense
in context. These writers either didn't realize the problems, or just didn't bother to fix them. I recognize that Trek science has always been fairly rubbery., but they stretched it past the breaking point.
In that case, lawman, assuming you are correct, the task is literally impossible.
Sorry, please clarify. What's impossible if I'm right about what?
Perhaps, but too much of the niggly detail like this would confuse matters for the uninitiated.
Right. Because the "uninitiated" are complete idiots, and can't understand a little basic exposition? (Perhaps the same assumption that went into the treatment of the supernova: "People understand a big explosion. Let's not confuse them with details!")
On this topic, I personally assume that it's been a couple years since the Narada incident. I know it wasn't expressly stated in the movie, but it makes since...
A lot of things in this film (though not all!) make more sense if you assume details not actually depicted or described on screen. At some point you hit a point of diminishing returns, though, and have to start asking yourself why the highly paid Hollywood writers couldn't make sense of their own story, rather than leaving that task to the viewers who paid for the privilege.
This is one of the central points of the movie, how he got to be CAPTAIN.
Then, since the writers actually had the entire movie to work with and weren't restricted to the final minutes, perhaps it would have behooved them to come up with a less gratingly stupid story to explain how he got to that point?
All we needed to see was Kirk set on his path to the captaincy. Many of the actors are 5-10 years older than their characters so allowing the passage of some time before the next film would make sense. They could have opened the sequel showing him being given command of the Enterprise.
This. Exactly.
I just find it mildly irritating that they opted for a rather childish, simplistic, instant gratification approach that seems so prevalent with today's youth.
This too. (Except for the gratuitous shot at "today's youth"; how about just "today's Hollywood"?)