Depends on who set up the poll.^^ Bully for them.
I can be a very stubborn cuss, cause I ain't given this film nothin'.
Oh, and I voted for the film on this site, too, but I can't remember if very disappointed or crap was one of the options.

Depends on who set up the poll.^^ Bully for them.
I can be a very stubborn cuss, cause I ain't given this film nothin'.
Oh, and I voted for the film on this site, too, but I can't remember if very disappointed or crap was one of the options.
I think there was a poll.
According to the poll in this forum, 63% rate this film as excellent.
Zarabeth was pretty isolated from her planets history. She would live and die without interacting with the others of her race.
Thats what the guy who stranded her there wanted. I-Chaya was Spock's pet, who died because of the changes Spock causes to the timeline.
Ah yes, Gillian There that inconsistantcy again. Wonder if she realy wound up on a science ship.![]()
OK, so? Plenty of people rate Titanic quite high also, doesn't mean that it isn't crap.![]()
But Spock could use the GOF or the Slingshot to bring her forward and not the machine. And surely they could find a cure for what ailes her.Zarabeth was pretty isolated from her planets history. She would live and die without interacting with the others of her race.
IIRC, Spock and McCoy got sent back there by accident and they were not suppose to be there. But she was there "on purpose" and apparently she could not come forward again by some technical design of the machine. Unlike STXI, this was explained as a reason why a time-travel rescue seemed to be not possible. I think it's called "hanging a lantern"? - something that was missing in STXI.
Thats what the guy who stranded her there wanted. I-Chaya was Spock's pet, who died because of the changes Spock causes to the timeline.
Yes but in doing so he caused I-Chaya to die prematurely. So the present he left (or was trying to restore) was not the present he returned to.I just read over the I-Chaya thing. One that doesn't apply to STXI because the lesson Spock supposedly learned was that "every life comes to an end when time demands it." Well, unless he felt firmly that everyone on Vulcan was meant to die so early, including his altverse Mom (which he addressed as his own at the end) then I doubt that XI was comparable to the TAS story. Didn't Spock even go back in time to fix the I-Chaya/his death as a boy problem?
Temporal Investigations probably drugged her, mind wiped her and sent her back to the 20th Century. Though I have a theory that her absence is why the whales went extinct in the first place.Ah yes, Gillian There that inconsistantcy again. Wonder if she realy wound up on a science ship.![]()
Well, let's hope she did. Although, there is room for The Wrath of Gillian. "THIS IS SCIENCE SHIP 5!!!!"
Doesn't mean most Trek fans liked it, but most moviegoers who went to see the film liked it.
So that's how polls work?And it only measures anyone who bothered to vote.
And I know 9 times as many who liked it and didn't vote either.I know enough people that saw that film and came away disgusted or at least disappointed. And none of them voted for anything.
Vulcan lives in Spock's home universe.I-Chaya' and Zarabeth had no historical impact beyond how they effected Spock personally. The same cannot be said for the destruction of a founding member planet of the Federation, particularly since Spock was directly involved in the chain of events that led to Vulcan's destruction. Since Spock has been shown making calculations for time warps in his head, and this movie shows Spock taking no action whatsoever to repair the damage Nero has caused, or even suggesting that such a course of action is possible (when he has personally taken such actions in the past in similar circumstances), the only logical conclusion is that this is not our Spock, we're dealing with an alternate timeline even before Nero starts trashing the place.
Vulcan lives in Spock's home universe.I-Chaya' and Zarabeth had no historical impact beyond how they effected Spock personally. The same cannot be said for the destruction of a founding member planet of the Federation, particularly since Spock was directly involved in the chain of events that led to Vulcan's destruction. Since Spock has been shown making calculations for time warps in his head, and this movie shows Spock taking no action whatsoever to repair the damage Nero has caused, or even suggesting that such a course of action is possible (when he has personally taken such actions in the past in similar circumstances), the only logical conclusion is that this is not our Spock, we're dealing with an alternate timeline even before Nero starts trashing the place.
Zarabeth is a living being who deserves better than death and loneliness in primitive Ice Age conditions, yet Spock did nothing to save her with with two methods of time travel at his disposal. In "Yesteryear" Spock meddled with time and the past was altered. He made no attempt to correct this once he discovered the alteration.
The point is, Spock's past was changed. His pet dies, wher before it didn't. So the unexpexcted can happen when you meddle with time.Vulcan lives in Spock's home universe.
Zarabeth is a living being who deserves better than death and loneliness in primitive Ice Age conditions, yet Spock did nothing to save her with with two methods of time travel at his disposal. In "Yesteryear" Spock meddled with time and the past was altered. He made no attempt to correct this once he discovered the alteration.
I just looked at the TAS episode's transcript. Granted I skimmed through it but it appeared that Spock or the GOF screwed it up when he wasn't there to save himself (yep). Both he and Kirk were on a GOF mission somewhere else when he was apparently suppose to be pretending to be his uncle Selek saving his younger self from death. In this case, Spock used the GOF to go fix it. But he did go fix it! (And saved his mom and himself to boot.)
The Zarabeth situation specifically stated that the machine altered her physically to be stuck in that time period. Anything they would need to do to alter her to be time-travel-friendly would've had to be in the past necessitating either multiple trips through the GOF or taking a ship back. However, the problem here is that Spock didn't screw up the timeline that was apparently meant to be and we don't know what Zarabeth's fate is. She could've been that planet's Mitochondrial Zarabeth. OTOH, if Spock had determined that taking her out of that planet's timeline was okay, he could go back at anytime - afterall, she isn't going anywhere![]()
Both cases - still not applicable reasons as to why Spock sorta-Prime didn't try to at least save Vulcan. I still think he's a fugitive from his own universe![]()
Nerys Myk said:Zarabeth shows that Spock hasn't used time travel to save people he cared for.
Did he go back in time and save Zarabeth from a cold and lonely death? How about poor I-Chaya? Of course Spock learned a hard lesson about mucking with the timeline in "Yesteryear".GIVE THAT MAN A CUPIE DOLL!!
Zarabeth was part of another planet's history that played out as it should. I don't recall I-Chaya, but if Spock knew how it was suppose to go and it was screwed up, he would've done something about it. If he was part of messing up the time, he'd go and fix it. If it meant the saving of a planet, he'd find a way. And come on, Spock's MOM!![]()
so here is the big question you TOS whiners, can you write and make a movie that would satisfy the old fans and bring in the new fans. When I say new fans, I am going for the Spock Who? You know the fan who needs every major character in the film to be introduced, which would include the technology that would go along with the major characters such as transporters, ships, and warp drive. Oh yes, assume that the new fan is dumb as a rock, do not assume they will understand technobabble or have Spock spell out what his plan is in near minute detail.
I bet you couldn't because you are sitting and ranting about a film rather than putting together a proposal, script, working the film relationships. How do I know this because the majority of whiners are the ones who post a response to nearly every response in which they have previously posted. You know who you are.
If Spock should have gone back in time to save Vulcan, he should have gone back in time to save Kirk's life by stopping Soran. He should have gone back in time to save David Marcus. He should have gone back in time to prevent V'Ger from destroying Epsilon Nine. He should have gone back in time to save Gorkon from assassination. He should have -
Time travel is a big ball of nonsense in Star Trek.
In a freakin' heartbeat. I could do it as a reboot or as one set in the original continuity. No sweat....so here is the big question you TOS whiners, can you write and make a movie that would satisfy the old fans and bring in the new fans. When I say new fans, I am going for the Spock Who? You know the fan who needs every major character in the film to be introduced, which would include the technology that would go along with the major characters such as transporters, ships, and warp drive. Oh yes, assume that the new fan is dumb as a rock, do not assume they will understand technobabble or have Spock spell out what his plan is in near minute detail.
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