Ah but Kirk supposedly did show mercy to Nero (insincere on the part of the writers though it may have been) so I wouldn’t describe him as having maniacal hatred.
I was talking about Nero.
Besides, Kirk's "glee" at destroying the genocidal Romulan lunatic that murdered his father, destroyed the entire Vulcan civilization and very nearly killed HIM on two separate occasions seems rather subdued compared to his vengeful glee at kicking Kruge into a lava flow or putting a torpedo up Chang's ass. The most you can say is that Kirk isn't the type to seek righteous retribution, but he's not one to pass it up if the opportunity presents itself.
Well, the plot device has done his job and bows out? OK but others have suggested less obnoxious ways of doing that that.
Sure. All of which require alot more time to pull off, especially if you want the resolution to be believable and emotionally satisfying. If your audiences want to see the bad guy finally and decisively defeated, you're taking a bit of a risk when you start introducing moral complications like "Sure he's a bad guy, but he should be brought to trial or possibly reformed of his insanity and we should talk to Romulus about making peace some time." You can do that in novels, sometimes even in TV shows. But a movie has to end at some point, you can't leave the situation half resolved and expect people not to be pissed. It's one of the reasons people hated Nemesis; interestingly, it's also one of the things audiences found unsettling about TWOK.
That seems reasonable. What happens in STXI might be in character for our current society sadly (though that's a bit unfair to us), but not theirs.
Are we watching the same Star Trek? It's perfectly in-character for James T. Kirk, especially a young and impulsive Kirk with a much more volatile upbringing. I agree it's out of character for Katheryn Janeway, somewhat out of character for Jean Luc Picard (Riker wouldn't give a damn), kind of out of character for Ben Sisko. Kirk has always been the type to offer mercy to his defeated foe when he could afford to, but when all else fails it's "I... Have had... Enough of... YOU!"
Hmmm, I still haven’t found the right concept. "Compromising its consistent internal values" is probably a bit closer.
Dude, it's a television franchise. It doesn't have consistent moral values, it has RATINGS. I can guarantee you the "Because of it's consistent moral values" is not very high on the list of reasons why people love Star Trek.
How many were quite so actively murderous?
"Klingon commander, this is Admiral James T. Kirk. I'm alive and well on the planet's surface. I know this may come as a pleasant surprise to you, but our ship was the victim of an unfortunate accident. Sorry about your crew, but as they say on Earth, cest la vive."