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Did Kirk's rather *enthusiastic* execution of Nero bug you?

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Kirk also destroyed the Narada and wasted the opportunity to learn from it. Had they included the deleted scenes of Nero being in prison for 25 years, this would have been even worse, because the Klingons would have had 25 years to study the Narada with 24th century technology, but Kirk just destroys it without thinking a single step ahead.

Well, to be fair I’m not sure Kirk had too many opportunities to save the Narada for study. It seemed to be already going down the plug hole. I don’t know how much Kirk’s self indulgent video game style retribution added to its apparently inevitable end as it is.

It's funny what happened here. Star Trek has mostly been a moral utopia. You lend the hand to someone who killed your son. You try to understand the motives of a mass murderer and allow him to redeem himself. You don't waste 600 lives to save a billion lives. You don't misuse a single human being to destroy a race of machines that endanger the entire galaxy. Capital punishment is no longer considered a justifiable deterrent. If they had to kill someone, they did it in self defense. That's of course not what most of the people think or agree with, because their morale is limited to "an eye for an eye". And which is why they like it that Trek has been "dumbed down" morally. Kirk is now reacting like they would. Which is pretty sad, because that was one of the points that made Trek good: it's rather utopic view of humans in the future, and that they would not react like today's people would.

A great point and a quality lost on many post 9/11 Trek fans it seems. Its fascinating how much we can become apart of our times and not even realise the change (er, if there was one). In fact, case study: "The effects on normal people of total emersion in declining moral environments." A theme for the next movie perhaps? ;)

But more seriously, [rant] it is sad that we think of the more traditional ST view as "utopian" (assuming we aren’t denying that characteristic in order to feel better about liking STXI of course) rather than something we might actually be able to obtain if we worked at it. There is so much room for improvement its not funny and we know how to start, we just don’t "want" to. Too much baggage I guess. I don’t see how we could end up with ST’s "world peace" without there being a general underlying improvement in individual human behaviour across the board. [/rant]

What?

Oh, oops, that may be slightly off topic. As you were! :)
 
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How fast was the Jellyfish moving when they beamed Spock off of it?

Going by screen evidence, about four hundred miles per hour. Not that it matters much (and I'm kind of amazed nobody mentioned this earlier) but the preferred method of beaming someone out of a hazardous situation is by locking on to their communicator signal and beaming them out by those coordinates. Beaming people out by sensors alone is depicted as somewhat difficult to do, and is rarely even attempted.

Actually, the only time I can immediately recal this being done was when Chekov did it in "The Enterprise Incident."

I doubt Captain Christopher was wearing a communicator in his F-104. Or Harry Mudd and the three "mail order brides". Etc, etc.
Which in both cases were depicted as rather difficult beamout scenarios with no guarantee of success. The "possible failure to beam" is always implied but rarely demonstrated on screen; in fact, the first time we clearly see it is in STXI when the Amanda fails to materialize just because the ground suddenly drops out from under her. It also kind of happens in Symbiosis, but it's never made clear if the transporter had then and lost them or failed to lock onto them at all (since we never see the beaming from their end).

And yet in XI Kirk & Sulu both have active communicators but the reason given why they can't be locked onto is because the were traveling too fast.
Actually, the reason is that they're traveling randomly, spinning tumbling, blown back and forth by air gusts of wind from a planet that's in the process of exploding under them.

OTOH, Chekov DID manage to lock onto them and beam them aboard, so that's a non-starter. We never see the second scene from Scotty's point of view either, but since he is 1) better at this than Chekov and 2) visibly ecstatic to have actually beamed all three of them aboard, we can again chalk this up to Kirk's personal awesomeness field.

Amanda was hardly moving at all when she was lost although she was the only one that the ground collapsed under.
It's not a matter of speed, but predictability of movement. Both Chekov and the unnamed transporter chief BOTH told their targets, in very stern tones, "Don't move!" Presumably the transporter can still lock on to a moving target, but only if in uniform motion at a fairly predictable rate of speed. So the transporter can probably track and beam up a running target, but it might loose the lock if you slip on a banana peel and faceplant in the middle of the transport cycle.
 
Ooh - me me, I called it earlier! My own view is that a communicator signal should be the ONLY way you can beam people around. Otherwise Scotty's technology that can beam people a light year can be used to good effect beaming enemy captains off their ships before they raise their shields.
And why not? We've seen it done before on a couple of occasions in Voyager and a few other episodes. Just because it's possible doesn't mean everyone will know how to do it or have a reason to try.

Plus, whatever the character's views, Kirk's reaction in STVI was intended to be viewed in a negative light by the writers. The audience is rooting for the peace process and by the end of the movie Kirk can see the error of his ways. This doesn't compare to NuTrek where viewers are encouraged to approve of the summary execution. Kirk's decision to spare Maltz is the most comparable situation albeit on a much smaller scale.

It might even have been more fun if Nero had rejected to Kirk's offer of help and then blown himself up by trying to shoot torpedoes which were sucked back in by the gravity well. Maybe somebody will do a Lucas-esque retcon like with Greedo!

All good points, but I simply meant to point out that there is nothing in the history of James T. Kirk that would suggest he is incapable of vengeful wrath for its own sake. It's hardly beyond possibility that a younger version of Kirk with a considerably more volatile childhood might secretly look for an excuse to blow away the Romulan psychopath who murdered his father 25 years ago.

That's all, really. Even Prime Kirk could harbor seething irrational hatred for years--at an ENTIRE RACE, no less--for the murder of his son. Why is it so hard to believe that NuKirk might be just as pissed at one particular Romulan for the murder of his father?
 
So you take a man who exhibits vengeful wrath for it's own sake, promote him to captain while promoting nobody else even one step in rank, and give him command of your newest ship?
 
Well, Picard kept trashing giant starships, and Starfleet gave him a more powerful one each time.

IRL he'd have been deskjobbed with extreme predjudice after the Stargazer went down in flames.

IRL Janeway would probably be facing a war crimes' court, not be promoted to Admiral.

IRL KirkPrime would be locked away for life for stealing and destroying the Enterprise.
 
JJKirk is not the Captain Kirk from old. His "ok, whatever" attitude when the Romulan ship was being sucked into the black hole plus his overall arrogance and general sardonic attitude suggest that JJ wanted to rewrite the character of Kirk into another realm...a combination of Han Solo, John Blutarsky, Trelane, and a tiny bit of Captain Kirk. Paramount wanted to bring in new fans (read: young, Star Wars/video game fans) to boost ticket sales. The concept of Star Trek was not important. If it needed to be updated, rewritten, reimagined, ect to get the $$$, then anything that accomplished that goal was ok. The new concept only had to make $$$; following any sort of continuity in characterizations or storylines was not an issue at all.
 
Oh, please. Kirk is the same Kirk, only difference is this version had his father killed by a renegade Romulan and had an abusive stepfather/uncle. Of course there will be some differences, the alternate Kirk was not brought up by the same people, but it's still Kirk. Under these circumstances, Kirk-prime would have done the exact same thing, maybe even in the original time-line.
 
Oh, please. Kirk is the same Kirk, only difference is this version had his father killed by a renegade Romulan and had an abusive stepfather/uncle. Of course there will be some differences, the alternate Kirk was not brought up by the same people, but it's still Kirk. Under these circumstances, Kirk-prime would have done the exact same thing, maybe even in the original time-line.

.....So? Might as well say that the Adam West Batman can do all those dark and scary things that the Keaton Batman would do. You might as well say that anyone can be anyone. Hitler could have been a priest, Clinton a McDonalds burger flipper, and Obama an baseball player. They're still the people they are, but the key ingredient here is that they're different. If they're going to be different in character, I'm going to have an opinion as such, and my opinion is that I like classic Kirk a lot more than NuKirk.

Seriously, last thing I would ever want to see in Kirk's character is for his arrogance to be the main driving of his character turned up to 11.

Oh, no. I don't want Nero to be killed by that Black Hole, I WANT TO KILL HIM!
 
JJKirk is not the Captain Kirk from old. His "ok, whatever" attitude when the Romulan ship was being sucked into the black hole plus his overall arrogance and general sardonic attitude suggest that JJ wanted to rewrite the character of Kirk into another realm...a combination of Han Solo, John Blutarsky, Trelane, and a tiny bit of Captain Kirk. Paramount wanted to bring in new fans (read: young, Star Wars/video game fans) to boost ticket sales. The concept of Star Trek was not important. If it needed to be updated, rewritten, reimagined, ect to get the $$$, then anything that accomplished that goal was ok. The new concept only had to make $$$; following any sort of continuity in characterizations or storylines was not an issue at all.

Wow, you mean Star Trek, which is a property of a corporation, did something to make money? Wow.
 
Well, I'm sure as hell happier to watch Chris Pine play Kirk than I would be to see Shatner take one more turn at it. Thank God that's done with.
 
Yes, as others have suggested, this might be the writers of that movie making a point at Kirk's expense. Compare it to STXI where they don’t even seem to realise there are moral issues let-alone resolve them.
An issue you're going to have to take up with the writers, though. The point remains, though, that seething murderous rage is hardly out of character for Prime Kirk, let alone the AU Kirk who is demonstrated as being somewhat less virtuous and somewhat more impulsive than his older Prime Universe counterpart. Of course, youth alone suffices for an explanation, as in Jean Luc Picard picking a fight with a trio of surly Nausicans (behaviors one can hardly imagine from CAPTAIN Picard).

No, Nero was finished as a threat to the Enterprise.
And Enterprise' weapons made sure of that. The question is whether Kirk did it out of necessity, or did it because he was pissed and needed an excuse to take a parting shot. I'm sure some admiral somewhere probably asked him about it, but I doubt anyone would seriously question it, considering the amount of damage Nero caused.
 
The initial point was that the transporter should be able to compensate for a difference in relative velocity of a few hundred kilometers per hour.
But it can't. That's for the transporter chief to do. Chekov apparently knows something the regular transporter chief doesn't.
 
Chekov, the 17 year old navigator, is a better transporter officer than the person that's been trained specifically for that position.

I suppose it's a good thing McCoy wasn't losing a paitent in surgery.

He'd just been left in command and the first thing he does is leave the bridge. It would have worked better if someone else had been left in charge and Spcok had Chekov go with him to the transporter room. When they get there, the call from Kirk comes in and Chekov is there to save the day.
 
The initial point was that the transporter should be able to compensate for a difference in relative velocity of a few hundred kilometers per hour.
But it can't. That's for the transporter chief to do. Chekov apparently knows something the regular transporter chief doesn't.
For one thing, Chekov has been closely monitoring the gravitational sensor - perhaps seeing and understanding data in detail far too great to convey quickly enough to the transporter chief.

Telescoping somewhat, from the transcript:

[Enterprise Bridge]

UHURA: The jamming signal is gone. Transport abilities are reestablished.
CHEKOV: Transporter control is reengaged, sir.
SPOCK: Chekov, run gravitational sensor, and I want to know what they are doing on the planet.
CHEKOV: Aye commander, ack, Captain. Sorry, Captain.

[...]

[Enterprise Bridge]

CHEKOV: Captain, gravitational sensors are off the scale. If my calculations are correct, they're creating a singularity, that will consume the planet.
SPOCK: They're creating a black hole at the center of Vulcan?
CHEKOV: Yes sir.
SPOCK: How long does the planet have?
CHEKOV: (shrugs) Minutes, sir. Minutes.

[...]

[Drill Platform]

(the platform begins retract and Sulu falls off)
TRANSPORTER CHIEF: (over comm) I can't lock onto you. Don't move. Don't move!

[...]

[Transporter room]

TRANSPORTER CHIEF: I'm trying. I can't lock on your signal, you're moving too fast.

[Bridge]

CHEKOV: I can do that. I can do that! Take the conn!

[...]

[Transporter room]

CHEKOV: Give me radio control, I can lock on!
KIRK: (over comm) Beam us out!

[...]

[Transporter room]

CHEKOV: Don't move! Hold on! Computating gravitational pull and... gotcha!
(Kirk and Sulu slam into the transporter pad)
CHEKOV: Ё моё!
The jamming signal generated by the drill's operation stops as the drill is put out of commission by Kirk and Sulu; transporters (and, by inference, sensors) come back on line. Chekov begins taking gravitational sensor readings, analyzes, makes calculations and projections; he, better than anyone on the ship at this point (including the transporter chief,) knows what's going on down there, gravitationally. When first Sulu and then Kirk suddenly end up in free fall, the transporter chief, who was already having trouble establishing a lock on two people standing on the platform due to all of the gravitational mayhem in progress, has a very complicated task dumped in her lap and she doesn't have already in her head the full load of current data needed to execute the transport.

But Chekov does, so he delegates the conn, hauls ass to the transporter room, and saves Kirk's and Sulu's bacon.

"Ё моё!"

Maybe Chekov was also an ace in transporter theory, but the scene doesn't require that be explicitly stated, and certainly not at that moment. All we really needed to know right then was that He can do that! He can do that!

And then he does it.
 
… but I simply meant to point out that there is nothing in the history of James T. Kirk that would suggest he is incapable of vengeful wrath for its own sake.

Hmmm, you mean except the history of James T Kirk? Is he capable of pressing an advantage in battle to a deadly conclusion? Yes certainly. Is he capable of executing defenceless opponents (that are or can be rendered "harmless") in a pretty cold and calculating way? That we have yet to establish. I don’t think we should lump both of those character traits together and pretend they are the same either.

It's hardly beyond possibility that a younger version of Kirk with a considerably more volatile childhood might secretly look for an excuse to blow away the Romulan psychopath who murdered his father 25 years ago.

That of course is the issue. No excuse is presented.

That's all, really. Even Prime Kirk could harbor seething irrational hatred for years--at an ENTIRE RACE, no less--for the murder of his son. Why is it so hard to believe that NuKirk might be just as pissed at one particular Romulan for the murder of his father?

Its not,* from our point of view, but it represents a breakdown of 23rd century socialisation. What I and perhaps others are saying is that combined with other moral issues in the film, NuTrek no longer embodies the moral and social standards of the Prime universe and some of us see that as a bad thing. What’s important about the Kirk/NuKirk debate is that it is part of an attempt to pretend there is no real difference, when in fact NuTrek is now based on roughly 20th rather than 23rd century values (not even 21st in military terms I believe).

* But his decision doesn’t seem to be made in the heat of the moment/blind fury. He seemed more in control than Spock at that point. It is also disappointing that 23rd century social services were apparently ineffective in helping Kirk get back on track, so to speak, after his "driving lesson". Maybe that can happen in Kirk’s case but was the Narada sufficient to explain a broad social regression of over two hundred years?

Yes, as others have suggested, this might be the writers of that movie making a point at Kirk's expense. Compare it to STXI where they don’t even seem to realise there are moral issues let-alone resolve them.

An issue you're going to have to take up with the writers, though. The point remains, though, that seething murderous rage is hardly out of character for Prime Kirk, let alone the AU Kirk who is demonstrated as being somewhat less virtuous and somewhat more impulsive than his older Prime Universe counterpart.

Well Kirk is human like the rest of us, so I can understand him saying something like "let them die" in the heat of the moment. It is rather a different thing to be the kind of person who would actually kill them. Our so-called "corrections" budget would go though the roof if not. I think that's a distinction that's worth coming to grips with. You cannot conclude Kirk felt "seething murderous rage" from what he said. He would have had to at least actually intended or tried to kill them for that to be the case. But as mentioned above, the attitude of the movie is in question. If you want to change that attitude, you can’t rely on fans to assume there’s an admiral somewhere, you have to show that admiral doing something.

Of course, youth alone suffices for an explanation, as in Jean Luc Picard picking a fight with a trio of surly Nausicans (behaviors one can hardly imagine from CAPTAIN Picard).

Indeed. But if you mean who provoked it, I think you will find the Nausicaans did that. Picard may have thrown the first punch (I can’t remember) but he felt he was morally obliged to support his friends I believe (for some reason I also can't remember). Don’t make me rewatch it. I will if I have too! :devil:

So you are arguing that NuKirk is too young to have the responsibility of commanding a flagship? I can’t help but agree. ;)

Edit: Sorry. Looks like you are right about Picard provoking the fight. Hard to believe as you say.

UFO said:
No, Nero was finished as a threat to the Enterprise.
And Enterprise' weapons made sure of that.

I believe the black hole made sure of that. With the Earth at stake, if Kirk and co. had any doubts about Nero’s threat level (I believe there are sensors for that sort of thing), they would have shot first and asked if Nero wanted help later (if there was a later!). Further, we wouldn’t be having this discussion because that would have been justified. :)

There is precedent for taking such things into account of course, but stealing a ship is not quite the same as murder. And the Federation just might take that particular form of lack of discipline more seriously than we do (not in the AU obviously). If they let him off, it might not be so bright to pop him straight back on the horse. Maybe allow for the fact he is so young and let him get a bit more experience first (before the next movie!).
 
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An issue you're going to have to take up with the writers, though. The point remains, though, that seething murderous rage is hardly out of character for Prime Kirk, let alone the AU Kirk who is demonstrated as being somewhat less virtuous and somewhat more impulsive than his older Prime Universe counterpart. Of course, youth alone suffices for an explanation, as in Jean Luc Picard picking a fight with a trio of surly Nausicans (behaviors one can hardly imagine from CAPTAIN Picard).

The episode shows that getting stabbed was a life changing moment for Picard. He learned from it and changed his life. It made him who he was to a degree along with many other factors.

Kirk didn't learn anything from killing Nero. When Spock told him not to offer mercy he grinned and blew Nero away. What we have now is a captain of a starship that believes his ship is an instrument of his personal vengeance.
 
Kirk.
Starfleet Captain.
Starfleet's finest.
....

Goofing on the guys he's about to kill...?

Not sorry for for believing he HAS to do it?

Has this alternate reality created a Kirk I can't look up to any more? Just another angry angsty texting post-teen that revels in his justifiable excesses?

Or did Nero REALLY ASK for it?
It would have been more in keeping with the best traditions of Starfleet for Kirk to involuntarily site-to-site beam the other crew directly (temporarily) to the brig, except Nero, since his utterly contemptuous refusal of rescue was crystal clear.
 
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