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TMP Seems more "Futuristic" Then "Star Trek '09"

I've watched all of them from the very first broadcast. Seen every shows the night it premiered. Seen all the movies.

Star Trek got weighed down with the barnacles of continuity and "canon" . It's time to strip it down to it's essence and do it anew.
I don't think the TOS era films got weighed down with continuity. Hell some have complained that they could be inconsistent with what had been established before. Ditto with TNG, at least in the earlier seasons.
 
Star Trek got weighed down with the barnacles of continuity and "canon" . It's time to strip it down to it's essence and do it anew.

TOS films didn't get bogged down with continuity at all. And the TNG films simply ignored continuity altogether, esp. in regards to Data's "emotion chip" and Wesley's sudden reappearance in "Nemesis."
 
TMP makes me feel like the characters are actually in space and in the future. ST09...not so much.

A telling difference is the presentation of the refit Enterprise. Seeing that magnificent ship being completed in an orbital drydock looks so damned credible and convincing. Seeing the repugnant JJprise being built on the ground in a field in Iowa...not so much. :rolleyes:
 
Kirk is a rebel who doesn't follow orders and shows that his superiors are idiots 99% of the time.
Problem with this is that Kirk is consistently shown to be a professional officer who follow the orders given to him. The only time he is shown to deliberately disobey an order is with his decision to take Spock to Vulcan in Amok Time. The only times he shows or treats a superior as an idiot is the government undersecratary in Tribbles, who is an idiot and maybe Commodore Stocker, who is in over his head. Yes there are occasions were he disagrees and even argues with superiors, but when they give him a lawful order, he follows it (maybe with gritted teeth).

Other wise he won't have left the galileo seven behind and likely wouldn't have searched for the Intrepid.

Kirk's position in Starfleet is shown to give him lots of professional leeway, it only in Amok Time that he seriously thought he might lose his command and career.

About all that new Trek should borrow from the old is: ...
And yes, Abrams would do well to borrow this Kirk and place him in his movies.

:)
 
- Kirk is a rebel who doesn't follow orders and shows that his superiors are idiots 99% of the time.

To this day I still don't understand where people get this interpretation of Kirk from? It obviously isn't from Star Trek: The Original Series. :rolleyes:
 
- Kirk is a rebel who doesn't follow orders and shows that his superiors are idiots 99% of the time.

To this day I still don't understand where people get this interpretation of Kirk from? It obviously isn't from Star Trek: The Original Series. :rolleyes:

The "rebel Kirk" is probably born out of episodes where he challenges authority directly, such as "The Galileo Seven", or goes against orders, such as "Amok Time." But more than likely the misconception that Kirk was a rebel rouser really was born out of the movies, particularly TSFS and TVH.

However, Kirk in the original series does have a strike of questioning authority, as demonstrated by his record of freeing people from machines that rule them in some fashion — such as "A Taste of Armageddon," "Return of the Archons," and "The Apple."

Apparently the writers of the latest movie got it from the same place, wherever that is...

^^ They pulled it out of a southern orifice.

The interpretation of Kirk as a rebel in the latest movie really comes from the fact that he had a different upbringing than Prime Kirk. And the biggest mistake Abrams made in the film was cutting out the preceding scene to the car chase. That scene clearly showed why little Jimmy Kirk grew up to be rebel, because before then he was someone who always listened and did as he was told.
 
And the biggest mistake Abrams made in the film was cutting out the preceding scene to the car chase. That scene clearly showed why little Jimmy Kirk grew up to be rebel, because before then he was someone who always listened and did as he was told.

It's a good scene, that's for sure.
 
And the biggest mistake Abrams made in the film was cutting out the preceding scene to the car chase. That scene clearly showed why little Jimmy Kirk grew up to be rebel, because before then he was someone who always listened and did as he was told.

It's a good scene, that's for sure.
I think they cut it because it spoiled the reveal that Kirk is Kirk, but all they had to was edit it to cut out the mentions of Kirk and it still would've worked, plus they could have the big dramatic "My name is James Tiberius Kirk" at the end.
 
A weak reason to cut it. They could have also left doubt as to which brother is which.

Warped9, I just found out about this scene today. You'll have to be a bit more specific as to what your question is. As far as I know, it's a deleted scene that I would have been happy to have left in the film.
 
- Kirk is a rebel who doesn't follow orders and shows that his superiors are idiots 99% of the time.

To this day I still don't understand where people get this interpretation of Kirk from? It obviously isn't from Star Trek: The Original Series. :rolleyes:

The "rebel Kirk" is probably born out of episodes where he challenges authority directly, such as "The Galileo Seven", or goes against orders, such as "Amok Time." But more than likely the misconception that Kirk was a rebel rouser really was born out of the movies, particularly TSFS and TVH.

However, Kirk in the original series does have a strike of questioning authority, as demonstrated by his record of freeing people from machines that rule them in some fashion — such as "A Taste of Armageddon," "Return of the Archons," and "The Apple."

Apparently the writers of the latest movie got it from the same place, wherever that is...

^^ They pulled it out of a southern orifice.

The interpretation of Kirk as a rebel in the latest movie really comes from the fact that he had a different upbringing than Prime Kirk. And the biggest mistake Abrams made in the film was cutting out the preceding scene to the car chase. That scene clearly showed why little Jimmy Kirk grew up to be rebel, because before then he was someone who always listened and did as he was told.

Kirk is NOT supposed to be the same as he is in the prime universe...however as the character grows I am sure he will appear to be much like the resulting Kirk that we know from the prime universe. He was already making strides in that direction at the end of the movie.

As far as Kirk the rebel..Kirk disobeyed or interpreted orders to fit his desires many times in TOS and the movies. He did it in Obsession, Galileo 7, Amok Time, Consicence of the King, Balance of Terror (direct orders not to cross the neutral zone), Trouble with Tribbles, STIII, STIV. In STII he "cheated" on a test but was rewarded, showing he started this predilection early. He broke the Prime Directive possibly 12-13 times by my count (other counts may differ..some say 3 dozen, some less). His greatest crime may be in "The Apple" or "A Private Little War".
 
^^ Then for the rest of the film he's still a dick and a punk.

He's actually a pretty nice guy, he spends much of the middle third of the film (after 3 yrs in the Academy) exasperated because he knows things his superiors don't and feels Spock is playing it safe. He has a personal reasons for doing this as well...his father's death, and the rescue of Pike, both pretty noble I think..

RAMA
 
He broke the Prime Directive possibly 12-13 times by my count (other counts may differ..some say 3 dozen, some less). His greatest crime may be in "The Apple" or "A Private Little War".

Care to name those 12-13 times? *loads rifle in preparation of shooting them down* :lol:
 
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