They're all quite Kirkian, nonetheless, and I'd imagine that it would take very little time and effort to identify parallels to all of those situations in episodes of the original series. For example, Number 1 might be like Kirk driving the Constellation into the mouth of the planet-killer; Number 7 echoes Kirk dangling by his fingertips above a bottomless pit on planet Exo III before being pulled to safety by the gigantic android who'd up to then been pursuing him.Lol. Early TOS Kirk was indeed very good. I think later on, inlcuding many aspects of the movies, he gets praise for results and everybody overlooks the fact that half the problems were caused by his dodgy decision-making in the first place. The characters succeed because the plot requires them to succeed rather than through monumental tactics or sound decision-making.
It always reminds me of Team America 'saving' Paris from terrorists.![]()
That's another problem I have with the movie. Kirk is heralded is this great hero, but let's look at the things Kirk does:
1) Almost killed himself by driving a stolen car off a cliff
2) Gotten beaten half to death by picking a fight against 4 guys, only to be rescued by Pike
3) Nearly gotten killed on the drilling platform, only to be saved by Sulu
4) Nearly fallen to death "skydiving" on Vulcan, only to be saved by Chekov.
5) Nearly been eaten by the snow monster after foolishly leaving his escape pod, only to be miraculously saved by oldSpock
5) Insisting on chasing after Nero's ship despite the Enterprise clearly being no match for it
6) Beamed aboard the Narada and miraculously survived a firefight despite being outnumbered
7) Luckily survived a fight with Nero's crew member, who conveniently decided to pick Kirk up by the throat (thus bringing him within reach of his gun), instead of simply kicking him off the ledge while he was dangling.
Call me crazy, but I don't see any leadership or heroism in Kirk. All I see is recklessness, stupidity, and a miraculous amount of dumb luck.
They're all quite Kirkian, nonetheless, and I'd imagine that it would take very little time and effort to identify parallels to all of those situations in episodes of the original series. For example, Number 1 might be like Kirk driving the Constellation into the mouth of the planet-killer; Number 7 echoes Kirk dangling by his fingertips above a bottomless pit on planet Exo III before being pulled to safety by the gigantic android who'd up to then been pursuing him.
That's another problem I have with the movie.
Because in real life, people don't do stupid things from time to time...
No, that's the right scene. Christine did order Ruk not to harm Kirk, and I've got no reason for thinking that might not have been a contributing factor, but it's never been my impression that Ruk was simply obeying an order, but rather that he reached a decision on his own, and for his own reasons. His reasons for lifting Kirk up are, no doubt, different than Ayel's, but I think the two situations have enough in common to be seen as parallel, at least as far as William Wallace's list is concerned.They're all quite Kirkian, nonetheless, and I'd imagine that it would take very little time and effort to identify parallels to all of those situations in episodes of the original series. For example, Number 1 might be like Kirk driving the Constellation into the mouth of the planet-killer; Number 7 echoes Kirk dangling by his fingertips above a bottomless pit on planet Exo III before being pulled to safety by the gigantic android who'd up to then been pursuing him.
I think Ruk only haved Kirk up because Christine ordered him to do so... or was that a different scene.
They're all quite Kirkian, nonetheless, and I'd imagine that it would take very little time and effort to identify parallels to all of those situations in episodes of the original series. For example, Number 1 might be like Kirk driving the Constellation into the mouth of the planet-killer; Number 7 echoes Kirk dangling by his fingertips above a bottomless pit on planet Exo III before being pulled to safety by the gigantic android who'd up to then been pursuing him.William Wallace;5307039[/QUOTE said:That's another problem I have with the movie. Kirk is heralded is this great hero, but let's look at the things Kirk does:
1) Almost killed himself by driving a stolen car off a cliff
2) Gotten beaten half to death by picking a fight against 4 guys, only to be rescued by Pike
3) Nearly gotten killed on the drilling platform, only to be saved by Sulu
4) Nearly fallen to death "skydiving" on Vulcan, only to be saved by Chekov.
5) Nearly been eaten by the snow monster after foolishly leaving his escape pod, only to be miraculously saved by oldSpock
5) Insisting on chasing after Nero's ship despite the Enterprise clearly being no match for it
6) Beamed aboard the Narada and miraculously survived a firefight despite being outnumbered
7) Luckily survived a fight with Nero's crew member, who conveniently decided to pick Kirk up by the throat (thus bringing him within reach of his gun), instead of simply kicking him off the ledge while he was dangling.
Call me crazy, but I don't see any leadership or heroism in Kirk. All I see is recklessness, stupidity, and a miraculous amount of dumb luck.
See? It's easy.
Now you try a few.
That's another problem I have with the movie.
So what else is new?![]()
Hey, be thankful I'm bringing it up here, and not in Plot Hole City Part 4![]()
Yeah, well, that makes it that much less believable that Spock would bet the ranch on Kirk's "leadership skills" to save the Federation.
Yeah, well, that makes it that much less believable that Spock would bet the ranch on Kirk's "leadership skills" to save the Federation.
Maybe for Quinto Spock (and even then that's questionable, seeing as how Spock kept grudgingly finding Kirk coming to the right conclusions -- logic =/= stubbornness), but Nimoy Spock, while usually noting the dangers, usually saw Shatner-Kirk do the same stuff and succeed. And in Unification, Spock references Kirk's "cowboy diplomacy" when he, Picard, and Data save the day with a rather cavalier plan.
So shooting down those Kirkisms as inconsistent seems to say that it's okay for TOS/TNG, but not okay for this film in particular.
It's all ok for everyone else except for Mr. Wallace, who can't see the answers within the film that the rest of us could by actually paying attention and having an imagination.
I guess I just have higher standards than you![]()
Either you're joking or you never watched an episode of Star Trek.But the series didn't make such a big deal about what an "amazing leader" Kirk was.
I think both of our standards speak for themselves.It's all ok for everyone else except for Mr. Wallace, who can't see the answers within the film that the rest of us could by actually paying attention and having an imagination.
I guess I just have higher standards than you![]()
Either you're joking or you never watched an episode of Star Trek.But the series didn't make such a big deal about what an "amazing leader" Kirk was.
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