And you leave out all the auxiliary craft that he has in his landing bay including a Romulan Bird of Prey.![]()
Wait Nero had what again?

And you leave out all the auxiliary craft that he has in his landing bay including a Romulan Bird of Prey.![]()
And you leave out all the auxiliary craft that he has in his landing bay including a Romulan Bird of Prey.![]()
Wait Nero had what again?![]()
Why does that have to be explicitly stated?
I think the film could have given more justification to Kirk's order to fire on an already doomed ship. I remember the TNG episode The Best of Both Worlds Part II when the Borg cube was about to be destroyed and the crew contemplate on what they should do even though Captain Picard is still linked to them.movie said:Nero: That ship, take it out.
Crew: Sir, if you ignite the red matter..
Computer: Incoming missiles. If the ship is hit, the red matter will detonate.
Best of Both Worlds Part II said:Beverly: There's no way to know what the destruction of the Borg ship will do to him.
Data: We should also consider the advantages of further examination of the Borg and their vessel.
Riker: I don't think so. Mister Data, separate yourself from Captain Picard.
May I ask you whether you also dislike dystopian science-fiction like Blade Runner, Fahrenheit 451, Brave New World and so on because it features a different social background or do you only dislike utopian sci-fi like Trek because it appears to be preachy and promoting an agenda?.
May I ask you whether you also dislike dystopian science-fiction like Blade Runner, Fahrenheit 451, Brave New World and so on because it features a different social background or do you only dislike utopian sci-fi like Trek because it appears to be preachy and promoting an agenda?.
Huh? Where did you get the idea that I dislike Trek? I've been a Trekkie my whole life.
I don't have a problem with upbeat, optimistic science fiction stories. I love Forbidden Planet, The Day the Earth Stood Still, Things to Come, and The Incredible Shrinking Man, and do I think that one of the distinguishing characteristics of Star Trek is that it's essentially an optimistic (not utopian) vision of the future in which mankind has NOT blown itself to smithereens or been taken over by computers, but is out there encountering strange new worlds, etc. And in which beings from diverse backgrounds and species are working together on the Enterprise, despite their occasional differences and personality conflicts. As long you have that, you have Star Trek--as in the new movie. Kirk and Spock and McCoy may argue all the time, and occasionally break the rules, but that doesn't mean that they're dysfunctional or adolescent, just human.
Nor do I prefer dystopias. Granted, Planet of the Apes is probably my favorite sf movie, but not because it's a Serious Cautionary Lesson about the dangers of nuclear warfare or putting orangutuans in charge, but because it's a marvelously well-crafted movie, with memorable characters, great dialogue, an imaginative concept, healthy amounts of tension and action, cool makeup effects, a great Jerry Goldsmith score, etc.
Basically, I'm more of an "art for art's sake" guy, so my hackles tend to rise when people start caring more about whether Star Trek movies are sending the right message, or being true to somebody's idea of the Star Trek philosophy, than whether they're well-written, well-acted, whatever. At the end of the day, it's just a movie based on a classic tv show, not a religion or way of life--and, contrary to modern revisionism, TOS was not just a weekly manifesto for utopian values--and that's not necessarily why we all watched it way back when.
I mean, look at "And Let That Be Your Last Battlefield." Sure, magazine articles love to cite that ep as evidence of Star Trek as Social Allegory, but does anybody really think that's one of the good episodes? I'd much rather watch "Amok Time" or "The Devil in the Dark" or "Journey to Babel." They're a lot more fun.
The new movie takes place in an optimistic (not utopian) future and has the crew of the Enterprise coming together to save the universe. That's upbeat and positive enough for me. And, getting back to the original issue, it feels like Star Trek to me.
Which was an act on Kirk's part.KHANNNNNNNN!!!
It always seems to boil down to this for you, doesn't it, Jeyl?Kirk's just an a-hole.
Indeed, he switched from "show them compassion" to "fire everything we got" and it is not hard to figure out whose of those two Kirks is authentic. He revels in not being forced anymore to play by the book.No more than 10 seconds and the deal is done. Anything would have been better than that conversation between Kirk and Spock involving details that were pulled right out of the writer's a**. Compassion? What compassion? You went onboard the Narada guns blazing with phasers set to kill. Peace with Romulus? What peace with Romulus? Isn't that what the Neutral Zone treaty was for? I do not get this sudden switch from "HUNTING NERO DOWN" to all of a sudden "Show them compassion" and back to "Arm phasers, fire everything we've got!".
Kirk's just an a-hole.
The new movie takes place in an optimistic (not utopian) future and has the crew of the Enterprise coming together to save the universe. That's upbeat and positive enough for me. And, getting back to the original issue, it feels like Star Trek to me.
I just wanted to say WOW. I agreed with everything you said! Including my preference for more positive upbeat science fiction than the depressing dystopian type of movie. The original Planet of the Apes is also one of my favorites and I think it was so well written and acted.
The new movie takes place in an optimistic (not utopian) future and has the crew of the Enterprise coming together to save the universe. That's upbeat and positive enough for me. And, getting back to the original issue, it feels like Star Trek to me.
I just wanted to say WOW. I agreed with everything you said! Including my preference for more positive upbeat science fiction than the depressing dystopian type of movie. The original Planet of the Apes is also one of my favorites and I think it was so well written and acted.
Thanks! Dare I admit I wrote the whole thing in my head while walking the dog this morning?
(Hey, it gave me something to think about while waiting for her to poop!)
(the Vulcans have the role of a god or a father, it is embarassing for us if they see that we are not able to manage ourselves well)
No more than 10 seconds and the deal is done. Anything would have been better than that conversation between Kirk and Spock involving details that were pulled right out of the writer's a**. Compassion? What compassion? You went onboard the Narada guns blazing with phasers set to kill. Peace with Romulus? What peace with Romulus? Isn't that what the Neutral Zone treaty was for? I do not get this sudden switch from "HUNTING NERO DOWN" to all of a sudden "Show them compassion" and back to "Arm phasers, fire everything we've got!".
Kirk's just an a-hole.
Indeed, he switched from "show them compassion" to "fire everything we got" and it is not hard to figure out whose of those two Kirks is authentic. He revels in not being forced anymore to play by the book.
All this is just my "fancy interpretation of the void between FC and ENT". I am not talking about facts, I am not Mr. Pseudo-Objective, I am talking about art the way you talk about art. Your interpretation of the scene where Kirk shoots is not more or less valid than mine just because you pretend that your reading of it is objective.
And the Vulcans being colonialists is supported by facts? Give me a break.
How come then that Archer launched his ships, the NX-Beta ("First Flight") as well as the NX-01 against the explicit will of the High Command?
But Earth is not a planet softly controlled by Vulcan
As the Vulcans don't expand and are "merely" engaged in some kind of cold war with the blueskins
I think a better comparison might be Coridan/Vulcan/Andoria to pre-Castro Cuba/US/Soviet Union.
Annexing a planetoid on the border is hardly imperial expansion.
Just compare them to the Romulans, there is definitely a large difference.
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