Narada had a shitload of ships docked inside. What if Nero got into one and flew through the black hole? Then he's somewhere and somewhen else, free do raise havok with a 24th century Romulan shuttlecraft.
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Ironically, if there really were any doubts about the Narada surviving, it would appear the practical decision would have been to beam off Nero and Co, no questions asked. Guess they can't have been that concerned after all.
Kirk offers Nero help and it is refused and the villain suffers the consequence of that refusal.
Kirk is right because he cannot be sure that Nero won't survive the trip through the black hole and again cause chaos somewhere else in the timeline. Unlike Kruge, Nero no longer posed a threat to Kirk.
As far as I am aware the only ones suggesting it are fans of STXI trying to find an excuse for something they know Prime Kirk would not have done.
This is the crux of the matter now isn't it? You didn't like the movie. That's fine.
But to imply that I know that Prime Kirk would never have done something like that and I am trying find some way to excuse NuKirk's behavior just because I like the movie is just not true.
Sorry. I will of course take your word on that.
We could could debate until the cows come home on whether or not prime Kirk would kill in this manner. I personally think he would if the situation called for it...but in all honesty this is one of my least problems with the movie and I do like the movie..it is my favorite Trek movie!
While I agree we can't be certain how an imagined Prime Kirk would always react, I am not uncomfortable drawing pretty strong conclusions from how he did react. As you have probably guessed, I think how he reacts is important to Trek. This is why I am interested in why you say:
... I actually had more problem with Spock's attitude in the situation.
I mean, Spock turned down the political rationale. Neither appears interested in humanitarianism, so isn't he more honourable in that sense than Kirk? In what negative way does he differ? You believe NuKirk had to do it, and if I agreed with you, I would have had no problem with Kirk's behaviour either, but his exchange with Spock and other factors mentioned in my previous post seem to argue against that justification, don't they?
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.
Most people claiming that the Earth is flat doesn't make her flat.
^Correct.
IMO, mostly all Trek series after TOS over-coddled terrorists. Too politically correct compared to the Cowboy diplomacy Kirk exhibited. (The Sisko and Janeway excepted)
Kirk, just as Pine as Kirk did, gave the bad guy a chance to reconsider the error of his ways and change his path, but when they chose the wrong answer he, having exhausted all diplomatic options, blew them out out sky.
Kirk knows the enemy, knows when any plea for mercy will be ploys to buy time to eventually attack again. I love the "no more playing" attitude of Kirk. Both of them.
Wrong. This is not a character being created out of thin air, it is captain kirk. And he is way out of context in this 2009 thing. Mind you, not only in the end scene, but the entire film.(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, they do not. The Vulcans are never, ever depicted as anything other than just people who are different. They're not depicted as "gods" or "fathers," or as a culture that is somehow "better" than Humanity's. Hell, throughout ENT, the Vulcans are depicted as a neo-imperial power that uses unofficial influence over less-powerful worlds' governments to dominate them, to the resentment of people who want equality and partnership rather than hegemony and domination. Vulcans aren't gods or fathers -- they're colonialists who have to be cast off and shown the error of their ways. They're not the Olympians to Earth's Athens; they're Britain to Earth's India. (Or, if you prefer a more modern comparson, the Vulcans are America to Earth's Brazil.)
The idea that Vulcans are some sort of superior culture against whom Humanity is found wanting is an idea you are projecting onto the text; it's utterly unsupported by any of TREK, which varies between depicting Vulcans' beliefs as right for them but nobody else to being just plain oppressive.
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.
The fact that he wanted to fire everything they had to ensure the Narada's destruction does not mean that he actually wanted to kill Nero rather than provide humanitarian aid. And even drawing some satisfaction from his death doesn't mean that he actually wanted Nero to die.
It's entirely possible to draw some satisfaction from a belief that justice is being served even if you would have preferred things to turn out a different way. You are, once again, projecting ideas onto the text that are simply not present in any way.
^ Then explain "I...have HAD...enough of YOU!!!!!!!!!"
In the 2009 movie, imposter kirk did something real kirk would never do, destroy a sitting duck!
Is Daniel Craig an "imposter Bond"? Is Christian Bale an "imposter Batman"? Was Katee Sackhoff an "imposter Starbuck"?
What about The Undiscovered Country? After the first hit, both Kirk and Sulu pounded Chang's ship until it was destroyed.^ Then explain "I...have HAD...enough of YOU!!!!!!!!!"
They were hanging off a cliff. Much different scenario than firing on a sitting duck ship, like a bully and a coward would. There was no equity of danger involved in imposter 2009 kirks actions.
And he is way out of context in this 2009 thing. Mind you, not only in the end scene, but the entire film.
Kirk of TOS was a man who always strived to be a representative of the way humanity SHOULD be, not the way it IS NOW. That is the difference here, and I suggest people who defend the poor characterization of imposter 2009 kirk take this distinction into account.
^ Then explain "I...have HAD...enough of YOU!!!!!!!!!"
They were hanging off a cliff. Much different scenario than firing on a sitting duck ship, like a bully and a coward would. There was no equity of danger involved in imposter 2009 kirks actions.
TOS Kirk is very much a product of the now rather than a representative of some future perfect humanity. The Kirk of TOS is always on a journey in those episodes. He usually arrives at the "right" solution in the final act, after using violence for the first three.And he is way out of context in this 2009 thing. Mind you, not only in the end scene, but the entire film.
Kirk of TOS was a man who always strived to be a representative of the way humanity SHOULD be, not the way it IS NOW. That is the difference here, and I suggest people who defend the poor characterization of imposter 2009 kirk take this distinction into account.
Kirk of TOS was a man who always strived to be a representative of the way humanity SHOULD be, not the way it IS NOW. That is the difference here, and I suggest people who defend the poor characterization of imposter 2009 kirk take this distinction into account.
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