Can someone rotate a 3D model of the new Enterprise against this still to prove that this is a different starship class?
It's not the Enterprise hitting the water, it's this ship:
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I found this pic online. It's from the trailer shown at the end of the 9-minute preview.
...with some sort of space station or other ship on the right side of the picture.
...with some sort of space station or other ship on the right side of the picture.
That's Kirk taking a space dive.![]()
...with some sort of space station or other ship on the right side of the picture.
That's Kirk taking a space dive.![]()
Oh, yeah. I can make out the boots and the rest of the shape, now. Unless you just planted that image in my head with your suggestion.![]()
I don't mean to throw a bucket of cold water on the pic (badda-bing!), but that looks like a very blurry picture of a starship by a cratered moon, with some sort of space station or other ship on the right side of the picture. Not a ship underwater or even about to hit water. Just my take.
Yeah, I should have said I think that's the ship that skims the water, because of the further-apart nacelles. It could easily be another ship.Franklin said:The scene doesn't portend much about that ship's fate,
though.
more hereThe last trailer scared the fans showing a half-destroyed Enterprise in orbit of Earth. Any comments ?
Are you sure it was the Enterprise? This is a J.J. Abrams movie after all!
I think that possibility has already occurred to a few people here, and Chambliss pretty much avoided giving a direct answer to the question, so I'll wait and see.You know what would really be a kicker? If the ship crashing is all part of a Spock nightmare sequence, a la Countdown to Darkness #1![]()
TrekWeb[Gustavo Leao]: Would you send a message to the fans regarding your work in INTO DARKNESS ?
Scott Chambliss: My message is my work itself. I leave it to others to define it for themselves. Isn't that one of the great qualities of the experience of watching a movie? Our responses to what we see are always utterly subjective in the end.
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