Not trying to convince you of anything. Pointing out that they had uniform hats. It's fun trivia, and fact.
Not trying to convince you of anything. Pointing out that they had uniform hats. It's fun trivia, and fact.
Not trying to convince you of anything. Pointing out that they had uniform hats. It's fun trivia, and fact.
OK, but they did away with various things from the un-aired pilot, that was obviously one of them as we never saw it again.
I'm just pointing out that I'm being sent links to a picture of a hat on a table, It's not going to change my opinion that I suddenly like it.
Congtratulations: you got sucked in by a political troll image nearly two years old, which has nothing whatsoever to do with the thread topic or forum.I can't really take you seriously with that avatar. Just saying.
Which amounts to "Nyah, same to you!"I can't really take you seriously with that avatar. Just saying.
Pot meet kettle..Just saying...
Neat, but that's completely off-topic, and it's out of place in this forum.I can't really take you seriously with that avatar. Just saying.
I think he has the best avatar on the forum.
Not trying to convince you of anything. Pointing out that they had uniform hats. It's fun trivia, and fact.
You think Spock would happily a planet full of innocents die?He seemed overly cavalier about his decision compared to how others regarded the Prime Directive and it didn't make sense that Spock wouldn't have objected, let alone to the point of playing the major role, and then not try to defend the decision later.
Spock didn't think Kirk would cover up the mission.
Take a look at the nasty red marks Shatner's Grabby Kirk left on Reyna's arms in "Requiem for Muthuselah" - Pine's Kirk would never do something like that.There's a difference between reusing a story and thematic idea and blatantly trying to remake much of a story; I thought Enterprise "Terra Nova" and Nemesis were much too close to past works and thus some of my least favorite (although "Friendship One" was very recent and bad to begin with).
As for the Eve in underwear scene, it seemed pointless but worse because I didn't like Kirk ignoring her telling him to turn around; the original Kirk would never do that but it seemed, unfortunately, like only a small stretch for Abrams version.
She was bothered by his willingness to put himself in danger and his post-Vulcan lack of communication, not his Vulcan nature. As was explained on the ride to Kronos.Did you find it believable that Uhura would love Spock but be so unaccepting, almost not even understanding, about his reserved, logical nature
Yes and yes.or that Spock wouldn't alert Kirk about Carol's identity earlier (or that he would contact his alternate self from the bridge)?
The dialogue of the protagonists was mediocre, the action boring and the plotting very convoluted and unbelieaveable.
You pretty much just described every Trek film in a nutshell.![]()
Maybe Simon Pegg is just annoyed that these people will never shut up about how much they hate the movie not matter how much time passes
as well as the fact that they will just randomly bring said hatred up in conversations that have nothing to do with said movie
I't funny how a few people are trying to convince me of the whole hat thing that was a flash on the screen of an original un-aired pilot that no one in the show ever actually wore.
I love it every time someone says stuff like "You think STD is bad? Well, every Trek has been bad."
It's like "If you don't like my favorite Trek, you shouldn't enjoy your favorite Trek!!!"
Why not? Standards change, as we're talking taste here.I love it every time someone says stuff like "You think STD is bad? Well, every Trek has been bad."
It's like "If you don't like my favorite Trek, you shouldn't enjoy your favorite Trek!!!"
It isn't that. It's more like you can't hold the newer part of the franchise to a higher standard than you do the older parts--and vice versa. If you're willing to let one slide, then you should let the other slide. Not saying you have to enjoy both or nothing, just be fair about being critical.
Why not? Standards change, as we're talking taste here.I love it every time someone says stuff like "You think STD is bad? Well, every Trek has been bad."
It's like "If you don't like my favorite Trek, you shouldn't enjoy your favorite Trek!!!"
It isn't that. It's more like you can't hold the newer part of the franchise to a higher standard than you do the older parts--and vice versa. If you're willing to let one slide, then you should let the other slide. Not saying you have to enjoy both or nothing, just be fair about being critical.
Again, simple fairness. You can't bust JJ Abrams nuts over some of the sillier things he's done with the reboots and let Gene Roddenberry, Berman, Braga, all have a pass for equally silly/same things.
Why not? Standards change, as we're talking taste here.It isn't that. It's more like you can't hold the newer part of the franchise to a higher standard than you do the older parts--and vice versa. If you're willing to let one slide, then you should let the other slide. Not saying you have to enjoy both or nothing, just be fair about being critical.
Again, simple fairness. You can't bust JJ Abrams nuts over some of the sillier things he's done with the reboots and let Gene Roddenberry, Berman, Braga, all have a pass for equally silly/same things.
There's a difference between "Well I didn't like the story/cast /SFX" andWhy not? Standards change, as we're talking taste here.
Again, simple fairness. You can't bust JJ Abrams nuts over some of the sillier things he's done with the reboots and let Gene Roddenberry, Berman, Braga, all have a pass for equally silly/same things.
Of course you can. Since when is taste fair? If you don't like the overall film, of course you find flaws in it. Sole nitpicks are never the reason people don't like a film, they are only symptoms picked as examples in discussions.
Discussions here usually go this way:
Person 1: I fucking loved it.
Person 2: Yeah, it was great.
Person 3: I want babies with it.
Person 4: Meh, I didn't like it.
Person 1: Why?
Person 2: Why?!
Person 3: WHY?!?!
Person 4: Yeah, you know, because of this and that and those and these.
And the shitstorm begins where Person 4 has to defend his opinion down to the tiniest detail against those other people. And eventually Person 4 gets bullied into argument corners and then labelled as butthurt or extremely nerdy, who "can't enjoy something for what it is", or who is on a hate quest against the director/cast/writer.
It also goes the other way round when the majority dislikes a film and someone comes in saying he liked it.
There's a difference between "Well I didn't like the story/cast /SFX" andAgain, simple fairness. You can't bust JJ Abrams nuts over some of the sillier things he's done with the reboots and let Gene Roddenberry, Berman, Braga, all have a pass for equally silly/same things.
Of course you can. Since when is taste fair? If you don't like the overall film, of course you find flaws in it. Sole nitpicks are never the reason people don't like a film, they are only symptoms picked as examples in discussions.
Discussions here usually go this way:
Person 1: I fucking loved it.
Person 2: Yeah, it was great.
Person 3: I want babies with it.
Person 4: Meh, I didn't like it.
Person 1: Why?
Person 2: Why?!
Person 3: WHY?!?!
Person 4: Yeah, you know, because of this and that and those and these.
And the shitstorm begins where Person 4 has to defend his opinion down to the tiniest detail against those other people. And eventually Person 4 gets bullied into argument corners and then labelled as butthurt or extremely nerdy, who "can't enjoy something for what it is", or who is on a hate quest against the director/cast/writer.
It also goes the other way round when the majority dislikes a film and someone comes in saying he liked it.
"It's stupid case of XYZ! TOS would have never done XYZ!"
"Well TOS did do XYZ"
"Uh well that was TOS, that's different,"
"How?"
"Cause TOS was sci-fi!"
If the story or the cast didn't appeal to you, fine. If you think it's a rehash or an all flash no substance movie, fine. But don't bust on them when they do the same bullshit we laud the other series for. Just cause the bullshit is from a different supplier doesn't make it any less bullshit.
Why not? Standards change, as we're talking taste here.
Again, simple fairness. You can't bust JJ Abrams nuts over some of the sillier things he's done with the reboots and let Gene Roddenberry, Berman, Braga, all have a pass for equally silly/same things.
Of course you can. Since when is taste fair? If you don't like the overall film, of course you find flaws in it. Sole nitpicks are never the reason people don't like a film, they are only symptoms picked as examples in discussions.
Discussions here usually go this way:
Person 1: I fucking loved it.
Person 2: Yeah, it was great.
Person 3: I want babies with it.
Person 4: Meh, I didn't like it.
Person 1: Why?
Person 2: Why?!
Person 3: WHY?!?!
Person 4: Yeah, you know, because of this and that and those and these.
And the shitstorm begins where Person 4 has to defend his opinion down to the tiniest detail against those other people. And eventually Person 4 gets bullied into argument corners and then labelled as butthurt or extremely nerdy, who "can't enjoy something for what it is", or who is on a hate quest against the director/cast/writer.
It also goes the other way round when the majority dislikes a film and someone comes in saying he liked it.
Discussions here usually go this way:
Person 1: I fucking loved it.
Person 2: Yeah, it was great.
Person 3: I want babies with it.
Person 4: Meh, I didn't like it.
Person 1: Why?
Person 2: Why?!
Person 3: WHY?!?!
Person 4: Yeah, you know, because of this and that and those and these.
And the shitstorm begins where Person 4 has to defend his opinion down to the tiniest detail against those other people. And eventually Person 4 gets bullied into argument corners and then labelled as butthurt or extremely nerdy, who "can't enjoy something for what it is", or who is on a hate quest against the director/cast/writer.
And the shitstorm begins where Person 4 has to defend his opinion down to the tiniest detail against those other people. And eventually Person 4 gets bullied into argument corners and then labelled as butthurt or extremely nerdy, who "can't enjoy something for what it is", or who is on a hate quest against the director/cast/writer.
It also goes the other way round when the majority dislikes a film and someone comes in saying he liked it.
Well, no, they don't usually go that way, and you know it. Buuut you got your agreements from all-too-predictable quarters, so score yourself a point, give yourself a smug pat on the back, and sit down. I'd really like to not see you needling for a while, Jarod.Why not? Standards change, as we're talking taste here.
Again, simple fairness. You can't bust JJ Abrams nuts over some of the sillier things he's done with the reboots and let Gene Roddenberry, Berman, Braga, all have a pass for equally silly/same things.
Of course you can. Since when is taste fair? If you don't like the overall film, of course you find flaws in it. Sole nitpicks are never the reason people don't like a film, they are only symptoms picked as examples in discussions.
Discussions here usually go this way:
Person 1: I fucking loved it.
Person 2: Yeah, it was great.
Person 3: I want babies with it.
Person 4: Meh, I didn't like it.
Person 1: Why?
Person 2: Why?!
Person 3: WHY?!?!
Person 4: Yeah, you know, because of this and that and those and these.
And the shitstorm begins where Person 4 has to defend his opinion down to the tiniest detail against those other people. And eventually Person 4 gets bullied into argument corners and then labelled as butthurt or extremely nerdy, who "can't enjoy something for what it is", or who is on a hate quest against the director/cast/writer.
It also goes the other way round when the majority dislikes a film and someone comes in saying he liked it.
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