That said, one of the questions I have is whether the torpedoes really are live ordnance or not. They can't be scanned, so how do we know?
Spock uses them to blow him up.
That said, one of the questions I have is whether the torpedoes really are live ordnance or not. They can't be scanned, so how do we know?
Eh, that doesn't really answer my question. But that's OK, it's one of the issues I'll be looking to resolve on rewatch.That said, one of the questions I have is whether the torpedoes really are live ordnance or not. They can't be scanned, so how do we know?
Spock uses them to blow him up.
I don't even recall Spock or anyone saying exactly what they did (if anything at all) to turn one (or more) of the torpedoes into something live for the beam over to the Vengeance.
Eh, that doesn't really answer my question.That said, one of the questions I have is whether the torpedoes really are live ordnance or not. They can't be scanned, so how do we know?
Spock uses them to blow him up.
Eh, that doesn't really answer my question.Spock uses them to blow him up.
You sure? It seems pretty definitive to me. You can't detonate things that don't contain explosives. But if you want to verify on rewatch, cool...
Physical love doesn't last. No matter how good it is, we may not want to admit to it, but yeah ... you get used to it, eventually. That's when the infidelity begins ...Kirk can have sleep with lots of women but he cant commit to one. I get why most fans say he is married to the enterprise.You'll ... you'll what, teacake? Clarify, for us ... specify! Personally, I'm fine with the idea. Just don't let Kirk marry some large-breasted green alien with scales and nostrils on her forehead ...
Under all that rock, it was a miracle the transporters worked ... It's even easier to conceive of a skeleton crew of refugees from the 20th century lacking the competence required to notice the life-filled bubble scores of meters away from the center of attention.
The writers pre-established that sensors could not detect the Genesis cave. Enterprise's sensors didn't detect it either. While it's an example of sensors working at the power of drama -- perhaps there were Plot-Convenient Deposits above the cave -- both ship's sensors play by the same rules throughout the film and Khan's motivation does not change. Bill is just wrong on this one.
No, I'm pretty sure Spock just arms them.
Chekov says "you have the coordinates" but no one actually gives Khan them to beam up Genesis.
Didn't McCoy accidentally arm one when he and Marcus were examining them?Does arming them require only something electronic, or does it require physically rearranging components inside the case? Just how safe are the torpedoes when they're first delivered to the Enterprise?
Didn't McCoy accidentally arm one when he and Marcus were examining them?Does arming them require only something electronic, or does it require physically rearranging components inside the case? Just how safe are the torpedoes when they're first delivered to the Enterprise?
And to be fair, "ham" in this context is something I'm not a fan of, more often than not. Intentionally over-the-top/hammy depictions of characters is something I'm very picky about in my sci-fi. It could work in certain settings, with a certain flavor. Star Trek is not one of them.Well, if you don't want ham, you surely don't want Montalban's Khan. That's for damn sure. If his being an ancient exotic tyrant or an analogue of Captain Ahab doesn't work for you either, hey, different strokes.
That's a very strange thing to lock onto. Of course that particular action on Khan's part wouldn't sell him as being "menacing". It wasn't supposed to be. I don't really understand what you're going for here; I could say "Standing around worrying about cooking eggs while Picard begs him for help saving an entire star system doesn't actually sell Kirk as being very heroic." That happened in Generations, but that particular scene wasn't supposed to have anything to do with that aspect of Kirk's character (heroism). Perhaps Cumberbatch Khan's degree of menace should be measured by... scenes that had any intention at all of trying to make him seem menacing?Loading one's own crew into explosive torpedoes doesn't actually sell a villain as being more intelligent and menacing than Montalban's Khan for me.
Well, to each their own I suppose. I know I'm in the minority in that I can't take Montalban Khan seriously. That said: ham? From Cumberbatch?And the parts of Cumberbatch's performance where he's selling us on his being Khan were like mainlining concentrated ham extract for me. Cumberbatch's villain is otherwise not bad, but not a huge standout from the Die Hard villain mould; I think there's a reason that we have a scene with Spock calling Spock so that Spock can explain to Spock why Khan is a guy to be feared.![]()
The shields things and the beaming thing are entirely different.Calling it "inexplicable" seems like reaching to me, just as with "why didn't Khan beam him up from Regula One"? It's a bad call, obviously, but hardly an "inexplicable" one, especially from Kirk who's been accustomed to finessing regulations in favour of his own judgment for most of his career, and in fact has no reason to expect an attack from a ship of his own fleet.
Physical love doesn't last. No matter how good it is, we may not want to admit to it, but yeah ... you get used to it, eventually. That's when the infidelity begins ...Kirk can have sleep with lots of women but he cant commit to one. I get why most fans say he is married to the enterprise.You'll ... you'll what, teacake? Clarify, for us ... specify! Personally, I'm fine with the idea. Just don't let Kirk marry some large-breasted green alien with scales and nostrils on her forehead ...
The point is, Cara ... you ladies want Kirk to be single, because, well ... it helps the fantasy.
Same thing with Spock. He never married T'Pring or Saavik for a reason: you women would never accept it. Oh, intellectually, you're fine with the concept that he might secretly long for, and fantasize about, a deeply committed relationship with a woman ... with you. But if these studds you love were to have the temerity to wed onscreen ... that way madness lay, as far as you ladies are concerned.
please don't think I am one of those silly female fans who, don't want a guy to commit to any other girl unless its them.
... that's cute!Wait wait wait wait wait.
Right. Getting old and rusty is—surprise!—the major theme of the film. Though I have to quibble with the not a superhero bit. Kirk still had aces up his sleeve. He whipped out the prefix codes, and after having his ass spanked, he came back swinging, putting up the magnificent fight to get them to the point where it was up to Spock.The reason Kirk doesn't raise the shields is to show that Kirk has lost it to some extent, is rusty, is getting old, a bit arrogant, is more realistic than a super-hero.
Well, oldKhan's lookahead wasn't as flashy as nuKhan's, that's for sure. Notice that oldKhan left Terrell and Chekov on Regula One before going off to fight Kirk. Using them to locate Genesis was a contingency plan, should he fail himself, which was smart. Also, luring the Enterprise by threatening Carol Marcus and then jamming communications with Regula One: very smart. The jamming of course played a part in the Reliant slipping in close at first, since it provided some measure of plausibility in the explanation of overloaded communications equipment. Where he was stupid was that he forgot to use his secret decoder ring. And, ultimately he proved to be old and rusty, too, unable to keep up with the Kirk he had rejuvenated.TWOK Khan didn't. And whatever you can say about how convoluted and twisty STID Khan's plan was, at least he HAD a plan! One of the things that undercut TWOK for me was that the villain seemed frankly like a cackling bully who couldn't plan more than fifteen minutes ahead. The only threatening things he could do were "shock value" threats; i.e. hanging the Regula 1 scientists up from the ceiling after killing them.
And I can appreciate that. In fact, I'd say I don't have a strong preference for either going with "he's old and rusty (at least for a time)" vs. "he's still on top of his game" during the time frame of TWOK - conceptually, that is. And you can see what they were going for in the very next scene: after they drive Reliant off, Kirk comments that he got caught with his pants down, and tells Saavik to keep on quoting regs at him, acknowledging the mistake. That's all fine. My problem is the Reliant approach scene itself. The execution just didn't work for me. It was one of those things that pops your suspension of disbelief and pulls you out of the story. It came off like "he's not putting the shields up because the writers need him to not put the shields up otherwise this scene won't work", instead of "he's not putting the shields up because he's old/rusty/arrogant and is having a moment of completely not living up to his former self."The reason Kirk doesn't raise the shields is to show that Kirk has lost it to some extent, is rusty, is getting old, a bit arrogant, is more realistic than a super-hero.
It was done deliberately and then in the end when he defeats Khan (at a great cost) he makes up for it to some extent. It was the deliberate intent of the writers to show some
vulnerability in Kirk.
Its not 'inexcusable' or 'inexplicable' IMO. People may not like it that their hero Starship Captains can make a mistake but it happened in TOS on occasion - usually not at the cost of people lives or the ship.
I personally would have preferred Kirk to always be perfect and be a cool older Captain like nuPike but that's not the way they went with the TOS movies.
Right. Getting old and rusty is—surprise!—the major theme of the film. Though I have to quibble with the not a superhero bit. Kirk still had aces up his sleeve. He whipped out the prefix codes, and after having his ass spanked, he came back swinging, putting up the magnificent fight to get them to the point where it was up to Spock.The reason Kirk doesn't raise the shields is to show that Kirk has lost it to some extent, is rusty, is getting old, a bit arrogant, is more realistic than a super-hero.
Well, oldKhan's lookahead wasn't as flashy as nuKhan's, that's for sure. Notice that oldKhan left Terrell and Chekov on Regula One before going off to fight Kirk. Using them to locate Genesis was a contingency plan, should he fail himself, which was smart. Also, luring the Enterprise by threatening Carol Marcus and then jamming communications with Regula One: very smart. The jamming of course played a part in the Reliant slipping in close at first, since it provided some measure of plausibility in the explanation of overloaded communications equipment. Where he was stupid was that he forgot to use his secret decoder ring. And, ultimately he proved to be old and rusty, too, unable to keep up with the Kirk he had rejuvenated.TWOK Khan didn't. And whatever you can say about how convoluted and twisty STID Khan's plan was, at least he HAD a plan! One of the things that undercut TWOK for me was that the villain seemed frankly like a cackling bully who couldn't plan more than fifteen minutes ahead. The only threatening things he could do were "shock value" threats; i.e. hanging the Regula 1 scientists up from the ceiling after killing them.
please don't think I am one of those silly female fans who, don't want a guy to commit to any other girl unless its them.
You are talking about 13 year olds. Or rather, a stereotype of 13 year olds. Just because someone doesn't like an onscreen relationship doesn't mean it's because they want one of the players for themselves.
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