I am sure it was a close your eyes and think of Vulcan deal for Saavik.
It was Robin Curtis Saavik, so that seems likely. If it had been Kirstie Alley Saavik? Whole different story. That chick was a goer.
I am sure it was a close your eyes and think of Vulcan deal for Saavik.
It does seem slightly stingy I have to say. Was it a money issue? How much would it have cost to pay her for the reuse of the footage?I just rewatched STIII earlier this week and you know what bugged me? When they played the recording of Kirk explaining Genesis. It's the same explanation Carol Marcus gave in TWOK. Word. For. Word. If they didn't want to pay the actress again by re-using the recording from that film, then at least change Kirk's explanation a LITTLE.
I am sure it was a close your eyes and think of Vulcan deal for Saavik.
Yeh pon farr seems to be so cool unless you're the girl.^boy she really was cold about the finale. Still, don't blame her.
Yeh pon farr seems to be so cool unless you're the girl.^boy she really was cold about the finale. Still, don't blame her.
Shall I go into the rant of no-soul Spock being able to walk and punch guys. No!
Yeh pon farr seems to be so cool unless you're the girl.^boy she really was cold about the finale. Still, don't blame her.
Shall I go into the rant of no-soul Spock being able to walk and punch guys. No!
The more I think about it, I could see Saavik in the role of Valeris. After TWOK I could see an interpretation that had Saavik as a a racist against Klingons. Part of what makes TUC a good story is that I think there is a point to the anti-Klingons. Klingons are dangerous, and we've seen so very much bad from them, that I can at least imagine the pov of the people who are against them. The movie also does a good job to show the other side, that not all Klingons are bad, so there's a complicated well thought out plot with real moral dilemas. The movie actually gives a good pay off to David's death in STIII and makes Kirk's bigotry against the Klingons believable and easy to understand..
What is the moral dilemma in TUC?
Yeh pon farr seems to be so cool unless you're the girl.^boy she really was cold about the finale. Still, don't blame her.
Shall I go into the rant of no-soul Spock being able to walk and punch guys. No!
I think you get the no soul part wrong. He was essentially a couple of days old newborn. Had they removed him from the planet as soon as they found him, he would have lived the life of a normal Vulcan child.
The more I think about it, I could see Saavik in the role of Valeris. After TWOK I could see an interpretation that had Saavik as a a racist against Klingons. Part of what makes TUC a good story is that I think there is a point to the anti-Klingons. Klingons are dangerous, and we've seen so very much bad from them, that I can at least imagine the pov of the people who are against them. The movie also does a good job to show the other side, that not all Klingons are bad, so there's a complicated well thought out plot with real moral dilemas. The movie actually gives a good pay off to David's death in STIII and makes Kirk's bigotry against the Klingons believable and easy to understand..
Yeah, Kim Cattrall did a good job with Valeris, but it would have been so much more dramatic if Saavik had been the traitor. And, as you say, it would have been logical as well. After seeing David Marcus brutally butchered before her eyes, Saavik could be forgiven for distrusting any Klingon "peace" initiative . . ..
I hate to admit it, but ... when I first saw this scene,
I laughed, out loud ...
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