Overall this is a movie I don't mind very much; it would have been better as an episode rather than a feature film, but the basic story itself is okay (even if the execution was off.)
But just yesterday I was watching a documentary about the Voyager spacecraft, launched in the 1970s, and which have just recently "officially" left our solar system and into interstellar space. One of the Voyager probes makes a cameo in TFF as the Klingon captain's "target practice". Thing is, the probes are moving extremely slowly at sublight speed -- if my math is right, they would still be only about a light-week away from Earth at the Star Trek time frame. That distance is essentially "nothing" in a future where warp drive is common (by comparison it's more than four light-years even to the closest star.)
So what gives? How could the Klingon ship be across the Neutral Zone and even so close to Earth without any consequences at all? Especially in the context of the previous movie where, from the Klingons' perspective, Kirk had just recently been let off the hook for the "murder of a Klingon crew"?
But just yesterday I was watching a documentary about the Voyager spacecraft, launched in the 1970s, and which have just recently "officially" left our solar system and into interstellar space. One of the Voyager probes makes a cameo in TFF as the Klingon captain's "target practice". Thing is, the probes are moving extremely slowly at sublight speed -- if my math is right, they would still be only about a light-week away from Earth at the Star Trek time frame. That distance is essentially "nothing" in a future where warp drive is common (by comparison it's more than four light-years even to the closest star.)
So what gives? How could the Klingon ship be across the Neutral Zone and even so close to Earth without any consequences at all? Especially in the context of the previous movie where, from the Klingons' perspective, Kirk had just recently been let off the hook for the "murder of a Klingon crew"?
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