But yelling out the villain's name is weird; why didn't he do that with Nero?
Spock did scream, albeit wordlessly, both times he'd previously lost his temper - with the Vulcan bully when he was a child (BTW, I loved the mirror of Spock wailing on the bully in ST'09 and him wailing on Khan at the end of ID) and when Kirk goaded him into attacking him in ST'09. So it does kind of fit previous behaviour.But what does yelling out Khan after nuKirk's death do for nuSpock?
....I find the part very funny and a little enduring. sometimes when something is bad and at the same time funny it becomes fun to watch.
Maybe people feel different but that screen overall is one of the worst moment in trek history for me personally, however it is Funny to watch and very enduring..
They were moving one way (and could only go one way: down), which is why Chekov was able to beam them up. Khan was moving around in an unpredictable pattern.
Really didn't like it. It was clearly written, not as a natural next step of the scene, but merely as a shout-out to TWOK, which cheapened Kirk's "death" scene even more (and I thought Pine did okay). Yeah, Spock's character has been established to go off the handle at times, which is set up in the first movie. But yelling out the villain's name is weird; why didn't he do that with Nero? (then again, if he yelled out Nero and then Khan's name, it'd be a running joke. And as it is, Shatner's scream used to be famous primarily among Trekkies, but is now an internet staple.)
But on a larger scale, it just didn't make any sense to flip Kirk and Spock in that scene, or to reference the TWOK death scene anyway. In TWOK, Spock's death meant a transformation for Kirk -- the guy who cheated the Kobayashi Maru was suddenly faced with a no-win situation that cost his friend his life; in essence, Spock made Kirk "cheat" by taking the fall for his captain. The death of Spock, who dwelt on the meaning of friendship earlier in the movie, meant that Kirk, who for much of the movie had contemplated his age and usefulness, found new life with his friend's passing, to the point where Kirk bookends the movie: when it starts, he tells Bones that he feels old, and when it ends, he tells Carol that he feels young again. It made a ton of narrative sense and brought the movie around full circle.
But what does yelling out Khan after nuKirk's death do for nuSpock? For Kirk, the guy who earlier bragged that he hadn't lost a single crewman under his command, became the ultimate casualty and saved his ship in the process. He matured from a cocky, dishonest, excuse-making youth to a real captain who did exactly what his father did. That's a good arc, I think. Yet, what that meant for Spock was essentially a scream that undid that impact by triggering memories of a pop culture meme, followed by a can of spinach to beam down and take on Bluto-Khan.
Nope.into darkness has faded into the void.
Nope.into darkness has faded into the void.
Nope.into darkness has faded into the void.
I can think of many more 'worst moments' in 'Star Trek history':
For example (in no particular order):
1. Spock's Brain - zombie Spock
2. Uhura's fan dance
3. The 'boob' joke in INS
4. The Kirk death scene in GEN
5. The skant
6. Beverley and Deanna throwing themselves at Picard and Riker in 'The Naked Now'
7. Picard getting annoyed at Data for saving the human popsicles.
8. The Salamander incident in VOY.
...
255. Data being a human floatation device.
And so on
They showed that he was back in one of the cryo-pods.
Could you explain your thought process for making that determination? Is there a specific "mechanism" you use for evaluating and analysing the evidence/data currently available on the movie?Nope.into darkness has faded into the void.
Yup. Or more accurately, is fading into the void. In a few more years it will have completely faded.
I've said before, that Into Darkness is the Quantum of Solace of the Trek movies. A disappointing follow up to a successful reboot film. Maybe with the 50th anniversary coming up the new Trek film will be the Trek equivalent to Skyfall. But after Into Darkness I have no interest in seeing another Star Trek movie ever again.
Well, they'd better make it double quick, apparently Into Darkness is "fading away"They showed that he was back in one of the cryo-pods.
Conveniently leaving it open for a sequel, I guess. I must have been in a self-medicated haze to have missed that.
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