Arlo said:
Spock in ST2: "As I recall you took the test three times yourself. Your final solution was, shall we say, unique?"
Ok, I forgot that bit, and I suppose if one was to retro-interpret the line as almost sarcastic given what may end up being his considerable role in the event, then one could rationalize it. Previous to this Trek XI plot point, I think the line was simply to be taken as Spock's knowing what Kirk did in the past, not any actual involvement.
I still see it as a contrivance (why must the big 3 just *happen* to have been so involved with each other?), but I guess this is all speculative until popcorn is in our laps.
You're assuming that the entire "big 3" are present at the same time.
I think it's very likely that Spock was present in some form when Lieutenant Kirk was at Command School. I don't see him as another Command School student, however. More likely than not, he was at the academy for some other purpose... either as an instructor, or for advanced science branch studies, or both. (Similarly, Lieutenant Kirk was both in Command School and was teaching classes... including one with Gary Mitchell as a student... and at that same point he met a "little blonde lab tech" he almost married... who I assume was Carol Marcus).
This stuff isn't "fanboy" because it's already there. That, by itself, doesn't make it "fanboy." It's not "fanboy" because we know it.
It COULD be "fanboy." But ONLY if it's presented in a way that isn't really important to the telling of the story.
I've been saying, for a YEAR now, that much of this story is going to be about "who these guys are and how they got their start." I'm still not convinced, entirely, that there's any actual TIME TRAVEL in the plot (do we have ANY confirmation of that?). I see it as being just as likely that it's a story told from the perspective of Nimoy's Spock. So far, other than "Ain't it Cool News" saying otherwise (which I don't really take too seriously)... there's no actual EVIDENCE to suggest otherwise... is there?
We know that Eric Bana will be in the film, that he's RUMORED to play a villain, and that his character is RUMORED to be a Romulan, and that the name on the call-sheets has been "Nero" (which, honestly, seems just a little bit TOO "contrived" to not question, at least a little bit!).
We were told that the "Guardian of Forever" would be in the flick. But that turned out to be untrue.
We know that we'll see George and Winona Kirk. We know that we'll see Sarek and Amanda. We know that we'll see Christopher Pike. We know that we'll see Kirk and Spock at the Academy. We know that we'll see Chekov, Uhura, Sulu, and Scotty. The only REAL thing that all of this tells us about the film is that the film is set in multiple timeframes (which proves NOTHING about the actual plot... except that it won't be a typical, linear "adventure of the week" show).
Guys... you're calling that "fanboy" but as far as I can tell (not claiming that JJ told me anything in person, mind you!), this could be fundamental to the type of story that JJ wants to tell.
If it's just thrown in as a "bone" for the fans... then it doesn't belong in there at all. But if the movie isn't a "rollicking romp with big 'splosions" but is more about PEOPLE... and if the people in question, really, are Jim Kirk and Spock (everyone else being in "supporting character" roles)... seems to me that this is pretty far from "fanboy" and is probably FUNDAMENTAL to the story JJ Abrams wants to tell.
We may see more about "how Jim Kirk became who we got to know later on" in other timeframes... including (but not necessarily limited to) the first time Kirk meets a civilian Leonard McCoy, and at least one period set on the TOS Enterprise. (Not to mention the inevitable 24th or 25th century scenes with Nimoy as Spock.)