My thoughts on STID is that Khan never needed to be in it. Cumberbatch should have been one of Khan's lieutenants who is trying to free Kahn and the rest of them (but we don't know that it is him throughout the movie). He fails because of Kirk, and then at the end where they show the them all frozen, the camera pans over one of the tubes and it is revealed to be Kahn. Now you have yourself set up for a "wrath of Kahn" type movie without losing what JJ was trying to do with STID.
Cumberbatch should have been an augment from Cold Station 12.My thoughts on STID is that Khan never needed to be in it. Cumberbatch should have been one of Khan's lieutenants who is trying to free Kahn and the rest of them (but we don't know that it is him throughout the movie). He fails because of Kirk, and then at the end where they show the them all frozen, the camera pans over one of the tubes and it is revealed to be Kahn. Now you have yourself set up for a "wrath of Kahn" type movie without losing what JJ was trying to do with STID.
Actually not totally true. The majority of reviews of STID stated that it was good with about the ending and other concerns. Which pretty much echoes my view and the poster aboveCritics AND fan reviews were overwhelmingly positive for this, and the first movie. You may disagree, but about 9/10 of both groups are against your view
That's as much the fact that Khan has been the go to bad guy and TWOK has cast a long shadow that Trek films can't seem to escape.My whole ussue is JJ altered the timeline to make anything possible then reuses TWO episodes (space seed n WOK) rehashinh old things just like TFA is essentially the same movie as ST a new hope..... forces Khan into a movie as he was the best villian in ST lore but gad zero idea why
No set up ala space seed etc. Just forced Khan in to get him in. New universe blank slate so let's use two ideas already used
Kirk's communicator was probably being relayed through Enterprise's systems - like how cell phones workusing a communicator to talk w Scotty from neutral zone while on Earth etc.
My thoughts on STID is that Khan never needed to be in it. Cumberbatch should have been one of Khan's lieutenants who is trying to free Kahn and the rest of them (but we don't know that it is him throughout the movie). He fails because of Kirk, and then at the end where they show the them all frozen, the camera pans over one of the tubes and it is revealed to be Kahn. Now you have yourself set up for a "wrath of Kahn" type movie without losing what JJ was trying to do with STID.
Ok, so leave Khan in there and when nu-Spock is getting advice from old Spock and he asks what happened, old Spock should have said, "I died" in Spock's dead pan way. That would have made that scene much more poignant and maybe powerful for nu-Spock. That way his emotion when Kirk dies would be tied to that where he thinks he should have been the one to die.I like this idea but you'd miss out on three of my favorite scenes in the movie: Cumberbatch saying his name is Khan, Spock screaming Khan, and old Spock saying Khan is dangerous.
If Janeway wouldn't have stopped every 5 minutes to stick her nose in somebody else's business, they would have made it back much faster.The A can make it to the galactic core in a couple hours but it would take Voyager a couple of decades?
It worked well enough for me, as Kirk was left with a "Who?" moment and it shows Khan's sense of self-importance in his name. Often times, in fiction, the reclaiming of a former name shows a sense of power and control.Ok, so leave Khan in there and when nu-Spock is getting advice from old Spock and he asks what happened, old Spock should have said, "I died" in Spock's dead pan way. That would have made that scene much more poignant and maybe powerful for nu-Spock. That way his emotion when Kirk dies would be tied to that where he thinks he should have been the one to die.
Also, I think when Cumberbatch revealed himself as Kahn was lame. Only because unless you are familiar with TOS and TWOK, it falls extremely flat on every one else.
Ok, so leave Khan in there and when nu-Spock is getting advice from old Spock and he asks what happened, old Spock should have said, "I died" in Spock's dead pan way. That would have made that scene much more poignant and maybe powerful for nu-Spock. That way his emotion when Kirk dies would be tied to that where he thinks he should have been the one to die.
It worked well enough for me, as Kirk was left with a "Who?" moment and it shows Khan's sense of self-importance in his name. Often times, in fiction, the reclaiming of a former name shows a sense of power and control.
It actually works on a number of levels.
Thinking about it now, after rewawtching it a couple of times, I really feel like it's Khan reasserting himself and becoming more dominant. His reference to Marcus letting him "sleep" is as much a comment on him being in statsis, as it was the awakening of Khan's more savage nature.I can see the reveal working better off screen. To new fans we know Khan is serious business, to old fans, we know what Spock was saying next - and seeing Spock lay down the plot of TWOK would remove an element of tension and be extremely contrived.
Thats why I liked it. It obviously couldn't be played on to the extreme, but that - and a sense of relief at being able to say the name - was what I got from it.
I agree. C'batch's delivery is very powerful. Also, "Khan" basically means king, which speaks to the character's ego issues.It worked well enough for me, as Kirk was left with a "Who?" moment and it shows Khan's sense of self-importance in his name. Often times, in fiction, the reclaiming of a former name shows a sense of power and control.
It actually works on a number of levels.
Agreed.Cumberbatch should have been an augment from Cold Station 12.
.... and I don't think that the biggest problem with STiD was JJ, I think it was the writers.
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