Actually no. Lots of people think that Leonard Nimoy is portraying Spock from the original Star Trek universe but if you study the movie carefully you will discover this to not be the case at all.
Eh? I misunderstood you. Spock Prime
came from the Prime Universe - that universe was not actually depicted in the film at all. I thought that's what you meant.
It's true that we have no way to verify that Nimoy is playing the same Spock as he has played before. It's not like he can talk to the audience and say, "yeah I'm the same guy, calm down and just eat your popcorn!"
So we can believe whatever we like. It makes sense that JJ meant for Nimoy's Spock to be the Spock we all know and love, and I'm pretty sure that's what he intended. Good enough for me.
Arguing about Spock - which is unprovable one way or the other in the context of the story - is a lot less interesting to me than arguing whether we're dealing with an alternate timeline or alternate reality.
Previous Trek plainly establishes in EVERY time-change episode that the timeline of a single universe is changed by changes in history, and in turn can be restored to pretty much how it should be.
Not necessarily. Every time Our Heroes though they were restoring the timeline, they may have simply been catapulting themselves into a different reality in which the timeline had never been broken. It remains broken in their original reality, but since the new reality looks exactly like their original one, they are none the wiser.
And when ya think about it, that makes more intuitive sense than the absurd notion that you can break the timeline and then restore it precisely to what it was before. That's like unscrambling an egg. Even though it's the dominant (but not sole) time travel logic employed by
Star Trek, that doesn't mean it makes any damn sense. Not that any of it makes any damn sense...
I also like the idea that the Starfleet dolts have been deluding themselves all along that they have the godlike power to retore a whole frakkin' timeline. What arrogance!
He'd find a way to go back and destroy the Narada before it even SAW the Kelvin.
That's exactly what I said up there somewheres - if we're talking timelines, Spock has a moral responsibility to do that Starfleet restore-the-timeline schtick. But if we're talking realities, the heat is off and he isn't forced into that tired routine.
That's why JJ & the gang shoehorned that weird dialogue into the story that implied that the characters had a preternatural knowledge that they were dealing with different realities rather than timelines. That really smacked me in the face when I heard it - how the frak could they know?
Which clued me in that there was some meta agenda here. JJ was signalling to the audience that "no, we aren't doing the reset-the-timeline thing again. Eat your damn popcorn already!" By letting Spock off the hook, JJ & co were letting themselves and the audience off the hook. They made the right choice! Does anyone really want to revisit such a tired storyline?
Not accepting what the WRITERS/MAKERS/CAST/PRODUCERS OF THE MOVIE ITSELF tell you, there's literally no chance of you accepting anything we say.
The writers do have to make a decent attempt to sell their ideas in the storyline and not just tell us what they intended in interviews. However, the
Trek XI writers have done a respectable job. Maybe there are little boggles here and there that can be cobbled together into a contrary argument, but I'm willing to overlook the small stuff as long as they take care of the big stuff.
The big stuff is: we get a new
Trek universe to play with, with hot young actors playing beloved old characters, in which new and unexpected things can happen, and nobody is being railroaded into boring resetting the timeline antics. Compared with that, any mistakes are small potatoes.
The only assertion the writers have made is that Spock Prime is TOS Spock. They have not explained in anyway why in Trek 2009 why time travel does not function is the same way as in every other incarnation of Star Trek. Nor have they explained how this can be the TOS Spock given that he is functioning under a totally different set of time travel rules from those that existed for TOS Spock.
Trek XI does not deal with time travel. It deals with travel between alternate realities. Even if Star Trek had logical, consistent rules about time travel, they wouldn't apply to
Trek XI.
I'm curious, how exactly can Spock-Prime establish himself as "TOS Spock" within the context of the movie?
They can't. The "meta" dialogue between Kirk and Spock was as far as JJ & co could push the breaking-the-fourth-wall attempt to directly tell the audience what was going on and pre-empt threads like this. It didn't rule out the notion that Spock is, say, actually Spock from the MU, who did a really bang-up job destroying the Terran Empire and turning his universe into a doppleganger of the Prime Universe and then blowing up Romulus and bopping into an entirely different universe for an encore. And somewhere along the line he married Marlena Moreau (after she killed MU Uhura in hand to hand combat) and lost the goatee. A fun topic for a fanfic perhaps, but as part of the movie franchise, it's a non-starter. So it can't be what JJ & co. intended. Why fuss over it then?