I think Kirk would have realized sooner or later that Edith Keeler was dead, partly because of him.Did the Generations people (i.e. Berman, Braga, etc.) ever explain why they went with Antonia instead of Edith Keeler, Janet Wallace or any other of the established love interests for Kirk?
I would've thought having Edith Keeler at the top of that hill would've been a powerful moment.
Made doubly so by Kirk's decision to walk away, making it more sorrowful and heroic.
What if Kirk's last words weren't, "Oh, my." but "Edith..."
Damn.
They didn't even have to show Joan Collins...they could've easily CGI'd her in the distance, no different from how Antonia was presented.
I doubt they could've used Collins' likeness without her permission. There are rules against that sort thing.
Well, maybe the Nexus "wants" its inhabitants to never leave? And to do so, it makes them forget who they are as much as possible... Ergo, it takes vague, emotional desires (family, an earthy, work-filled retirement) and creates scenarios based on those tones rather than facts or specific memories. The Nexus thus doesn't care about Edith Keeler or Picard's interest archeological history, and it certainly doesn't want its captures thinking very much, or brushing up against an uncanny valley effect.
I like this idea. A clever extrapolation from the facts the movie presents to us.
Personally, I've long been of the opinion that Antonia (and Kirk's temporary retirement) were both imaginary. I think she was someone that Kirk might've met in passing or never got to be introduced to who became a symbol of a great "might have been" in Kirk's life.
Sort of like this monologue from Bernstein in Citizen Kane:
"A fellow will remember a lot of things you wouldn't think he'd remember. You take me. One day, back in 1896, I was crossing over to Jersey on the ferry, and as we pulled out, there was another ferry pulling in, and on it there was a girl waiting to get off. A white dress she had on. She was carrying a white parasol. I only saw her for one second. She didn't see me at all, but I'll bet a month hasn't gone by since that I haven't thought of that girl."
The thing is, the Nexus wasn't reality. Picard realized it, then Guinan's "echo" showed up to reinforce it. Kirk realized it wasn't real when his horse didn't hesitate at the jump.
I think the whole point is that our Captains' realities were stronger than the pull of whatever the Nexus offered.
EDIT: I don't get why people would prefer to stick a cameo into something that clearly, from my point of view, would be fanwank and therefore unnecessary.
Well, that's a load off. I had begun to loose sleep and drink heavily.Still not sure why you think this need to pointed out.It means you're stating the obvious: In the movie, Kirk says, "The day I told her I was going back to Starfleet." That implies he had left or semi-retired or retired?
When was that in the timeline, you think?
During TOS? Prior to TMP? Obviously it was after TMP.
It's ok. Don't worry about it.![]()
Well, that's a load off. I had begun to loose sleep and drink heavily.Still not sure why you think this need to pointed out.
It's ok. Don't worry about it.![]()
Yes. Because we didn't care about Kirk leaving Antonia - and Kirk didn't seem too bothered either - it weakened the narrative of the Nexus being this wonderful awful addictive place that was so difficult to leave.
that would also explain why we don't see Picard and Co helping Spock out in his mindmeld flashbackThe only way this would actually work is if Picard never really left the Nexus. His meeting with Kirk, return to the real world, defeating Soran, FC, INS, NEM, and all the rest never actually happened, and it's all just a Nexus-induced fantasy.
Captain spock (on a new ship not Ent A) would deal with sybok possibly without having the ship hijacked (as his ship would've been fully functional). Then overseen the peace stuff with the Klingons (maybe the outcome would've been similar) the Ent B gets its launch without Kirk (or Spock). Don't manage to save anyone. Guinan and Soran remain in the nexus. (which would mean the federation would be destroyed by the Klingons)The assumption is that Kirk retired sometime between TMP and TWOK. It would make a little sense. Admiral Kirk loses command of the Enterprise again, decides to leave Starfleet this time instead of say behind a desk. Yet something calls to him to go back even if it is to the Academy. At least he can still take rides on Enterprise.
In a world he decides to stay retired with this woman, things change. Perhaps he was responsible for at least part of the Genesis Project and without him, they wouldn't get the funding so USS Reliant never goes to Ceti Alpha V. Khan doesn't get his revenge, Spock doesn't die, the Enterprise stays in service in some capacity. David doesn't get killed by Klingons. Of course there is the whole Whalesong problem, but if Spock is still Captain of the Enterprise, even as a training ship, he would have figured out the solution with or without Kirk. And Enterprise would be more suited to getting some whales than that Bird of Prey. Enterprise-Spock save the day and Kirk goes on riding his horses.
Yes. Because we didn't care about Kirk leaving Antonia - and Kirk didn't seem too bothered either - it weakened the narrative of the Nexus being this wonderful awful addictive place that was so difficult to leave.
Yep, that was my point. We're beaten over the head with the fact that the Nexus is so addictive that you'll never want to leave it (Guinan), and if you do, you'll do anything to get back (Soran). And yet Picard and Kirk find it very easy to leave and never come back. This is the biggest flaw of all in the film.
The only way this would actually work is if Picard never really left the Nexus. His meeting with Kirk, return to the real world, defeating Soran, FC, INS, NEM, and all the rest never actually happened, and it's all just a Nexus-induced fantasy.
Little did you know, that's what he's really into.Except Picard's life, especially in Nemesis, with Shizon and Data's death, is pretty depressing.
Well, okay, but it's also quite easily explained away - Picard and Kirk made conscious decisions to leave the Nexus, whereas Guinan and Soran were ripped out, and the trauma of the latter method is incomparably worse than the former process. (But they wouldn't know that; they'd only know how awful it was for them.) One could, if one were so inclined, make a crude analogy to different forms of sex, which I won't spell out any further. Fan apologism? Sure, guilty as charged... and it's a finding I can live with.We're beaten over the head with the fact that the Nexus is so addictive that you'll never want to leave it (Guinan), and if you do, you'll do anything to get back (Soran). And yet Picard and Kirk find it very easy to leave and never come back. This is the biggest flaw of all in the film.
It should have been Carol Marcus, IMO. And I suspect the reason they invented a new lost love instead of using someone known, was the same penny-pinching that led to Nick Whatshisname being changed to Tom Paris, or T'Pau becoming T'Pol in ENT.
Meh. All it means is that Kirk had another love interest later in life. Hardly unbelievable, and also at the same time also not universe shrinking, either. I'm ok with that.
As far as Picard's fantasy is concerned, why a Victorian Christmas? ....
Jean-Luc Picard: the most Anglophile Frenchman ever!![]()
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