Actually, it seems to me that "Immunity Syndrome" is the only case in Star Trek history where either our heroes or their contemporary colleagues give such praise.
Timo Saloniemi
Amok Time.
Actually, it seems to me that "Immunity Syndrome" is the only case in Star Trek history where either our heroes or their contemporary colleagues give such praise.
Timo Saloniemi
The whole POINT of Trek is that the Big E is a SPECIAL SHIP!
Only twelve like it in the fleet!
Sure sounds like someone who has been doing it a long time, no?
part of the whole CONCEPT of Trek is the idea that the Captain of the ship - be it Pike....Kirk...even Picard...is a SPECIAL officer
The whole POINT of Trek is that the Big E is a SPECIAL SHIP!
That's for saturday kiddie specials (TAS perhaps notwithstanding). Real heroes don't fly fanboy-designed überships. They work with what has been given to them, and are all the more heroic for it.
Kirk, Pike, and all the concepts for TOS leads before them were supposed to be the Horatio Hornblowers of space: heroes from the rank and file, not born to the purple. Nothing in TOS contradicts this concept.
Only twelve like it in the fleet!
There'd hardly be an infinite number of any ship type, from battleship to minesweeper. Only six Pegasus hydrofoils in recent USN; very special, but hardly the cream of the cream.
In contrast, there's no limit set for the number of starships in Starfleet.
Sure sounds like someone who has been doing it a long time, no?
More like somebody who has not yet learned to cope. Kirk lost dozens of crew during the first few years of his mission; this seems to be Pike's first loss.
part of the whole CONCEPT of Trek is the idea that the Captain of the ship - be it Pike....Kirk...even Picard...is a SPECIAL officer
Absolutely not. Kirk is an Iowan farmboy, Picard is the son of a vintner. Not noblemen, but ordinary working stiffs. Picard is older than Kirk and has more brownie points, so he gets to command the Federation Flagship and is a celebrity of sorts (either as the cause or as the effect), but nowhere is Kirk's ship considered such a special showpiece. Picard's crew also has some celebrities aboard - the android, the Klingon, the ambassador's daughter. Kirk only has Spock, who's an outcast of sorts and keeps a low profile. And neither Picard nor Kirk brags about being special, of being the SG-1 that gets sent to sort out the mess made by SG-13.
Our heroes are not specially anointed, that's the very point of Trek. They are people for whom space exploration is not an adventure but a day's work, people who tackle the absurdities of the week by referring to their generic Starfleet training and using their generic Starfleet hardware, plus a healthy dose of common sense and natural charm.
Timo Saloniemi
Bread and Circuses said:MERIK: He commands not just a spaceship, Proconsul, but a starship. A very special vessel and crew. I tried for such a command.
The decisions made in JJ's movie had more to do with playing to the general public's conceptions (and misconceptions) about Star Trek, even if those preconceived notions had no resemblance to the actual show.
I think that's quite true. Due to the worshipful treatment given the characters and ship in the movies and spinoffs, lots of people just assume that Kirk and his crew and his ship were always the universally acknowledge superstars of Starfleet. Not so in TOS.The decisions made in JJ's movie had more to do with playing to the general public's conceptions (and misconceptions) about Star Trek, even if those preconceived notions had no resemblance to the actual show.
Only the former. Kirk doesn't become particularly unique simply for being a starship skipper. Even in the TOS context where a starship is a better ship than others, there are starships and starships: the ancient Archon was one, too. No doubt various second-rate starships serve at all times alongside the current operational spearheads and the latest prototypes.You do seem to ignore Kor's delight at having captured a starship captain and Merrick's stating that the commander of a starship is a special individual...
Yeah, might be Kirk is legendary among Klingons. Might simply be that Kor is delighted to have "a starship commander", any starship commander, in his hands, and realizes that Kirk must be from the starship that was reported to be in this area (and that Klingons already tried to intercept in vain).Kor: "Captain of the USS Enterprise. A starship commander. And his first officer? I had hoped to meet you in battle, but -"
Do we have a reason to think the feat would require more than one ship of any other type?Add to the fact that single Connie can destroy the habitable surface of a planet per A Taste of Armageddon
But we don't know if the crew really did anything extraordinarily extraordinary; at the end of each episode, it simply seemed like it was time for the usual beer after a competent nine-to-five day.I think because of that it was assumed the Enterprise itself was "the" ship of the fleet.
In the movie, the ship was exalted and revered before Kirk set foot on it. Sort of the reverse dramatic effect from the one where our heroes make an impression through their heroics and thus give their ship a good rep, too. I wouldn't consider that dramatic choice a mindless copying of (mis)perceived TOS ideas, but a wholly deliberate decision that intentionally sets the movie timeline apart from the old TV show one.I also guess that is why they decided to officially make the Enterprise the flagship in XI.
...Which is why anything said by Scotty or LaForge on the issue might have to be taken with a sack or two of salt. Curiously, Kirk was extremely hesistant to give praise to his ship or crew in terms of superlatives. He lauded their competence, not their excellence. Spock's "Immunity Syndrome" pep talk is a very rare example of superlative use, and is not undersigned by Kirk.I would think that to a Captain or crewmember their ship is special.
But we don't know if the crew really did anything extraordinarily extraordinary; at the end of each episode, it simply seemed like it was time for the usual beer after a competent nine-to-five day.
Nor did it seem that our heroes were ever assigned any missions of the nature where previous crews had failed and the best of the best were now being brought in to complete the job. Sometimes the heroes stumbled onto situations where previous Starfleeters or Earthlings had met with failure, but they were never actually assigned to sort out something where a starship or other Federation asset had recently failed. The cream of the cream could be expected to be tasked with exactly that sort of work.
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This is my favorite Captain Pike.
Beep & blink your light once if you agree. Twice if you don't.
By the time we hit the movies, it became a point of " We need to send out Jim Kirk and the Enterprise to save the day ".
Same in STVI, it was an issue of " Jim Kirk is the best at dealing with the Klingons, he has the most history with them, let's send him out "
Same in STVI, it was an issue of " Jim Kirk is the best at dealing with the Klingons, he has the most history with them, let's send him out "
But most of that history wasn't exactly positive from a Klingon point of view.
Spock would have been a more logical choice to command the mission since he had been having positive communications with Gorkon.
Same in STVI, it was an issue of " Jim Kirk is the best at dealing with the Klingons, he has the most history with them, let's send him out "
But most of that history wasn't exactly positive from a Klingon point of view.
Spock would have been a more logical choice to command the mission since he had been having positive communications with Gorkon.
They weren't looking at it from that angle, they were looking at it from how Spock explained it, " Only Nixon can go to China "
Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country said:Well, there are Klingons who feel the same way about the peace treaty as yourself and Admiral Cartwright. But they'll think twice about attacking the Enterprise under your command.
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