He just saved the world. Rescued Chris Pike from Romulans. Saved another planet. Exposed a highest-level plot at Starfleet and stopped a planned war with the Klingons.
Nope, he didn't do a thing![]()
He became Captain of the Enterprise after goading Spock to beat him up. At that point in the film, he'd done absolutely nothing to demonstrate any kind of leadership capabilities, instead only proving himself an idiot (and probably mentally ill) at every turn. After all, prior to that point, all he's done is 1. be born, 2. trash a car, 3. get in a barfight, 4. cheat on an exam, 5. beat guys up and fire a guy. I'm not sure where in there he demonstrates any kind of cunning or skill or leadership abilities (unless his ability to beat guys up and fire a gun qualify him to command the Federation's flagship). I guess all the events which prove his leadership abilities must've occurred off-screen.
And if you examine the events of the films following this event, none of his actions come from the content of his character, but instead come from the plot (and I use the term loosely). J.J. Abrams' films are those in which the characters do whatever is required from them in order to advance the plot; the story does not come from the characters, but rather the plot.
And if you examine the events of the films following this event, none of his actions come from the content of his character, but instead come from the plot (and I use the term loosely). J.J. Abrams' films are those in which the characters do whatever is required from them in order to advance the plot; the story does not come from the characters, but rather the plot.
Urban comes across to me as an impressionist and not a lot more. His routine is Pissed-Off McCoy, only one of the three or four attitudes Kelley was capable of as McCoy.
I enjoy Urban, but I enjoy impressions.
Depends how you see Kirk, doesn't it? Some fixate on Gary Mitchell's "Stack of books with legs" line from the second pilot and work backward from there, while minimizing Kirk's actions in "Amok Time" and the movies (Carol: "Jim Kirk was many things, but he was never a boy scout!") which firmly establish him as being insubordinate.
Depends how you see Kirk, doesn't it? Some fixate on Gary Mitchell's "Stack of books with legs" line from the second pilot and work backward from there, while minimizing Kirk's actions in "Amok Time" and the movies (Carol: "Jim Kirk was many things, but he was never a boy scout!") which firmly establish him as being insubordinate.
They really don't. The "stack of books with legs" line and Kirk's assertion in Shore Leave that he was a "grim" young man go together with his early characterisation as a Hamlet/Hornblower crossbreed to paint a man who is "so worried about duty and obligation [he] couldn't see past [his] own uniform." In TOS he's fairly by-the-book, but if push comes to shove he'll break the rules for the greater good (the one occasion he outright defies orders to save his friend, in Amok Time, is the exception not the rule), not because he likes sticking two fingers up to authority. Kirk the young rebel is a retcon that came out of TWOK, so there is a precedent, but the Kobayashi Maru incident (for which there was no mention of disciplinary action, but rather a commendation for original thinking) alone, and the oblique description of him never having been "a boy scout" might suggest "unorthodox," but it's quite a leap to "insubordinate."
Bear in mind if he were truly an insubordinate officer, he wouldn't have a very long career in Starfleet no matter how brilliant he was.
Bear in mind if he were truly an insubordinate officer, he wouldn't have a very long career in Starfleet no matter how brilliant he was.
Oh come on, the dude steals and blows up starships and they give him new ones.
Starfleet has no real rules or structure beyond plot contrivance.
If Star Trek were in any way realistic, Spock would be dead and Kirk rotting the rest of his life away in a prison for attempting to steal a Federation starship. It's a comic book fantasy world.
If Star Trek were in any way realistic, Spock would be dead and Kirk rotting the rest of his life away in a prison for attempting to steal a Federation starship. It's a comic book fantasy world.
Bear in mind if he were truly an insubordinate officer, he wouldn't have a very long career in Starfleet no matter how brilliant he was.
Oh come on, the dude steals and blows up starships and they give him new ones.
Starfleet has no real rules or structure beyond plot contrivance.
Forgive me. I interjected a moment of the real world into the proceedings.
Actually, I've always thought Kirk is the moral voice of Starfleet. He is the embodiment of the type of person Grace Hopper used to say was the type who found it easier to apologize rather than get permission. As in, I'm sorry I saved several billion people even though regulations said I probably shouldn't have. Who's morally correct regarding the aliens in the opening of STID, Kirk or Starfleet?
I'm sorry I stole the Enterprise and saved Spock, then brought Spock back to life when all of you were content with his death.
Kirk was larger than life, and reality.
If Star Trek were in any way realistic, Spock would be dead and Kirk rotting the rest of his life away in a prison for attempting to steal a Federation starship. It's a comic book fantasy world.
If Star Trek were in any way realistic, Spock would be dead and Kirk rotting the rest of his life away in a prison for attempting to steal a Federation starship. It's a comic book fantasy world.
With SF you have to change what is realistic to fit the givens of the universe you are watching. You may still judge the Genesis Device and what it can do, to be unrealistic of course. But not as unrealistic as it would be in a temporary cop show, for example.
So maybe Spock should still be dead (just not as dead). Kirk's a little harder though. After all, how many courts have had to rule on someone who A) steals and destroys a starship but B) that's B) saves a whole world? I'd say its one each way.
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If Star Trek were in any way realistic, Spock would be dead and Kirk rotting the rest of his life away in a prison for attempting to steal a Federation starship. It's a comic book fantasy world.
There's heaps of people who hijacked a Starship and got away with it.
Spock
Data
Those Awful Children
The Hippies
The Binars
Moriarity
And there were heaps of time when Picard, Kirk and Janeway lost control of the ship through invasion, disease or stupidity.
They're in space. A lot of mysterious unknown alien things happen.
If Starfleet dropped the captain every time they lost control of the ship or crew both Picard and Kirk would be gone after episode 3.
^He's unsure of himself by design, the idea being that he is ten years younger than the Kirk of TOS and isn't the confident leader quite yet.
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