I agree with this. Come on, they blew up Vulcan.
I agree with this. Come on, they blew up Vulcan.
I look at Spock's "No, not really. Not this time." was the one time he gave in to his feelings.
He was not advocating murder, but disparaging that he would be saving the man responsible for destroying his home world, and killing his mother.
Given what Nero had done, I don't blame him one bit for this one lapse of logic.
Kirk, however, was truly stepping into his role as Captain, a soldier, diplomat and a representative of the Federation.
He wanted Nero gone, and for good reason, so he didn't shed a tear when Nero refused his offer of help. "You Got it" in this case means "Whatever you want. We're done here."
Kirk is also an asshole. He always has been. For some reason though, this movie seems to bring up the ire of the fans who never really recognized this aspect about him.![]()
It's kind of a pointless move since all those who participated in the commentary state that the black hole is already the death of Nero.
Kirk didn't participate in the commentary tho, Kirk knew what could have happened.
Dude, Kirk is written by those who participated in the commentary.![]()
Spock didn't seem to have a problem changing the timeline either and he's also from the future.
Which is nice, since plan b was more emotionally gratifying for the audience.
Spock didn't seem to have a problem changing the timeline either and he's also from the future.
Spock was trying to restore some semblance of the timeline, by uniting the Enterprise crew in order to stop Nero.
It's a different timeline, there is no semblance to it. Is it only a valid universe if the Enterprise crew is together?
Which is nice, since plan b was more emotionally gratifying for the audience.
In a word: BINGO!
To end it in any other way, then what we got would have been an emotional let down, and would have come across as silly.
Which is nice, since plan b was more emotionally gratifying for the audience.
In a word: BINGO!
To end it in any other way, then what we got would have been an emotional let down, and would have come across as silly.
I don't want to believe that if you are making a ST movie you should be more worried about being "silly" (meaning you can't film the scene well enough) than being right. Or are my expectations too high?
By the way, Spock's death at the end of TWOK was an emotional let down. Ignoring STIII, were they wrong? As you probably know, Director Nicholas Meyer was very anti the resurrection, which could have prevented him from doing the next film by the sound of it. There's an interesting alternative universe!
Spock's death at the end of TWOK was an emotional let down.
Spock didn't seem to have a problem changing the timeline either and he's also from the future.
Spock was trying to restore some semblance of the timeline, by uniting the Enterprise crew in order to stop Nero.
It's a different timeline, there is no semblance to it. Is it only a valid universe if the Enterprise crew is together?
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