Didn't Sisko react a little emotion when the Defiant was about to explode?
Didn't Sisko react a little emotion when the Defiant was about to explode?
Riker also had an attachment to Enterprise that Picard didn't.
Didn't Sisko react a little emotion when the Defiant was about to explode?
He voiced regret at losing her, but his attachment was Bajor rather than the Defiant.
Riker also had an attachment to Enterprise that Picard didn't.
I always got the impression his attachment lessened as the years went by. Certainly during the early years--when the writers were trying to make him seem like a hybrid of Kirk and Decker--he seemed to have an infatuation with the Enterprise that none of his shipmates did, which was part of the reason why he didn't take any of the promotions or transfers offered to him.
Cyke101 said:So if their infatuation lessened as the years went by, it's kind of shown by the two highest ranking officers on the ship kind of treating her loss as just another day on the job.
But. Nevertheless. That is the portrayal on the show.
"I'll get you, my pretty. And your mangy little dog, too!"I'm blowing up Mister Spock's planet, that's it! What's it called? "Vulcan"? And just for the hell of it ... throw in his mother, too. HA!!!
... but forget to tell them about the Slingshot Maneuver that they could use to go back in time and maybe save Vulcan.)
... but forget to tell them about the Slingshot Maneuver that they could use to go back in time and maybe save Vulcan.)
That's hard to pin on just JJ & Co. Opening up that can of worms in either timeline becomes a hypothetical nightmare and a very slippery slope.
Or maybe that's the grand plan and the Spock Prime scenes are already filmed. [snip a very funny hypothetical scenario, nice work]
All nice and tidy, right? Not so much.
[snip a very funny hypothetical scenario, nice work]
I understand what you are saying. But to be honest, I have bigger issues with Generations and Nemesis. At least 09 is operating in an alternate time line, instead of mucking up the prime one.
I don't even think it was tried with that ship. Picard's refusal to self-destruct the Enterprise-E in First Contact had less to do with his love of the ship and more with his not wanting the Borg to take anything else from him again, IMO.They tried with the Enterprise-E, but it wasn't the same.
But in a way, we really have to look at the captains that came after Kirk as well. Kirk was, well, something of a romantic in the sense that his ship was the most important thing to him; Picard was more objective and reserved in nature; Sisko had a space station to run, a family to protect, and ultimately a war to fight; Janeway was focused more on her crew and trying to get them home; and Archer barely knew the name of his ship (okay, I'm kidding about that last part--he was more of a mission-oriented guy). In comparison, Kirk was the only one with a mad crush on his ship.
Agreed, I never really felt they did that kind of thing with 1701-E.
I expect that Picard's romanticism was completely reserved for the Stargazer. He was always less passionate about Enterprise, or maybe more "professionally detached" would be a more appropriate phrase, but I reckon losing Stargazer really *meant* something to him.
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