WNMHGB was not an origin story. It was the second pilot for a TV show which had very little change or continuity between episodes. Any personal growth was reset by the start of the next episode.We should have seen that by the end of the first movie, at the very latest.^^We saw a preview of Kirk becoming the captain we're familiar with at the end of STID.
Even Original Kirk started out in "Where No Man Has Gone Before" as a responsible, grownup captain, not as some kid who has to "grow into" the position.
WNMHGB was not an origin story. It was the second pilot for a TV show which had very little change or continuity between episodes. Any personal growth was reset by the start of the next episode.
I love it when people cite the "unprofessionalism" in the new movies, as though Our Heroes' behavior in TOS was always the epitome of professional conduct.
Can't tell whether Selective Amnesia or Glossing Over.
Just look at Spock in "The Menagerie". Kidnapping, hijacking and falsifying orders are hardly professional.I love it when people cite the "unprofessionalism" in the new movies, as though Our Heroes' behavior in TOS was always the epitome of professional conduct.
Can't tell whether Selective Amnesia or Glossing Over.
Just look at the charge sheet they built up in just Star Trek III: The Search for Spock alone...
Just look at Spock in "The Menagerie". Kidnapping, hijacking and falsifying orders are hardly professional.I love it when people cite the "unprofessionalism" in the new movies, as though Our Heroes' behavior in TOS was always the epitome of professional conduct.
Can't tell whether Selective Amnesia or Glossing Over.
Just look at the charge sheet they built up in just Star Trek III: The Search for Spock alone...
It was the first episode where we saw Kirk. We are told what kind of individual he was in his Academy years.WNMHGB was not an origin story. It was the second pilot for a TV show which had very little change or continuity between episodes. Any personal growth was reset by the start of the next episode.We should have seen that by the end of the first movie, at the very latest.^^We saw a preview of Kirk becoming the captain we're familiar with at the end of STID.
Even Original Kirk started out in "Where No Man Has Gone Before" as a responsible, grownup captain, not as some kid who has to "grow into" the position.
But there isn't a decade between nuKirk's first Frat Boy action and his most recent. There isn't a decade between nuUhura's first "boyfriend moment" on duty and her most recent (if there had been, I'd be even more disgusted with them than I am now). And Original Spock was still showing his emotions in the early episodes of TOS. What do you think inspired the "Shouting Spock" thread we had here some years ago? It wasn't all based on his actions in "The Cage/Menagerie".WNMHGB was not an origin story. It was the second pilot for a TV show which had very little change or continuity between episodes. Any personal growth was reset by the start of the next episode.
This says it all. There are no "origin" episodes to compare the Abrams films to. We have no real idea of what Kirk and the rest of the big seven were like prior to TOS. We have "The Cage" with a more emotional Spock, which actually fits what we see in the Abrams films.
If Spock could go through that type of evolution between the first pilot and TOS proper, then I imagine all of the characters could change over the course of a decade. Are any of us the same people we were a decade ago? I don't think Kirk's habit of disrespecting authority and challenging the rulebook was something that just blossomed one day after taking command of the Enterprise. Just because TOS notes he was serious doesn't mean he was some automaton where authority was concerned.
WNMHGB was not an origin story. It was the second pilot for a TV show which had very little change or continuity between episodes. Any personal growth was reset by the start of the next episode.
This says it all. There are no "origin" episodes to compare the Abrams films to. We have no real idea of what Kirk and the rest of the big seven were like prior to TOS. We have "The Cage" with a more emotional Spock, which actually fits what we see in the Abrams films.
If Spock could go through that type of evolution between the first pilot and TOS proper, then I imagine all of the characters could change over the course of a decade. Are any of us the same people we were a decade ago? I don't think Kirk's habit of disrespecting authority and challenging the rulebook was something that just blossomed one day after taking command of the Enterprise. Just because TOS notes he was serious doesn't mean he was some automaton where authority was concerned.
Not sure a real military organization would be so lenient no matter what the length of service. Spock has a history of hijacking the ship. He did it in "Amok Time" as well and in "This Side of Paradise" was the point man in a mutiny. Spock's transgressions are a little more serious that dropping the f bomb. Spock's also been know to assault a superior officer. ("Amok Time" "This Side of Paradise")Just look at Spock in "The Menagerie". Kidnapping, hijacking and falsifying orders are hardly professional.Just look at the charge sheet they built up in just Star Trek III: The Search for Spock alone...
That was after decades of service where they went by the rules. Sometimes an act involving saving Captain Pike or the Earth is forgiven.
Its like my lecturer at Uni who told us all to f#@$ off. He was back the next week. I'm sure if that was his first week in he would have been given the boot.
Not sure a real military organization would be so lenient no matter what the length of service. Spock has a history of hijacking the ship. He did it in "Amok Time" as well and in "This Side of Paradise" was the point man in a mutiny. Spock's transgressions are a little more serious that dropping the f bomb. Spock's also been know to assault a superior officer. ("Amok Time" "This Side of Paradise")Just look at Spock in "The Menagerie". Kidnapping, hijacking and falsifying orders are hardly professional.
That was after decades of service where they went by the rules. Sometimes an act involving saving Captain Pike or the Earth is forgiven.
Its like my lecturer at Uni who told us all to f#@$ off. He was back the next week. I'm sure if that was his first week in he would have been given the boot.
If saving Pike gets Spock a pass, then saving the Earth ( and the Federation) should give Kirk a pass too.
Kirk seems to be very lax in security matters. His ship as mentioned was hijacked by Spock on two occasions. Other hijackers include Khan, Norman, Space Hippies, the Scalosians, Sybok and a group of children. (probably some others I've forgot). A real military organization might look askance as such a record, in spite of the positive outcomes.
He's also used Starfleet resources to follow a personal agenda ("The Conscience of the King" "Obsession") and disobeyed direct orders from a superior officer ("Amok Time" again). He makes a habit of showing disrespect towards Federation officials. (Barris, Fox, Helford, Ferris). Though they might deserve that, it's still unprofessional. Kirk is prone to taking unnecessary risks, often taking part dangerous missions or physically engaging opponents placing himself in harms way needlessly. A true professional knows how and when to delegate. So Carol Marcus had a point when she said Kirk was no boy scout.
The reality is Kirk, Spock and the rest ( both Prime and New) are characters in a drama. Acting "professionally" just doesn't promote "the drama". So they will acting in ways that would get them cashiered out in the real world. Be it leaving their posts for a heart to heart, goading a fellow officer into fight, bucking the system or hijacking the ship.
It was the first episode where we saw Kirk.
It was the first episode where we saw Kirk.
Still wasn't an origin story, which was the point.
This says it all. There are no "origin" episodes to compare the Abrams films to. We have no real idea of what Kirk and the rest of the big seven were like prior to TOS. We have "The Cage" with a more emotional Spock, which actually fits what we see in the Abrams films.
He's also used Starfleet resources to follow a personal agenda ("The Conscience of the King" "Obsession")
I was even thinking Picard should dump Data when he was subjected so much to outside forces.
What were the instructions in the Starfleet manual to do when your crew mutinied when they were under the influence of spores? If that happened in the current Navy I'm sure the captain and first officer would be let of on fighting charges.
If an officer were about to die on a ship on a non-urgent mission I'm sure the Navy ship would be re-routed to a hospital base or a helicopter bought in. Or would the current Navy let them die like Kirk refused to let happen to Spock in Amok Time?
Of course he was right, he's the hero. (He was also wrong because it was Lenore doing the killing.) Imagine if Karidian was just an actor and he diverted the ship for no reason.He's also used Starfleet resources to follow a personal agenda ("The Conscience of the King" "Obsession")
To be fair, in both cases those "personal" agendas were about concern for the lives of other people. He was right that Karidian was actually a mass murderer who'd eluded justice for decades (and that someone was killing to protect him, though it wasn't who he thought), and he was right that the cloud creature was a deadly threat that needed to be stopped before it killed even more people. So his motives weren't exactly selfish.
It would help if the officer was a little more forthcoming instead of being closed up tight as an Aldebaran shellmouth and didn't issue orders that countermanded his CO.CommishSleer said:If an officer were about to die on a ship on a non-urgent mission I'm sure the Navy ship would be re-routed to a hospital base or a helicopter bought in. Or would the current Navy let them die like Kirk refused to let happen to Spock in Amok Time?
Imagine if Karidian was just an actor and he diverted the ship for no reason.
Not saying it was a bad thing. Just that he diverted Starfleet resources. He could have gotten hold of the legal authorities and let them handle it. Instead he took matters into his own hands. Arranged for the Karidian Company to be stranded and changed the Enterprise's course to "rescue" them so he could play detective. In the process he placed Riley and himself at risk ( playing in Lenore's hands! Making her job easier.) It's typical behavior for fictional heroes. Be they cops, lawyers or Starfleet officers.Imagine if Karidian was just an actor and he diverted the ship for no reason.
Even so, the point was that it wasn't "personal" in the sense that he was trying to get back at the guy who stole his girlfriend or keyed his car. It wasn't personal like his rivalry with Finnegan, say. He was trying to bring a mass murderer to justice and stop a new series of murders. He had a personal stake in it, yes, but it wasn't a selfish or petty goal, because it was about protecting other people.
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