The turbolift also moves at the speed of plot. I liked the turbolift scenes in Insurrection, because you could see on a viewscreen in the background where the pod was.
5000 people saying the wrong thing doesn't make it right. No point in have grammatical rule if we change then due to popular demand or misuse.
Why wouldn't he? He knew the ship had transporters. And Kirk WOULD have used them if they worked (and if they could pick them out), that was established when Scotty said it couldn't happen
Chekov's expression showed he thought Sulu's excuse was ridiculous.
I think the audience is smart enough to go with it if it was numbered correctly.
So the guy who sets his ship to explode when one guy from Cheron takes over just lets Sybok gain access to the ship?
But I'd have loved a couple of small lines of dialog in the brig to clarify it, if indeed that was what they were going for
Most of my points were made with a light heart.
Supposedly, the place was safe enough for top secret research before the incident took place. Probably deep inside UFP territory, then; no need to protect against a Klingon invasion, unless the Klingons came in an (snort! ridiculous!) invisible ship...Why would the Federation leave the Mutara Sector without any form of constant Starfleet presence? A lowly crappy Science Ship is no real form of Defense fit for a "Galactic Controversy"
How? They can't steal a fully staffed ship. And they aren't exactly the most powerful people in Starfleet, or the least conspicuous. Kirk seems convinced that Morrow's word is final, and that he has used all his over-the-counter options at that point.Why steal the Enterprise? Kirk and co are more than capable of "acquiring" the services of the Excelsior, a ship that would be more beneficial for a rescue mission in a potentially hazardous area
Caveman instincts won't help much against an enemy equipped with tricorders and an orbiting starship... The very fact that the Klingons hadn't already captured David's party via transporter, or bombed it out of existence from orbit, suggested that resistance would not be futile - that the Klingon party would be moving and acting with atypical caution and could indeed be delayed or discouraged.David Marcus sees a large party of hostiles approaching in the distance, does he take Saavik and Spock and head off into the Wilderness?
The checkmate would cease the moment one side did something the other didn't like. Kirk would know the Klingons would destroy the Enterprise if their only ace was being pulled out of their hands.Why did Kirk and Co not beam up Saavik, Spock and David as soon as they were in checkmate with the BOP? Both ships shields were down, they could have beamed them up and at the same time beamed the crew of the BOP down to Genesis and left them there, the Transporters were working and so were the sensors
What snowfield? He probably walked on meadows overflowing with milk and honey. Note that when he's found, he's next to a cactus, which has only recently been covered in snow... And there's no indication of him walking any set distance, although several kilometers is not rare for lost children of that age. We do hear his scream when Marcus and Saavik stand next to the torpedo casing, so it's not all that far.No real explanation of how a "Mindless" Spock was able to not only open the Photon Tube...but walk a few Kilometres into a Snowfield and survive there for how ever many days it took for the Grissom to arrive at the Planet and lifeform.
It is explained there: Right in his first scene, Esteban orders these news to be sent to Starfleet in code.Obviously, how Starfleet knew Spock's Casket was found on the Genesis Planet, in the novel its stated that Grissom relayed the info to Starfleet, but in the film its never explained.
Why does Sarek want Spock's body to be recovered from Genesis? First he says that Spock's death in isolation means "all is lost"; there's no katra in the head of the corpse any more, apparently (I guess it ceases to exist as the brain winds down to death), and Sarek thus is no longer interested in the corpse. Then he learns the katra is in McCoy's noggin. What good is Spock's body at that point? Does Sarek leap to the conclusion that Spock's corpse has been reanimated, based on what he saw in Kirk's mind? Kirk did believe in reincarnation, sort of, at the end of ST2.Anyone else got anything to add to list?
Actually there would be no retroactive plot hole in 2. The reason they didn't stay was that they were leaving to go to Ceti Alpha to pick up the Reliant's crew.I guess Kirk always wanted to go look for Spock's body on that planet, because he expresses the sentiment "Genesis=life from death -> I gotta get back" at the end of ST2, and then immediately wants to get back to Genesis at the beginning of ST3, even before Sarek's visit, as we hear when Morrow comes aboard.
But originally, Kirk is in no hurry; he's ready to wait until Scotty repairs the Enterprise, and happy to wait for his son and Saavik to do the survey of the planet first (but a bit worried he's not hearing back from them, which we later learn is because Genesis has become a point of controversy).
And he did leave Genesis at the end of ST2, even though he could probably have opted to stay. So either he thought that the Genesis magic would work on Spock very slowly, or then he didn't really believe in Spock's reincarnation but was merely curious about Genesis in general. I guess we could take ST3 as retroactively creating a ST2 plot hole in making it illogical for Kirk to leave Genesis...
Timo Saloniemi
With pleasure.Have at it, Timo!![]()
This is actually a cutting issue: there originally was a line on every Starfleet vessel having this equipment aboard at the time, during the guided tour of the Enterprise for the Klingon troupe. It’s also a Meyerism, a Cold War allusion to the International Year of Geophysics which both sides used as an excuse for purely military research on a global scale. Or did we really think the Excelsior was only scanning strategically uninteresting planets with her new equipment while skirting the Klingon border?"The thing's gotta have a tail pipe."
Another Meyerism there… In every paranoia movie, there’s this bit about your words being used against you even if you uttered them in seeming privacy (say, in the safety of your own home, to your wife or best buddy). A bugged conference room sounds just about right."Let them die, you said."
She does that to fool people into thinking she’s somebody else. She uses her own voice when she wants people to realize that “it is I, Leclerc”… Thus, Iman voice in the presence of our heroes, except when she wants to play with them.Martia suddenly uses someone else's voice.
It’s nicely consistent with TOS, though. Back then, we didn’t get alarms when authorized phasers were fired at vaporize (say, redshirts desperately firing at Nomad), but neither did unauthorized non-vaporizing firing trigger an alarm (Karidian Jr killing the frail Karidian Sr with a point-blank shot – and probably also Rand warming up Kirk’s coffee!). If the alarm covered non-disintegrating use in TUC, the movie would be in contradiction with the alarm-free TOS.The criteria for the alarm going off changes from "an unauthorized phaser" to only going off if the shooter vaporizes the victims.
What options did she have, though? If she thought it was a trap, she knew she was already as good as caught. She could have served the conspiracy one final time, say, by assassinating Kirk or blowing up the ship – but she apparently wasn’t the suicidal type. Her best odds of extricating herself were to eliminate the witnesses, or to surrender, and she could achieve both by going to Sickbay.Valeris falling for the Burke and Samno trap. I dunno, I'm not sure she would have taken that bait. She wouldn't shoot them and then leave without confirming their deaths. But I wouldn't call being a sucker a plot hole.
In this era, though, our heroes don’t seem to have portable access to records. We don’t know how long Chekov waited for Dax to arrive; might have been just a few seconds, really, not long enough to do any checking.And crewman Dax. Chekov, as security chief, should have looked up his file and then discovered his species. No boots for you! But again, being a dumbass isn't necessarily a plot hole.
Maybe Sybok got there by stowing away on some garbage scow that happened to be passing by or something. Why didn't he brainwash--I mean "cleanse the pain"--of that crew and have them fly him through the barrier?
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