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I don't think Vulcan [SPOILERS]

He might be saying that to throw people off so that it's a surprise in the sequel when Vulcan comes back inverted.

When's season four start? 24 is over, House is over, Smallville is over. I need entertainment!

Are you sure you watched Star Trek and not The Soloist or something? I really don't think you saw the same movie we all did.

:lol:

The Soloist has an interesting plot if it involves Vulcan coming out the otherside of a red-matter black hole inverted.
 
Thank you, Flaemgrape, I don't understand it either. It's like people WANT Vulcan to be destroyed! Usually when something like this happens all the Trekkeries are trying desperately to come up with a reason why it DIDN'T happen. Remember when Trip died and his army of housewife fans made up excuses why he wasn't "really" dead? We need to apply that kind of thinking to Vulcan (though without the lust, obviously.)

"Inverted" is to show the the black hole has had an effect.
 
Thank you, Flaemgrape, I don't understand it either. It's like people WANT Vulcan to be destroyed! Usually when something like this happens all the Trekkeries are trying desperately to come up with a reason why it DIDN'T happen. Remember when Trip died and his army of housewife fans made up excuses why he wasn't "really" dead? We need to apply that kind of thinking to Vulcan (though without the lust, obviously.)

"Inverted" is to show the the black hole has had an effect.
It's NOT that people WANTED Vulcan to be destroyed. It's that, finally, when something of major consequence happens in the Trek universe, it's not immediately erased by a "re-set button" conclusion. Someone above pointed out that his reaction to Vulcan's destruction was subdued because he believed the film would end, like all other Trek stories, with a giant re-set and Vulcan would be "back to normal". He only felt the destruction was shocking AFTER the film, when he realized it wasn't going to be "re-set". I had faith that Abrams and co. would NOT use a re-set button so when Vulcan was destroyed, it had a dramatic impact that it would have lacked if I'd been convinced it was going to be "saved" by a re-set button ending.

It is the fact that we don't know the outcome, for anyone or anything, in this new timeline that is worth endorsing. Vulcan's destruction is particularly strong proof of that--and that's why there are some of us who do NOT want to rationalize it away. It's not as dramatically satisfying.
 
Of course it'll be reset by not mentioning its destruction in the sequels anyway.

(IF you're all right and it really didn't survive the sucking effect of the black hole like I think it might have...)
 
Of course it'll be reset by not mentioning its destruction in the sequels anyway.

(IF you're all right and it really didn't survive the sucking effect of the black hole like I think it might have...)
The black hole IS Vulcan (the mass for the singularity is the mass of the planet--Vulcan didn't go anywhere, it collapsed upon itself). And "not mentioning" equals "re-set"? Really? I didn't mention the bombing of Dresden yesterday to anyone--does that mean it's been "re-set" and "never happened"? Or to use a more appropriate fictional example--none of the TOS films ever mentioned the destruction of Mr. Atoz's planet (name escapes me at the moment). That equals a "re-set"? You're really grasping at straws here to live in denial (especially wasted when it is a denial of a fictional event).
 
That was in the sixties. The network wouldn't let them have continuity between shows there for fear it would confuse viewers. I'm sure Gene wanted to.

And if the "mass" of Vulcan makes the black hole, then what "mass" makes the black holes the Narada and the Jellyfish travel through!?
 
That was in the sixties. The network wouldn't let them have continuity between shows there for fear it would confuse viewers. I'm sure Gene wanted to.
Wrong again. In By Any Other Name, Kirk reminds Spock of his "telepathic suggestion" on Eminiar 7. So there was no "network rule" against it. Try again.

And if the "mass" of Vulcan makes the black hole, then what "mass" makes the black holes the Narada and the Jellyfish travel through!?
The troublesome star that necessitated the use of "red matter" in the first place. Did you not see the movie?
 
Spock, via mind meld, explains to Kirk that he got to the troublesome star too late to save Romulus, hence Nero's anger, but still delivered the red matter into the star (as it threatened more than just Romulus). The result of the interaction between the red matter and the star created the singularity that carried Nero and Spock into the past.
 
I don't think that's how it happened in Countdown.

But anyway you have to remember this is still science FICTION and if the writers want Vulcan to survive (and given fan outrage at its destruction THEY MAY WELL) then they can treknobabble a way.
 
I don't think that's how it happened in Countdown.

But anyway you have to remember this is still science FICTION and if the writers want Vulcan to survive (and given fan outrage at its destruction THEY MAY WELL) then they can treknobabble a way.
I have a feeling the "fan outrage" (and if this board is any indication, that number of fans is actually quite small) isn't even going to register with them.
 
I don't think that's how it happened in Countdown.

But anyway you have to remember this is still science FICTION and if the writers want Vulcan to survive (and given fan outrage at its destruction THEY MAY WELL) then they can treknobabble a way.
They won't. Get over it. The "outrage" isn't enough to light up a 15w candelabra bulb.
 
I don't think that's how it happened in Countdown.
It is.

But anyway you have to remember this is still science FICTION and if the writers want Vulcan to survive (and given fan outrage at its destruction THEY MAY WELL) then they can treknobabble a way.
You're overestimating how much outrage there is. In fact, a vast majority of people are taking it pretty well. Not only is Vulcan dead, it is going to stay dead.
 
We didn't really know anybody on Alderan, except the princess; and she was conspicuously absent for the debacle.

An impact at least an order of magnitude smaller for fans.

Conspicuously absent from Alderran when it was destroyed *AND* she had Han Solo fly the Millenium Falcon to the Rebel base on Yavin 4 *KNOWING* the ship was being tracked.

I don't trust this broad.

What the F-?

In this move that is called Star Trek, the planet Vulcan was destroyed.

This much is totally, absolutely certain. They are stupid for destroying Vulcan and violating Star Trek canon in such an egregious way, and everyone who has said "just one pon'farr cycle will fix it" is less than worthless. They just killed the most interesting race in the galaxy.

We haven't got time travel. Yet. One day one of the first applications may be to stop this move from having been made.

And thus the Temporal Cold War is started...

I find it interesting how so many Trek fans are tired of the writers/producers of playing things safe with their storytelling, which is one reason why Enterprise was so hated because it was "business-as-usual" and played things safe. But when something is done to really shake things up and take risks and do things different, so many of those same fans disregard it and hate because it doesn't stick to what's been done before.

Is it just me? Or is that a little contradictory?

Do I like Vulcan? Yes. Did I want to see it destroyed? No. But it sure as hell shook things up. I was shocked and I was incredibly entertained and I loved the hell out of what it meant for this new Star Trek universe. I say it's time to see what someone else can do by going back to the beginning of Gene Roddenberry's creation and taking it from there. We still have over 700 hours of Star Trek that we are all comfortable (for the most part) with. If you don't like the new stuff we get, dive back into the od stuff. In the mean time, I say we just try to enjoy what we can!

The Star Trek Phase II / New Voyages / Whatever they're calling it this month isn't bad at all, in fact. http://www.startreknewvoyages.com/

Without Vulcan, the biggest change will be that DS9 episode where the crew plays a bunch of Vulcans in baseball. Oh. Teh. Noes.

Some of you people are acting like the planet and it's people were the primary location and characters of the damned franchise.

Vulcan is actually a very important place in the Star Trek universe.

Creating a story where Vulcan is destroyed is sheer stupidity, especially since the planet is around in series which takes place AFTER the events in the movie. OK, they can rant about "alternate timelines" but for some strange reason everyone seem to claim that this new "alternate" timeline is the "right one" and everything Star trek should be adapted to this new timeline.

If I had written a similar story and sent it to PocketBooks some years ago, the script would have been returned with a reminder about how to NOT violate existing Star Trek canon.

I have a week's pay that says if you had framed your story in an alternate timeline similar to how this movie was done, it would have been considered.

Incidentally, no one gave a crap when Captain Taggart of the U.S.S. Repulse was suddenly a WOMAN in Peter David's "Vendetta."
 
I'm just happy Star Trek can finally "boldly go" without knowing how it's all going to end. NOW it can end with Shatner playing an old Kirk (if they really wanted).
 
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