I'd rather that how he died would have been left up to our imaginations, but I've had 15 years now to come to terms with it.I don't mind Kirk's death at all. Kirk had to go somehow, a man like that wouldn't have been happy growing old and dying in bed.
That's an interesting idea that had never occurred to me. I'll say that I thought The Shootist was a better movie than GEN.As a side note, Does Kirk's death remind anyone else of the John Wayne film, The Shootist? It has a somewhat similar premise. A legend from another era showing up for one last battle, in which they are killed in somewhat inglorious fashion. Not only that, but it marked the last appearence of both icons (Kirk and Wayne).
Me neither. Seconded. I thought it was a nice way for him to go. It could have been worse.I don't mind Kirk's death at all. Kirk had to go somehow, a man like that wouldn't have been happy growing old and dying in bed. I thought him dying with Picard next to him was very touching.
As a side note, Does Kirk's death remind anyone else of the John Wayne film, The Shootist? It has a somewhat similar premise. A legend from another era showing up for one last battle, in which they are killed in somewhat inglorious fashion. Not only that, but it marked the last appearence of both icons (Kirk and Wayne).
I saw the original filmed version on youtube, no bridge collapse, Kirk's death was "better", the missile launches but crashes, I was confused as to why Picard simple shot Dr. Soran at the end of the scene.
While I hated seeing Kirk die in Generations (I was totally happy with TUC as being the last time we saw him ever), I probably would hate the idea of Kirk alive and well in the 24th-Century even more.
James Kirk died of congestive heart failure some time after the events of TUC and before those of GEN whilst climbing a mountain on terraformed Venus. His body fell three kilometers and upon impact collapsed a previously un-surveyed sinkhole housing the last of Venus's indigenous lifeforms, the Venusian Xsjf. The creature awoke from hibernation from contact with Kirk's DNA, and involuntarily and all-but-wholly became the man, minus any medical ailments or memory of its previous life.
A normal death for a normal human being, while also fitting in with exalted canon.
Or we could say all of GEN was a holonovel for our benefit, keeping secret a faaar more glooorious death for our substitute messiah.
If you're wondering what the hell I'm talking about, get in line.
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