No matter what had happened, Kirk would never be happy settling down. He can't be happy unless he's in command of a Starship. That's what he was born to do.
Again, how would they have taken Edith to the future? Perhaps just saved her, and then yelled "HEY GUARDIAN LOL WE DIDN'T LET HER DIE HAHA BUT WE THINK SHE'S AWESUM SO LIKE TAKE US ALL TO THE FUTURE SO SHE NO MESS UP TIMELINE K THX" and then the Guardian would be all, like, "LOL U GOT ME OK I BRING U 2 TEH FUTURE NOW LET ME BE YR GATEWAY HAHA" and then they'd be like "LOL LET'S THE GET THE HELL OUTTA HERE AND GO PARTY ON MY SHIP K BEAM ME UP"?
(I think I really caught the spirit of Ellison's dialogue there, btw.)
Again, how would they have taken Edith to the future? Perhaps just saved her, and then yelled "HEY GUARDIAN LOL WE DIDN'T LET HER DIE HAHA BUT WE THINK SHE'S AWESUM SO LIKE TAKE US ALL TO THE FUTURE SO SHE NO MESS UP TIMELINE K THX" and then the Guardian would be all, like, "LOL U GOT ME OK I BRING U 2 TEH FUTURE NOW LET ME BE YR GATEWAY HAHA" and then they'd be like "LOL LET'S THE GET THE HELL OUTTA HERE AND GO PARTY ON MY SHIP K BEAM ME UP"?
(I think I really caught the spirit of Ellison's dialogue there, btw.)
Wrong! He didn't have to kill her. He could have abducted her, taken her to the future like he did that marine biologist in Star Trek IV. She didn't have to die.
Even if it can't, the past is the past and the Guardian knew that Edith Keeler died by being hit by a truck at a certain time.
Kirk had to be the one to let her die, it would have destroyed the character to have him be indecisive
And it's the most OBVIOUS easy solution...and what any TV show would do with its lead character, rendering him/her blandly noble, as always.Kirk had to be the one to let her die, it would have destroyed the character to have him be indecisive
And its simply more dramatic..If I told you that you had to kill your wife to restore the future, that would be far more hard to than letting someone else do it...Kirk was the ultimate hero by doing what had to be done...
Had Edith Keeler lived then she would have delayed our (USA) entry into the war and Hitler would have captured the world?? So the world would have gone down a darkened path...and for all we know, blown its self up with Nukes down the line....Heck, who knows, maybe the Mirror Universe is the result of that event...
That little nickpick of Spock knowing she dies in car accident but still fretting because kirk stopped her from falling is my only small little problem with the episode. But, i always rationalized it with that Spock wasn't sure if she had to die the same way it had happened before.
I don't think that what you're describing is Ellison's at all.I guess that's one way to look at it. I have always seen it as Ellison making sure that every one was able to follow along and not get lost.
Jim loves Edith.
Edith must die.
Spock drives the point home to Jim.
Will Jim let her die??? Dun, dun dun.
It was about a subtle as driving a push pin with sledgehammer. But fortunately, it was the only real problem in an otherwise very good Ep.
I don't think that what you're describing is Ellison's at all.I guess that's one way to look at it. I have always seen it as Ellison making sure that every one was able to follow along and not get lost.
Jim loves Edith.
Edith must die.
Spock drives the point home to Jim.
Will Jim let her die??? Dun, dun dun.
It was about a subtle as driving a push pin with sledgehammer. But fortunately, it was the only real problem in an otherwise very good Ep.
In Ellison's first draft, Edith slips, Kirk reaches out but then closes his hand and lets her fall. She looks up, sees his extended but closed hand. She seems to know he let her fall, and "a confused, hurt expression crosses her face." Spock is nowhere to be seen, and we see that Kirk does know why he's there, and he's capable of letting her die, but he's conflicted and we're not sure if he'll let it happen at...and he's not sure.
"City" was rewritten so many times only a few lines of Ellison's actual dialog survive into the final draft.Well if that's the case, I guess it wasn't Ellison who felt the need to portray the scene the way it ended up on screen. (I don't have access to the first draft, so I wasn't privy to that information.)
Wrong! He didn't have to kill her. He could have abducted her, taken her to the future like he did that marine biologist in Star Trek IV. She didn't have to die.
And risk creating an unpredictable set of changes to the timeline. She died, it is not Kirk's place to change that no matter his feelings for her.
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