Casting for a fictional character with malleable origins has to take into account more than a previously established backstory. It also has to take into account commercial appeal and acting ability. Like it or not, white male Brits are a hot commodity in the US, and casting Mr. Cumberbatch was quite a PR and commercial coup.
white male Brits are a hot commodity in the US
Kirk was less of an asshole.It was manipulation, yes. He was a villain, after all.(Not that I think Kirk's various manipulations of the weaker sex in TOS were much healthier, but... it-was-the-Sixties-mumble-mumble...)
Janice of Turnabout Intruder, likely didn't share that opinion.
Also, Sikh not an ethnicity.Leaving aside the ethnic origin (Sikh as said in space seed) there's also the fact that Khan was obviously a babe magnet.
Try again?
- He doesn't in any way resemble a Sikh in "Space Seed," regardless of what McGivers suggested as a likelihood. She was a really bad historian;
- His behavior toward McGivers was physical and emotional abuse, not the behavior of a man any emotionally healthy woman would be attracted to.
Anyway, assuming all these traits are reflective of an actual character in-universe, it's a wonder she was assigned to the Enterprise in the first place. A ship with people like that on board is the sorta ship where you'd expect Scotty to be dealing drugs.
She saw his picture in a history book. She reads as well as paints to fill those long hours between actual assignments.Kirk was less of an asshole.
Janice of Turnabout Intruder, likely didn't share that opinion.
Yes, buts she was nuts. Seriously killing a bunch of people and stealing your ex's body for revenge is not the sign of a sane person.
And from the sounds of Kirk talking about their relationship, possibly emotionally abusive since it sounds like she took the whole can't command a starship thing out on him.
Also, Sikh not an ethnicity.
Of course this then begs the question of just how the hell McGivers pegged Khan as a Sikh?
She saw his picture in a history book. She reads as well as paints to fill those long hours between actual assignments.Janice of Turnabout Intruder, likely didn't share that opinion.
Yes, buts she was nuts. Seriously killing a bunch of people and stealing your ex's body for revenge is not the sign of a sane person.
And from the sounds of Kirk talking about their relationship, possibly emotionally abusive since it sounds like she took the whole can't command a starship thing out on him.
Also, Sikh not an ethnicity.
Of course this then begs the question of just how the hell McGivers pegged Khan as a Sikh?
She's an Augment fangirl. *She saw his picture in a history book. She reads as well as paints to fill those long hours between actual assignments.Yes, buts she was nuts. Seriously killing a bunch of people and stealing your ex's body for revenge is not the sign of a sane person.
And from the sounds of Kirk talking about their relationship, possibly emotionally abusive since it sounds like she took the whole can't command a starship thing out on him.
Of course this then begs the question of just how the hell McGivers pegged Khan as a Sikh?
So the explanation is that McGivers knew it was Khan the whole time and decided not to mention that they were about to defrost a former dictator, just becuase.![]()
STID's character could literally have been anybody. Bob from Starfleet Accounting. BOOOOOOOBBBB!!!
The entire debate about Cumberbund's portrayal, or Khan's ethnicity aside, (as interesting as they are) what bothers me most is this: what was the freaking point of having Khan in STID in the first place!?
TWOK Khan was a fantastic villain excellently portrayed, but his ONLY relevance, story-wise, was his history with Kirk. The only reason he resonated at all on an emotional level (think: KHHHAAAANN!!!) is because of the events in Space Seed.
STID's character could literally have been anybody. Bob from Starfleet Accounting. BOOOOOOOBBBB!!! Without the history, re-hashing Khan is utterly pointless.
TWOK Khan was a fantastic villain excellently portrayed, but his ONLY relevance, story-wise, was his history with Kirk. The only reason he resonated at all on an emotional level (think: KHHHAAAANN!!!) is because of the events in Space Seed.
STID's character could literally have been anybody. Bob from Starfleet Accounting. BOOOOOOOBBBB!!! Without the history, re-hashing Khan is utterly pointless.
The entire debate about Cumberbund's portrayal, or Khan's ethnicity aside, (as interesting as they are) what bothers me most is this: what was the freaking point of having Khan in STID in the first place!?
TWOK Khan was a fantastic villain excellently portrayed, but his ONLY relevance, story-wise, was his history with Kirk. The only reason he resonated at all on an emotional level (think: KHHHAAAANN!!!) is because of the events in Space Seed.
STID's character could literally have been anybody. Bob from Starfleet Accounting. BOOOOOOOBBBB!!! Without the history, re-hashing Khan is utterly pointless.
STID's character could literally have been anybody. Bob from Starfleet Accounting. BOOOOOOOBBBB!!! Without the history, re-hashing Khan is utterly pointless.
They actually showed him being superhuman rather than just have him shout how superior he is while being hit by a pipe. He's constantly outsmarted in the old stuff, way more competent in Into Darkness.
Well, maybe I'll have to watch it again, but most of the replies seem to justify using Khan from a purely commercial point of view -- name recognition will sell tickets -- rather than from any story-telling merit.
Perhaps (if I can get past the gut-wrenching stupidity of parking the E in a lake for no reason at all) (it was all downhill from there and maybe that's why I wasn't able to cut the new Khan any slack) I should try to watch it again with a more open mind.
But seriously.... In a lake? WTF?!
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