That's what I meant.
oh yeah lol, sorry i just got it.
That's what I meant.
This may have been mentioned, (it was above. Whoops ) but Kirk was one of the only people attempting to help Khan when Khan tried taking over the Enterprise. Even afterward, Kirk was good enough to give Khan and his group an entire planet to colonize and build a civilization. Kirk obviously (if you apply logic) had no control over the natural disaster that turned Khan's planet into a desert.Yeah, but my point is that Spock was the only person attempting to help Nero. It makes zero sense that Nero would go through all that trouble to try and kill Spock.
Someone in the Trek universe should really do a study to see why so many planets/moon/suns explode as often as they do!No, the "Shinzon syndrome" was Khan's problem. He was a dumbass and chose to blame Kirk for that. Consider this: Kirk brought him back to life, helped him get acquainted with the 23d century, threw a party in his honour, treated him with fairness when Khan, had he been in his place, would have executed him. In fact, Khan tortured him. Then, in the end, Kirk manages to get him and his lackeys onto a nice planet (which blew up but that wasn't Kirk's responsibility at all).
Blame Kirk. Yeah yeah, sure sure, whatever.
Just as plausible? No, even less.
...And when it did finally explode, even if it was five light-years from Romulus, it still probably would've taken 50 years minimum for the shockwave to reach there...
No, the "Shinzon syndrome" was Khan's problem. He was a dumbass and chose to blame Kirk for that. Consider this: Kirk brought him back to life, helped him get acquainted with the 23d century, threw a party in his honour, treated him with fairness when Khan, had he been in his place, would have executed him. In fact, Khan tortured him. Then, in the end, Kirk manages to get him and his lackeys onto a nice planet (which blew up but that wasn't Kirk's responsibility at all).
Someone in the Trek universe should really do a study to see why so many planets/moon/suns explode as often as they do!No, the "Shinzon syndrome" was Khan's problem. He was a dumbass and chose to blame Kirk for that. Consider this: Kirk brought him back to life, helped him get acquainted with the 23d century, threw a party in his honour, treated him with fairness when Khan, had he been in his place, would have executed him. In fact, Khan tortured him. Then, in the end, Kirk manages to get him and his lackeys onto a nice planet (which blew up but that wasn't Kirk's responsibility at all).
Blame Kirk. Yeah yeah, sure sure, whatever.
Just as plausible? No, even less.
Ceti Alpha VI, Praxis, the Genesis planet, the Veridian star, the Hobus star...
Yeah, some of those were man-made explosions, but still.
Spock may not have intentionally hurt Nero. However, Nero put all of his hope on Spock to save his world. When Spock failed, Nero, overcome with grief, blamed Spock for his failure.In Nero's case, Spock simply wasn't able to save Romulus. He didn't cause the supernova or actively harm Nero. So Nero places his blame on Spock, Vulcan, and the Federation because of this? Make sense? No.
Ryan, we're not getting anywhere with this, as I'm not going to change my mind and I already said what I had to say on the matter. You think Nero didn't have a reason to be angry at Spock, I think he did, and I said why. You like Khan as a villain and I don't, stating my reasons as to why that is. You used the term Shinzon syndrome, I just quoted it.
I guess that, in the end, it's only a matter of whether you feel empathy towards the character or not. Something about Khan ticks people's boxes, and I understand that, but I don't feel that way.
Spock may not have intentionally hurt Nero. However, Nero put all of his hope on Spock to save his world. When Spock failed, Nero, overcome with grief, blamed Spock for his failure.
I agree that this wasn't conveyed very well in the movie. Honestly, just an extra 3-4 minutes of backstory would have been enough to flesh-out Nero's character, but alas, this wasn't done. I don't think his motives are absent, but they could have been presented better. Probably my only nitpick about the movie.Spock may not have intentionally hurt Nero. However, Nero put all of his hope on Spock to save his world. When Spock failed, Nero, overcome with grief, blamed Spock for his failure.
It would've been nice had this been conveyed more. Nevertheless, it doesn't exactly excuse multiple attempts at mass-genocide, especially when with time travel he could've prevented the whole thing. Now he has to accept that he'll likely never be born in this timeline, Vulcan is destroyed, and Romulus will likely still be destroyed.
Spock was the only person who attempted to help Nero and the rest of Romulus.
Of all people why travel through time (and waste 25 years of his life)in an attempt to kill the single person in the universe that tried to help him? Why not just go back in time and save Romulus?
If he insisted on revenge why not kill the people who refused to listen to Spock?
Am I missing something here? If not Nero's motivations make zero sense and he may be the dumbest of all trek villians.
...And when it did finally explode, even if it was five light-years from Romulus, it still probably would've taken 50 years minimum for the shockwave to reach there...
Yes good point. I guess i glossed over that bit too myself suspending my disbelief to get on with the film, vaguely rationalising it by thinking well things can go faster than light in the star trek universe.
Conventional science does go though the window and i'm not a scientist either so i'll habitually tend to invent something like maybe the nature of the supernova was so different or there was some incredible fluke of circumstances from the view of their 24th Century science that caused space to warp unexpectedly and for the shockwave to move faster than they anticipated.
If no one else has mentioned this, the comic book trade paperback Star Trek: Countdown adds a lot of background to the film. It was also written by the movie's two writers. Check at your local comic book store or Borders and Barnes and Nobel.
I'm not trying to vindicate poor Nero by bashing Khan... but if someone says Nero didn't have a motivation and Khan did, then I'm sorry, if you really want to see it that way, neither of them had logical reasons to hate the people they hated.
Would Khan have destroyed Earth and all Federation planets to get back at Kirk? I'm guessing not.
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