Like Trekker 4747, I'm also puzzled by the need to show the
Enterprise (or similar starship) on the ground. What purpose does it serve? I assume, and might be wrong, that the whole point is for Kirk to see a starship while he's lost and aimless to fill him with a sense of purpose and possibly to get away from an abusive uncle. That's not bad, and it's easy for audiences to get a handle on it, but it wouldn't be hard to do this in orbit.
Consider:
Young Jim Kirk is heading home from a failed Federation colony, along with a ship load of other passengers. Some are gaunt and carry haunted expressions from the horrors they've endured. Perhaps we see flashbacks to the colony from Jim's perspective as a tyrant condemns people to death so that the remaining colonists survive. He's seen people he loves die.
Jim makes his way to a dark, quiet place to be alone with his thoughts; an observation lounge with only one or two other people present, watching blurry and streaked stars drift past the lounge windows. He settles in there, leaning against the glass and continuing to play out the memories that torture him. In the background, a steward is making her way, speaking softly to passengers and urging them to their seats.
She reaches Kirk and tells him they're moments away from Earth orbit. Something about this boy catches her attention (what IS it with this guy?) and she takes a moment to chat with him. She gasps as he tells her about Tarsus IV and the actions of Kodos. A quiet moment passes during which the liner drops out of warp and the Earth fills most of the window. Shipyards and NEO traffic dot the spacescape; one will pass quite close.
The steward asks where he'll go now. He says something about a ranch in Iowa, but it hasn't been home since he was eight. He's not certain he ever wants to settle on another planet again anyway. In the reflection of the window, we see his eyes catch on something ... she sees it too. "It's a new Starship. The Enterprise, I think. Starfleet's ships are getting bigger and ... more beautiful, too, don't you think?" Kirk stares at the ship without answering, his eyes sweeping over the curves of her hull ... the depths of her open framework. "Where do you think it'll go?" he asks her. "Anywhere, I guess. Everywhere."
For the first time, we see Kirk smile.
Now, assuming my assumption about the reason for putting the
Enterprise on the ground in the first place is right, doesn't this serve the same purpose? And doesn't this tell a more wrenching story than a drunken father-figure with anger management issues? And we've kept to the original conceit that the
Enterprise was built -- or at least assembled -- in space.