So I'm OK with the way Kirk went. He died for what he believed in, and that's the main thing.
That's basically why it has never been a big deal for me. The movie's plot itself however...

So I'm OK with the way Kirk went. He died for what he believed in, and that's the main thing.
Am I the only one that actually prefers Kirk to be shot in the back, rather than falling off the bridge?
Well, as filmed for the original ending, he wasn't blown apart. He was just shot. Dead.
Dax's death was fine until the hokey deathbed scene. If you're gonna kill her off, that's fine; she's in the wrong place at the wrong time, and Dukat even apologizes to her seeming-corpse. But wait - she lives!! But just barely. And Starfleet medical which can save any major character any other time can't help her. Boooo.
I mean, Yar kept being brought up later in the series, Worf had to deal with Jadzia being dead but Dax still living on in Ezri, Spock dying practically turned Kirk emo, stuff like that.
Dax's death was fine until the hokey deathbed scene. If you're gonna kill her off, that's fine; she's in the wrong place at the wrong time, and Dukat even apologizes to her seeming-corpse. But wait - she lives!! But just barely. And Starfleet medical which can save any major character any other time can't help her. Boooo.
I also agree that the "Worf screams at heaven" bit was played and by-the-numbers, especially by his eighth year in Trek. A quiet scene where he just stares at the symbiont suspended in stasis, not quite comprehending what the response Klingon culture demands here, wondering if Jadzia really is dead, really kind of just amazed that the slug was his wife, unsure if it still is--that would've been better.
I sometimes think the question isn't so much whether the death should be in some sort of extraordinary manner, but whether the audience is likely to end up feeling as though it should have been avoidable.
I was reading this older article about Connor Trinnear's reaction to getting killed off in the final ep of Enterprise...
http://www.treknation.com/articles/trinneer_trektrak2005.shtmlhe felt that the death scene itself was scripted somewhat arbitrarily because "I've gotten out of much worse scrapes than that"
I think this is interesting because it also applies other lame Trek death scenes I've witnessed, especially Kirk's.
If you're going to kill a major character off...one who's already been through hell and lived to tell about it...you'd better make sure he's killed through very extraordinary circumstances.
Otherwise, the audience just ain't gonna buy it.
Kirk went out on the bridge to get the device, but had no reason to think that he wouldn't "cheat death" as he had so many times before. He risked his life, but no more so than on dozens of other occasions.
FWIW, the original ending of Generations had Soren shooting Kirk in the back. It was changed after the initial focus group audiences complained that Kirk should die a more heroic death.
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