I'm looking for this movie to confirm a 20 year old suspicion I've had, concerning another Star Trek movie, that Nimoy had influence in.
STVI? I don't get it.
I'm looking for this movie to confirm a 20 year old suspicion I've had, concerning another Star Trek movie, that Nimoy had influence in.
Force of Nature? Season one villain?
Could be some WNMHGB remake.
1. Kirk will face his first problem with Starfleet Regulation. The High Command and even Spock will question his capability as captain. Somebody will tell that he is too young as a captain. And... Kirk will do something wrong at the first part of the story that make his situation worst.
2. Mc Coy will face his first away mission and complain a lot.
3. Spock will face some trouble with his relation with Uhura.
4. Sulu, Chekov, Scotty..., well I don't know.
Nimoy: I had a very interesting conversation with Gene Roddenberry in which we’d been discussing the idea of this movie being about going into the Klingon territory, into the Klingon Empire. I came up with the idea that since Nixon, who was a known conservative, was the person who could go to China to make a deal, who were obviously not conservative – they were a very deeply red Communist country – that Captain Kirk would be the ideal choice to go to the Klingon Empire to deal with them to create a détente between the Kingon Empire and our side, the Federation. That idea intrigued Nick Meyer and he wrote a very workable screenplay, but what I was hoping for was that once inside the Klingon Empire we would find out something about the Klingons that would surprise us all. Why are they so angry? Why are they so hostile? Why are so warring? Why are they so bent on conflict and paranoia and suspicion? What’s going on in their minds? What’s inside that Empire that we don’t know that would surprise us? We never quite got to that. We never quite did. We did do an interesting story about the political faction within the Klingon’s structure, but we didn’t quite get to that amazing revelation about what the Klingons were really all about.
There's some fan disgruntlement over Kirk being cocky. The solution is for Kirk himself to be the one who takes himself down a peg. Kirk develops as a character, the fans stop bitching. For ten seconds.
I never saw this interview before, but it fits quite well. As for the Klingons being the force to deal with, anybody listen to the writer's comments on the second dvd. They come right out and say that they have to revisit "Rura Penthe" which is a subplot in STVI. I think this might also be the reason why we heard Archer's name mentioned. Up until this point, he's the only one that escaped from the prison planet. And what exactly did Spock Prime mean when he said that he had failed. Did he have an agenda that included changing the timeline in some respect?Something to do with this?
Nimoy: I had a very interesting conversation with Gene Roddenberry in which we’d been discussing the idea of this movie being about going into the Klingon territory, into the Klingon Empire. I came up with the idea that since Nixon, who was a known conservative, was the person who could go to China to make a deal, who were obviously not conservative – they were a very deeply red Communist country – that Captain Kirk would be the ideal choice to go to the Klingon Empire to deal with them to create a détente between the Kingon Empire and our side, the Federation. That idea intrigued Nick Meyer and he wrote a very workable screenplay, but what I was hoping for was that once inside the Klingon Empire we would find out something about the Klingons that would surprise us all. Why are they so angry? Why are they so hostile? Why are so warring? Why are they so bent on conflict and paranoia and suspicion? What’s going on in their minds? What’s inside that Empire that we don’t know that would surprise us? We never quite got to that. We never quite did. We did do an interesting story about the political faction within the Klingon’s structure, but we didn’t quite get to that amazing revelation about what the Klingons were really all about.
Nope. I've known ones with a much wider range of personality types, including ones who were intelligent and mature even at that young age, which isn't all that young, it's several years past college after all.I might be wrong but I thought most 25 year old males were rather cocky.
These I suspect are likely:
No Romulans
No Doomsday Machine (done destroying planets already)
Spock/Uhura relationship tensions
Chekov comedy 'nomance' with female crew member (possibly Rand?)
Big McCoy acting scene, saving life of major character old-fashioned way (with Urban doing scene justice)
Scotty getting drunk(Pegg comedy moment)
Christine Chapel
Major space battle (more along lines of oldTrek movies rather than Kelvin ass-kicking; Enterprise gets damaged; Scotty has to fix - and would give excuse to change engineering in third film)
Interested to see what others might add (apart from obvious ones like: Kirk gets fight scene/shirt ripped *snort*)
^Rand as Kirk's bodyguard?
Don't we have a tomboy-tough-"cool-girl" in NuUhura already--and aren't a lot of fans WHINING about that?
(Or are you thinking more along the lines of Muammar Gadaffi's "bodyguards"...?)
^Rand as Kirk's bodyguard?
Don't we have a tomboy-tough-"cool-girl" in NuUhura already--and aren't a lot of fans WHINING about that?
(Or are you thinking more along the lines of Muammar Gadaffi's "bodyguards"...?)
Really? I've seen fans unhappy about Uhura being in a relationship with Spock, I've seen fans whining that she only got to do more because her additional scenes related to her being a 'love interest', I've seen criticism that she's a bit too thin to pull off a skant like Nichelle, but I've seen no criticism at all about her being a 'tomboy'! That surprises me quite a lot if that's true.
I don't really want Rand to be head of security because I loathe the obsession with department heads and senior officers. I like the fact that Rand is a non-com (most probably a petty officer since the Captain's Yeoman is quite a senior position and she was a chief petty officer by TMP). Plus the chief of security has a lot of other duties that might interfere with the plot.
As his yeoman she needs no excuse to be at Kirk's side whether on the bridge or on landing parties. It's a simple mechanism for allowing her to be in the thick of the action without needing an in-plot excuse (like you need to get Uhura away from her post - particularly when the writers forget relevant skills such as her fluency in Romulan and keep her on the ship instead of sending her on an away mission where the ability to understand Romulan could be crucial).
I speak of Rand as a 'bodyguard' only in that a modern version of the captain's yeoman should be combat-trained and capable of covering his/her captain's back
instead of cowering behind it like TOS Rand.
It's interesting that you choose to compare the situation to Gadaffi's exclusive use of female bodyguards. Surely the US President has female members of the Secret Service on his protection detail? I think perhaps you are ascribing a cultural bias to your definition of a 'bodyguard' as a hulking great man who beats down anybody who gets too close.
Someone trained in security protocols who accompanies the captain could be viewed as a bodyguard whether they're male or female. Rand could be adjusted into the 21st century quite easily to fulfill that role. In fact, it would be more cringeworthy if all she gets to do is serve coffee and make eyes at Kirk. Even the original sixties character, who was the female lead until they fired Grace Lee Whitney lets not forget, had far more potential than that.
I've been thinking about that for a long time. Especially considering that starships beyond about TWOK don't really seem to have Yeowman, nor should there really be a need for them on a vessel with 23rd century technology where most of a Yeowman's duties would be automated anyway.If Rand was made head of security or something instead of a yeoman, it could work. As far as romance, just tease a romance between Kirk and Rand. Kirk gets the girl in the XIII perhaps?
I don't really want Rand to be head of security because I loathe the obsession with department heads and senior officers. I like the fact that Rand is a non-com (most probably a petty officer since the Captain's Yeoman is quite a senior position and she was a chief petty officer by TMP). Plus the chief of security has a lot of other duties that might interfere with the plot.
I've been thinking about that for a long time. Especially considering that starships beyond about TWOK don't really seem to have Yeowman, nor should there really be a need for them on a vessel with 23rd century technology where most of a Yeowman's duties would be automated anyway.If Rand was made head of security or something instead of a yeoman, it could work. As far as romance, just tease a romance between Kirk and Rand. Kirk gets the girl in the XIII perhaps?
"Security Chief Janice Rand" is alot more workable, character wise, than "Captain's secretary and coffee girl Janice Rand." I also doubt anyone would really complain; it's not as if Rand was a really outstanding character to begin with.
I don't really want Rand to be head of security because I loathe the obsession with department heads and senior officers. I like the fact that Rand is a non-com (most probably a petty officer since the Captain's Yeoman is quite a senior position and she was a chief petty officer by TMP). Plus the chief of security has a lot of other duties that might interfere with the plot.
A noncom can't be head of security? Somehow I always thought "Sergeant Rand" had kind of an easy ring to it. Maybe have Kirk hear the name for the first time and five minutes later express surprise and bewilderment to discover that Sergeant Rand is actually a pretty woman with a phaser and a marksman certificate.
There's a hilarious Youtube video, something like 'Should Rand have stayed on the ship?' where they examine her 'best' moments, which included her using McCoy (I think) as a human shield in ' Miri.'It's certainly worth a look when thinking about how to modernise the character and it is very funny.
I always saw Janice as being a comic character who could get a great double act going with Scotty or Chekov. They could also allude to her 'future' role under Sulu's command, which had its roots (no pun intended) in the botany scene of 'the Man Trap'.
I'd quite like to see her as an overzealous, overprotective yeoman, wrestling Carol Marcus to the floor when she charges in spitting blood and fire or 'protecting' him from that orion slave girl because, 'I thought I saw a knife, sir,' followed by Kirk's enquiry as to exactly where she could hide the knife in that space bikini.
It may just be me, but I find Janice a lot easier to write for than Uhura or Chapel because Janice's role is so flexible and the others are much more serious characters.
Miss Whitney noted in Longest Trek that Gene actually wanted Rand to be to Kirk what Miss Kitty was to Marshall Dillon--the confidant, in a way that even Bones couldn't be. Bones and Jim talk man-to-man, Rand provides the feminine insight to Kirk. (For some reason, the writers didn't seem to take a liking to this--the only time we saw a hint of this was in "Balance of Terror", when Rand comes into Kirk's quarters and tries to cheer him up a bit.)
And of course, a lot of us must have read the notes by The Bird himself to the effect that Rand to have a "sister-brother" relationship with Spock, "...perhaps because beneath her swinging exterior is a motherly instinct for lonely men."
She was to be even more audacious towards Spock than Bones--again, feminine insight, seeing things another man wouldn't. Spock, amused, would respond in kind and guess at some of her secrets (definitely some "humor" here!).
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