The Kelvin was at rest relative to the Narada originally or nearly so. It must have had some propulsion and control or Kirk’s father could have abandoned ship like everyone else.
Sorry, I meant the
Kelvin deprived the
Narada of all propulsion, control and armament (as the ramming ended Nero's quest to catch or destroy the shuttlecraft and left the mining ship spinning and leaking jetsam).
For all we know, Nero had to spend the next 25 years repairing what he could, and was still left with a much weakened ship.
And you think word of him wiping out 47 Klingon ships was exaggerated or due to cleaver (red matter?) tricks?
I rather think Nero made that one out of whole cloth. No Klingon ships were destroyed - it was just a ruse to get Starfleet to go to Laurentius to meet the imaginary threat.
OTOH, it did happen exactly one hour after Nero had acquired red matter from Spock, if Starfleet's intel on the events was correct...
On the contrary, he should have succeeded without red matter.
Only red matter is known to kill planets in that movie. And the asteroid-tugging trick was never demonstrated; we have no real reason to think his ship would be capable of towing a rock large enough that Starfleet couldn't un-tow it. An absolute prerequisite for asteroid bombardment, then, would be the elimination of Starfleet. Which Nero was only able to achieve by creating the Laurentian diversion, one way or another; he could never have seriously hoped to kill more than two planets that way until Starfleet caught up with his very slowly moving vessel. Indeed, him managing to threaten Earth was a major mystery in the movie - why would the main fleet have been that slow to react to news of Vulcan being lost, when the
Enterprise, reduced to warp four and doing all sorts of stupid diversions, so easily outran Nero?
I mean, if the fleet went to Laurentius in response to the supposed Klingon calamity, we know when they left. And we know when Nero reached Earth, in terms of the time of the day at San Francisco. By turning around when Vulcan was lost, they should have preceded Nero to Earth.
...Unless we assume the fleet went to Laurentius well in advance of Spock delivering the red matter to Nero, for a completely unrelated reason. Nobody did seem to require any explanations when the Admiral at the Academy said "With our main forces deployed at Laurentius". Perhaps there was a war going on there? But that would mean the arrangement at Earth, with ships lacking crews, was permanent rather than temporary, which would be odd. Moreover, that would mean Nero didn't send the fleet to Laurentius, which would mean he had absolutely phenomenal luck. It doesn't make sense that way.
Nero lost the first round, with
Kelvin, although Starfleet lost it as well. Nero won the second round at Vulcan. And then he lost the third round at Earth, reacting in panic and rage at a single tiny vessel that had just fired its peashooters and achieved an effect comparable to handgun fire - that is, blasted his only known planet-busting weapon to pieces. Nero had no plan, no weapons, and no hope.
Which is
good writing when your villain is a civilian madman, rather than a hardened warrior. The one odd thing there is that Nero spent 25 years being a madman and not wisening up - but we can chalk that up to him being a Romulan, with centuries of life to spare.
Timo Saloniemi