"Correcting" unimportant stuff such as this is too nerdy even for me. And that's saying a lot.
ADF did "correct" it. The novelization says "... nothing left but my skeleton."
"Correcting" unimportant stuff such as this is too nerdy even for me. And that's saying a lot.
nuKirk can read?
I thought the idea behind it was that the Orion chick hacked the program for him...he just wrote the code...^And in the Academy scenes, Kirk's attitude wasn't that of a slacker, but that of a student so gifted that he found the educational process tedious and restrictive and refused to be bound by its limits. (So more like Caulfield in Frazz than like Calvin or Bart Simpson.) After all, he was smart enough to hack a computer program designed by Spock.
"Correcting" unimportant stuff such as this is too nerdy even for me. And that's saying a lot.
ADF did "correct" it. The novelization says "... nothing left but my skeleton."
However, since that is the 23rd century, one should think that writing computer code would be taught in school just as any other language as it would be an integral part of life. Think how much we rely on computers and IT-based stuff today, from cars to refrigerators, now think of an extrapolation of how much we'll rely on these things in the future. I have no issue with thinking that even the dumbest high school student in the late 2250s could write code.^ Even if that's true, it's not like any dummy can write usable computer code for something as sophisticated as a tactical simulation...contrary to the opinions espoused by Facebook ads, stupid radio commercials for community colleges as well a good portion of the people I've been forced to deal with over way too many years spent in the IT industry.
(Yeah, I've been carrying that around for a long time....)
I think she actually just got him into the program so he could hack it. At least that was how I interpreted it.I thought the idea behind it was that the Orion chick hacked the program for him...he just wrote the code...^And in the Academy scenes, Kirk's attitude wasn't that of a slacker, but that of a student so gifted that he found the educational process tedious and restrictive and refused to be bound by its limits. (So more like Caulfield in Frazz than like Calvin or Bart Simpson.) After all, he was smart enough to hack a computer program designed by Spock.
You've probably never heard "Nancy Pelosi's body has been taken over by the spirit of J. Edgar Hoover because he loves her sense of fashion," but that doesn't mean no one's ever said it before.
A thought: in general, the dialogue in the new movie tends to be more collequial than traditional Trek. ("Bullshit!") Could that be what's turning people off?
It's also worth noting that the scene is set 243 years in the future. It's probable that people then will be using slang and idioms that would sound unnatural and awkward to our ears, just as something like "My bad" or "Awesomesauce" would sound bizarre to someone from the 18th century...
The cast were signed for one movie and options for two sequels. Therefore = trilogy.
And once the trilogy ends, guess what's next: another TOS reboot. Think of Spider-Man. They are doing it right now.
Plays into the idea that reboot always equals bad. (as do sequels and remakes)^So what? How is another reboot bad as long as it's enjoyable?
^So what? How is another reboot bad as long as it's enjoyable?
I thought the idea behind it was that the Orion chick hacked the program for him...he just wrote the code...
However, since that is the 23rd century, one should think that writing computer code would be taught in school just as any other language as it would be an integral part of life.
But this defense is inconsistent with the rest of the movie. If they weren't using all those present-day colloquialisms, then that would make sense. But you can't just apply it to that one line, since there's no other future slang or idioms used anywhere else in the movie (at least, not as I recall).
Yeah, I've been thinking about that, too. They also may or may not be doing it with X-Men (hard to say at this stage of development). I think it's probably quite likely for Star Trek (and also Batman; probably Bond, too).
^So what? How is another reboot bad as long as it's enjoyable?
That's a knockout argument.
Personally, I prefer sequels over reboots and remakes any time. And if I asked you now what you would prefer, a sequel to Star Trek 2009 or yet another reboot, I'm sure you'd say: sequel. And if Star Trek 2009 Part III is just as good as Star Trek 2009 or even better, you'd still prefer yet another sequel over a reboot, no?
Besides, I think Hollywood will be out of it's OCD reboot phase by 2014.
My point is, it's unrealistic to begin with for a film set 300 years in the future to show characters speaking recognizable modern American English at all.
Given how much disbelief you have to suspend about the whole usage of language in the series, why is it so impossible to suspend disbelief about a single awkward sentence?
And come on, do you really mean to tell me you've never heard a real person say something that you found awkward and strange? That's what I'd find unrealistic, if every sentence ever spoken were well-constructed and idiomatically precise.
In a way, I wouldn't mind that. Sometimes I think it's too limiting to have all screen Trek presented as a single consistent reality, with even the alternate timelines being part of the same multiverse. It might be more freeing if there were multiple totally unconnected interpretations of the Trek universe, as there are with Batman or Spider-Man or Sherlock Holmes.
In a way, I wouldn't mind that. Sometimes I think it's too limiting to have all screen Trek presented as a single consistent reality, with even the alternate timelines being part of the same multiverse. It might be more freeing if there were multiple totally unconnected interpretations of the Trek universe, as there are with Batman or Spider-Man or Sherlock Holmes.
Christopher, automotive mechanics should be taught in today's schools. I come from the UK where almost everybody who drives tops up their own oil (we don't have an entire dedicated industry to change oil every 3k miles because people are too lazy or incompetent to do it themselves). Learning how to make simple repairs should be taught, as it makes people far more independent.
Christopher, automotive mechanics should be taught in today's schools. I come from the UK where almost everybody who drives tops up their own oil (we don't have an entire dedicated industry to change oil every 3k miles because people are too lazy or incompetent to do it themselves). Learning how to make simple repairs should be taught, as it makes people far more independent.
But we're not talking about simple repairs here. We're talking about something far, far more involved. The proposition was that any idiot in the 23rd century would be given enough computer instruction to be capable of hacking a program designed by Mr. Spock. I think that's an absurd proposition. Yes, I'm sure basic programming skills are taught as part of the ordinary curriculum in Kirk's time, but that's a far cry from being able to outprogram an A7-rated computer expert. That's not changing the oil, that's rebuilding the entire drive assembly.
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