I think the books should go the other way and each one should have a completely inexplicable scene that is never expanded upon or explained.
So for example, Kirk could go to Spock's cabin and he finds Spock playing cards with a horse. None of the characters question this and the presence of the horse is never explained.
And in this case, there are a ton of fans who see it differently. ST 2009 is the most successful Trek film in ages, if not ever, and the purpose of the Abramsverse books is specifically to attract its new fanbase to the novel line, not to repel them by saying "Hey, we think that movie you loved was wrong and here's why in exhaustive detail."
Well, hey, it's better than nothing. But I don't understand why they (Kurtzman and Orci) couldn't have just had Kirk call him "sawbones." Maybe I'm wrong, but it seemed fairly obvious to me. Like, after I saw the movie, I asked my dad (who's not a Trekkie) if he knew why Dr. McCoy was called Bones, and he said, "Because it's short for sawbones, right?" To me, it's Occam's Razor. But maybe that's just me.
The real problem, I suspect, is that the term "sawbones" has largely fallen out of the vernacular. It's a bit of antiquated slang that would have required too much effort to explain.
The real problem, I suspect, is that the term "sawbones" has largely fallen out of the vernacular. It's a bit of antiquated slang that would have required too much effort to explain.
Oh no, the effort.![]()
The real problem, I suspect, is that the term "sawbones" has largely fallen out of the vernacular. It's a bit of antiquated slang that would have required too much effort to explain.
Oh no, the effort.![]()
When you only have two hours to tell a story, why bog things down explaining what a "sawbones" is? Especially when it doesn't advance the plot.
That's just good editing.
Oh no, the effort.![]()
When you only have two hours to tell a story, why bog things down explaining what a "sawbones" is? Especially when it doesn't advance the plot.
That's just good editing.
If you can tell me how the car scene or the swollen hands and numb tounge advanced the plot, then I might tell you how they could have sneaked a good explanation for "sawbones" in there.![]()
^Why not? Why can't it be both? Kirk heard McCoy make an offhand crack about his wife leaving him only his bones, it struck him as ironic considering that McCoy was a doctor (i.e. "sawbones"), so he decided to use "Bones" as a nickname because of the combination of both factors. Makes perfect sense to me, and there's no conflict. Heck, it even explains why Kirk's nickname was simply "Bones" and not "Sawbones."
"Very good, sir," replied Sam. "There's a couple o' Sawbones down-stairs."
"A couple of what!" exclaimed Mr. Pickwick, sitting up in bed.
"A couple of Sawbones," said Sam.
"What's a Sawbone?" inquired Mr. Pickwick, not quite certain whether it was a live animal or something to eat.
"What! Don't know what a Sawbones is, sir?" inquired Mr. Weller. "I thought everybody know'd as a Sawbones was a Surgeon."
"Oh, a Surgeon, eh?" said Mr. Pickwick, with a smile.
KIRK: (saying something to McCoy, ending with: ) "... Bones!"
SPOCK: (raising a brow) "Bones?"
KIRK: "Well, he's a Sawbone!" (recognizes Spock doesn't get it, and smiles amused) "What? Don't know what a Sawbone is, Spock?"
McCOY: "He means down in sickbay I'm treating my patients using a butcher knife."
SPOCK: (slightly irritated, but getting the meaning) "That would be highly unpleasant."
The "bones" line in the movie killed three birds with one stone: it explained the nickname, fleshed out McCoy's backstory, and got a laugh from the audience.
Mission accomplished!
I liked the old "Sawbones" stuff, but the line as delivered in the movie was a bit unexpected - and hilarious. According to Karl Urban, he actually suggested the line during his first meeting with JJ and it gave everyone a heartwarming laugh and it went into the script in the early drafts.
It doesn't rewrite the old connotation at all. Nicknames often have several meanings, or mean different things to the various people who use them. And that's why they stick. Because they seem appropriate at the time, but keep seeming appropriate in new situations. They become running gags. Certainly, the people who know my nicknames think there are different reasons for the terms.
A doctor grumbles about having nothing left but his bones. A Sawbones complaining about bones. Clever! A nickname is born.
Okay, there is The Good That Men Do, but I doubt that would've gotten away with it if a) "These Are the Voyages" hadn't been so poorly received by fans and b) Berman and Braga hadn't moved on to other jobs by that point, removing them from the approval chain for Trek novels.
I could see this working for KirkPrime, but IMO at least, I really don't see either of those things being true of NewKirk.Or a very subtle moment where McCoy comes into Kirk's quarters at the Academy, while Kirk is reading Dickens' book and during that conversation he refers to him as Bones for the first time. No spoonfeeding, but you have the association to McCoy's actual profession (and not to his divorce, which is silly), you have Kirk's fondness for antiques AND even a hint at why Kirk could have been "a stack of books with legs" at the academy.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.