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Should novels set in the JJVerse rectify the film's plot holes?

Might or might not. No real reason for him to though. If Spock, as First officer< can have a realtionship with Uhura there's no reason Kirk could go after any woman he wanted to. This Kirk wasn't "The stack of books with legs". He also hasn't been assigned to a ship before now.
 
Hm. That's an interesting point. I'm if he was just Science officer, there wouldn't be a problem, because Uhura isn't in his department, but as First Officer, he's everyone's superior (except Kirk's, obviously). Which, of course, is the original reason he didn't assign her to the ship, since he didn't want to look like he was just reeling in his squeeze.

I somehow doubt BALOK has a Starfleet Advisor to help them keep all this stuff about fraternization straight.
 
In the Titan series, admittedly in the future (and another universe), Riker's the Captain and he's married to a crew member. That's pretty much as fraternized as you can get <grin>
 
Might or might not. No real reason for him to though. If Spock, as First officer< can have a realtionship with Uhura there's no reason Kirk could go after any woman he wanted to. This Kirk wasn't "The stack of books with legs". He also hasn't been assigned to a ship before now.
Thats the point. The script hasn't been written. We've no idea what Kirk's attitude toward a relationship with a subordinate will be. For himself or his officers. Being a stack of books with legs didn't stop Kirk from pursuing a relationship with Ruth (possibly an older woman, maybe an instructor),Carol Marcus or Areel Shaw. Nor do we know the circumstances surrounding these relationships.
 
Spock was banging a cadet and he's suppose to be more straight than Kirk, so I doubt (based on that writer's choice) he's going to have many concerns about getting his end away with crew members.
 
Spock was banging a cadet...

We don't know that. Strictly speaking, all we know is that Uhura kissed Spock on two occasions. For all we know, the turbolift scene was their first kiss. And even if they'd kissed before, that doesn't necessarily mean they'd had sex.

And again, can we not use language that assumes the male is the only active party? Uhura was obviously the aggressor in the relationship.
 
According to Memory Alpha - "Commander Spock served as one of Cadet Uhura's instructors and judged her performance to be consistently exemplary."

We just assumed it was her scolastic performance he was referring to.
 
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According to Memory Alpha - "Commander Spock served as one of Cadet Uhura's instructors and judged her performance to be consistently exemplary."

We just assumed it was her scolastic performance he was referring to.
The film's dialog would seem to indicate it was.
 
They spent months hashing out this story, putting far more thought and care into its construction than you or I ever have, and with far more at stake for them career-wise if they screwed it up.

You can't use that as an argument that it was right, though. Yes, from a general-consumption perspective, it did work. But people put a lot of thought and care into less popular movies like Fantastic Four and Daredevil and had just as much at stake.
I can't argue that it didn't satisfy most other people. But the points you make there are purely incidental to that.

Personally, I'm puzzled that you're having such a hard time understanding these decisions. I think you just need to learn to open your mind and be a little more flexible.

I think there's a definite difference between not understanding something, and simply disagreeing. I think that I do understand, but just feel it could've been more artistic. That doesn't mean that I couldn't ever be flexible enough to appreciate this on its own merits; but analyzing how something could've been better is a valid topic for discussion, in my opinion (and discussing these points to such a rigorous degree can actually aid my appreciation). I also think that opining on how something could've been better isn't tantamount to judging it "bad." Do you disagree?

Actually, I do think that the storytelling in Batman & Robin was radically different from Batman Forever. Maybe not quite as radical as Begins, but Forever was a lot less campy than B&R, and part of the reason that Val Kilmer was dropped is that he was resistant to the extent of campiness to which Schumacher was trying to take it.
Only a difference of degree, really.

I suppose. But the point I was making was that the change in cast and change in tone were directly connected.

I never claimed that "the general public would never even have heard of Vulcan." Of course that's ridiculous. I rather claimed that they wouldn't know whether it had ever blown up or not.
That's being way too literal-minded. They didn't have to know whether it had blown up or not. But they knew it was an important place in the Trek universe, and they knew it was important to one of the two main characters of the series, so blowing it up is something they'd recognize as a big fracking deal regardless of whether they're intimately acquainted with the historical minutiae of the original continuity. I think you're trying to evaluate everything here on far too reductionistic and literalistic a level, and are missing the forest for the trees. The way an audience responds to movies isn't about specific factual details and minutiae, it's about their overall impressions and visceral responses.

I don't even think it's an important place in the Trek universe. If Vulcan had been destroyed in the Prime universe, what story-lines (other than the above stated) would that have changed?

That is an interesting point, but in some ways, I find it ironic. We shouldn't be 60's cavemen by only considering the man, but apparently all the woman is good for is having someone to kiss the man. If Uhura had been more of a key player in the movie, maybe this point would be more significant to me.
And I think it's chauvinistic to assume that just because her role is romantic, that makes her unimportant as a character. The point is that she's the initiator of the relationship, that she's not an appendage but is a character with agency in her own right. Uhura's role in the film fundamentally alters the whole Kirk-Spock dynamic, by giving Kirk a rival and gadfly and Spock a humanizing influence and confidante. She is absolutely a key player in the movie, so much so that even McCoy is pushed to the sidelines. Like I said, this is fundamentally a character-driven movie, and even though her role in the physical action is secondary, her impact on the character dynamic is profound.

Well, I'm going to have to differ the point, because I really don't think I want to get into a discussion about gender roles. :alienblush:

Anyway, that's beside the point I'm making, which is about those two specific scenes. Regardless of her role in the overall film, she's the aggressor in her romance with Spock, so it's missing the point to think the romantic scenes should've used Vulcan expressions of intimacy instead of human ones.

Why is it missing the point to suggest that she, being the initiator, might have initiated the type of contact that would be the most meaningful to a Vulcan (that is, the object of her affection)?

But then, I'll go ahead and respond to myself that the question brings the argument into a circle about what types of intimacy Spock would respond to. I think that probably just has to be left open to interpretation.


Well, I think the discussion's starting to wind down (maybe not, who knows), but before it officially fades, I want to say that this has been a most thought-provoking discussion; the best one I've had on here in quite a long a time. I sincerely hope I wasn't the only who drew some value from it.
 
They spent months hashing out this story, putting far more thought and care into its construction than you or I ever have, and with far more at stake for them career-wise if they screwed it up.

You can't use that as an argument that it was right, though.

I'm not. I'm using it to point out that it was not a shoddy or thoughtless decision and that it's kind of arrogant for an armchair quarterback on the Internet to make judgments about the intelligence of their choices. Just because you don't agree with their decisions doesn't mean you're more qualified than they are to know what a good decision would've been. It's always easy to judge and criticize something when you don't have to do it yourself.


Personally, I'm puzzled that you're having such a hard time understanding these decisions. I think you just need to learn to open your mind and be a little more flexible.

I think there's a definite difference between not understanding something, and simply disagreeing.

That's exactly my point. You aren't just saying you disagree, you keep insisting that you're utterly bewildered and mystified at these decisions, and that makes you come off as either extremely disingenuous in your choice of words or borderline-autistic in your inability to grasp human emotional response.

I think that I do understand, but just feel it could've been more artistic.

And that contradicts the rhetoric of bewilderment and incomprehension that you've been using over and over throughout this thread.


Why is it missing the point to suggest that she, being the initiator, might have initiated the type of contact that would be the most meaningful to a Vulcan (that is, the object of her affection)?

If you haven't gotten it by now, then you're just not trying. Again, stop stereotyping Spock as "a Vulcan." He's half-Vulcan, half-human.
 
We've seen Spock make peace with his two halves in the prime universe. Hopefully they'll take NuSpock in a different direction now. He's seen what Romulans are capable of. What if he gets passionate about taking down the Romulan Empire? Show him using different parts of his heritage. The passion of the human with the intelligence of the Vulcan focused on making sure that the Romulans never get to the point that someone like Nero can come to be. Rather than unification, assimilation.

We're on a new path, let's not look for a shortcut back to the old one.
 
I'm not. I'm using it to point out that it was not a shoddy or thoughtless decision and that it's kind of arrogant for an armchair quarterback on the Internet to make judgments about the intelligence of their choices. Just because you don't agree with their decisions doesn't mean you're more qualified than they are to know what a good decision would've been. It's always easy to judge and criticize something when you don't have to do it yourself.

I'm not saying I'm more qualified than them to judge a good decision. I'm only the most qualified to judge what would've worked better for me. And if it would've worked better for me, that indicates at least a possibility that it may also have worked better for some other people.

And besides, are you suggesting that you've never played "armchair quarterback" here, and made judgments about the intelligence of anyone else's decisions? I think that you, especially, should be careful about who you call arrogant.

That's exactly my point. You aren't just saying you disagree, you keep insisting that you're utterly bewildered and mystified at these decisions, and that makes you come off as either extremely disingenuous in your choice of words or borderline-autistic in your inability to grasp human emotional response.
I think that I do understand, but just feel it could've been more artistic.
And that contradicts the rhetoric of bewilderment and incomprehension that you've been using over and over throughout this thread.

Congratulations again for your unrivaled skill at subtle mockery.

I am constantly bewildered at how different many of my opinions are from what could be termed the "general public." I understand that the writers made these decisions because they felt it would have the best result for that general public. I do have trouble understanding how the general public's and my opinions (and perceptions) can be so profoundly different, when we all breathe the same air.
You, on the other hand, seem to be acting like you've never met someone who had opinions other than that general public (or, perhaps just nobody who's expressed them), and that also mystifies me, because I know I'm not the first person to articulate these concepts.

But, to summarize, I'm not bewildered at the concepts in the film, I'm bewildered that that's what the public wanted. If you consider that borderline-autistic, I guess I'll just have to live with that (but I think you know better).

If you haven't gotten it by now, then you're just not trying. Again, stop stereotyping Spock as "a Vulcan." He's half-Vulcan, half-human.

Yeah, I guess I'm not trying with that point. Spock, culturally, is a Vulcan, in the same way that I'm an American.
 
I am constantly bewildered at how different many of my opinions are from what could be termed the "general public." I understand that the writers made these decisions because they felt it would have the best result for that general public. I do have trouble understanding how the general public's and my opinions (and perceptions) can be so profoundly different, when we all breathe the same air.

And that, to me, is the strangest thing you've said yet. People think differently from each other. That's the way they are. What's so bewildering about it? I think it would be bewildering if people didn't think differently, especially in matters of taste.


Yeah, I guess I'm not trying with that point. Spock, culturally, is a Vulcan, in the same way that I'm an American.

And I think that gives far too little credit to Amanda. As I said, it's likely that Spock spent far more time growing up with Amanda than he did with Sarek or any other individual Vulcan. It makes no sense to assume that she had no influence on his socialization, especially when we know that she introduced him to a lot of Earth culture and literature.

Indeed, the whole conceit that Spock has a "human half" he's constantly struggling with behaviorally pretty much proves that he's been heavily influenced by Amanda. After all, it's illogical to attribute his humanlike behaviors to genetics; Vulcan behavior is not genetic, but learned, and their emotions are intrinsically more intense than those of a human. So the Vulcan and human "halves" that are observed in Spock's behavior must instead be the result of behavioral conditioning and socialization. That's the only way they make any sense. And that means that the human factors in his behavior must be the result of Amanda's influence, an influence that would be inevitable given that she was his primary caregiver in his formative years.

And there are plenty of Americans who are also socialized as Mexicans, Japanese, Koreans, Germans, Haitians, you name it. A primary cultural influence doesn't equate to an exclusive cultural influence.
 
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You can't use that as an argument that it was right, though. Yes, from a general-consumption perspective, it did work.

From a fan perspective it also worked. Just not for you and a few others.

From a professional film critic's perspective it also worked. Again, from a business standpoint it worked.
 
And I think that gives far too little credit to Amanda. As I said, it's likely that Spock spent far more time growing up with Amanda than he did with Sarek or any other individual Vulcan. It makes no sense to assume that she had no influence on his socialization, especially when we know that she introduced him to a lot of Earth culture and literature.

No, he is just being realistic. I don't know about you, but the average kid spends more time in school with classmates and teachers than with his parents, his lifestyle is dictated more by the cultural mainstream than by his parents.

And as long as Amanda didn't go wacko and put Spock out of the schools that taught Surak's teachings of repressing emotions, then he shouldn't have had any problems actually. Did Spock and Family live in "Little Earth" or why was he constantly confused by Human and Vulcan traditions? He should have actually received the full package of Vulcan culture and therefore shouldn't have had any problems.

And what I find the most stupid about it is that little Vulcan children and adult Council members are full blown racists. Vulcans live the IDIC. Spock is the representation of what they believe in.
 
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