Wait, how many days has the movie been out?I think I see a rage thread coming. It feels good not to really care. *Kicks back and waits for others to argue.*
hehe. I was waiting to see when you would show up in this thread

Wait, how many days has the movie been out?I think I see a rage thread coming. It feels good not to really care. *Kicks back and waits for others to argue.*
Spock needs Uhura for so many more reasons than "conquest".
I was talking about Kirk's needs there.
like I said earlier, I see fanfic.
Yes I know, sorry I should have been clearer.
Kirk's needs are inferior. I don't care about his need to conquest. He has the galaxy for that. And plenty of Orions that haven't blown up.
I can see Spock still being a cold fish though, especially as as defense mechanism and Kirk being all warm and empathic with Uhura, stepping into the breach as it were.. and then I will hate him.
She's really going to be ticked off when he decides to go back and do Kolinar. That's all I could think while all that sweetness was going on. Sista, you are in for a world of heartache.
Yeah, I'm just going by the old timeline. Don't know what he'll do in this one, but it seems reasonable that they won't tie down a dynamic character. Something's going to get in the way.
Indeed. Spock is often credited with bringing an entire generation of women into sf.
Too fast? For us, the viewer, perhaps. But it might as well have been going on for 4 years at the Academy. Perhaps he knew her from before that. She doesn't get to be his special protegé for nothing; she probably consistently proven herself to him. Or he wouldn't have her transferred to the Enterprise.It was too comfortable too fast, though.
unethical can be good fodder for drama.
think about it.
stop thinking of drama in terms of real life.
it doesn't work that way,
Too fast? For us, the viewer, perhaps. But it might as well have been going on for 4 years at the Academy. Perhaps he knew her from before that. She doesn't get to be his special protegé for nothing; she probably consistently proven herself to him. Or he wouldn't have her transferred to the Enterprise.It was too comfortable too fast, though.
I haven't waded through all the responses, so someone else may have already brought this up but....
I really enjoyed the movie but this is one of the things that really gripes at me. I think it's pretty clear from the "reassignment" scene and from later events that Spock and Uhura have an ongoing relationship. That means that they were lovers when she was a cadet and he was an instructor -- her instructor.
I don't care what you say about timelines and advances in human relationships or anything else. Such an affair, particularly when it involves favoritism, is UNETHICAL in any century in any universe. And Spock, as we all know, is nothing if not ethical.
To me, this was a poorly thought out attempt to "spice up" the new movie. New Spock has plenty of moments in which he demonstrates that he is less emotionally controlled than in the old series. The Uhura/Spock affair is just gratuitous.
I call bullshit on the whole thing.![]()
Indeed. Spock is often credited with bringing an entire generation of women into sf.
This is off topic but; Please Greg, tell us you've been approached about new work for nuTrek or any other Trek! I'd also love to see you tackle Voyager in the DQ. *sorry - overcome by excitement over your presence . . . *
unethical can be good fodder for drama.
think about it.
stop thinking of drama in terms of real life.
it doesn't work that way,
I know how drama works, thanks. I've got a degree in theatre and worked in The Biz for well over 25 years. Feel free to disagree with me but you're going to have to offer a better argument than "you don't know what you're talking about."
My argument is that the writers have taken a character who has always stood for the ethical, right decision and subverted that character in a very basic way. This isn't "dramatic" -- there is just as much, if not more, drama in a person standing for a particular code regardless of circumstance. This is a cheap, easy, poorly thought out choice and I didn't like it.
But, as I admitted in my first post, it's a quibble of sorts. On the whole, I was very pleased with the movie, am looking forward to seeing it again (and again) and looking forward even more to seeing where the new production team takes the franchise.
I didn't have a problem with the emotion he showed. The character is still young; and don't forget, in early TOS he was CONSTANTLY SHOUTING.
Full Vulcans do sometimes show less than complete emotionlessness. Spock in TOS was the perfect example of "no zealot like a convert." Or as been famously noted: "More Vulcan than Vulcan."
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