They don't "embrace" it. STO takes place in the old timeline.
Have you written off all Star Trek with similar "problems"?I'm very sorry, but I'm afraid that this is just one of many reasons I find I cannot accept ST XI; it's a total mess. If the novel writers and makers of ST: Online want to embrace it, they're welcome to. But not me, at least not until its errors are fixed.
You need to watch the movie again.
When the Federation fleet set off for Vulcan, Nero couldn't have been there much more than half an hour or so, and when the fleet arrived Vulcan was already in pretty dire straits from Nero's drilling. Logically, then, the Enterprise should not have gotten back in time to save Earth. There's simply no getting around this.
They don't "embrace" it. STO takes place in the old timeline.
Yes, it's been mentioned quite a few times already.
In fact, my character is commanding one.
So they force to change ships each time you go up in rank?
So they force to change ships each time you go up in rank?
And yes, of course the movie has timing problems and other plot holes. Name a single Trek movie that doesn't have plot holes. If you're going to reject ST '09 because of something as trivial as a timing problem, then you should also reject TWOK for the sheer ludicrousness of Genesis, the contradictions in the portrayal of Khan's followers, the anachronistic Starfleet paraphernalia on Ceti Alpha, the inability of Reliant's crew to count, the idiocy of Scotty abandoning his post and bringing a wounded engineer to the bridge instead of sickbay, etc. etc.
Ah, I see. I just thought it would suck if you found a really good ship, that you had really mastered and gotten to like, and were then forced to give it up.
And yes, of course the movie has timing problems and other plot holes. Name a single Trek movie that doesn't have plot holes. If you're going to reject ST '09 because of something as trivial as a timing problem, then you should also reject TWOK for the sheer ludicrousness of Genesis, the contradictions in the portrayal of Khan's followers, the anachronistic Starfleet paraphernalia on Ceti Alpha, the inability of Reliant's crew to count, the idiocy of Scotty abandoning his post and bringing a wounded engineer to the bridge instead of sickbay, etc. etc.
May I point out that Greg Cox has reconciled most of these errors in his novels about Khan? If someone can do the same for the errors in XI, I would be very happy.
^Exactly. I bet that most of the people who condemn the new movie for its plot holes have no trouble forgiving TWOK for its equally glaring plot holes. That's because we've had decades to get used to TWOK as part of the tapestry of Star Trek and learn to rationalize or ignore its inconsistencies, but ST XI is still new. But that doesn't make it any less of a double standard.
I think its more likely that people are willing to overlook some trivial plot holes in a film such as TWOK where they are surrounded by quality drama, sci-fi ideas, characterization, and storytelling but in a film that is essentially 90% glitz, in-joke/references and on-rushing stylish non-sense with a glaring LACK of engrossing ideas, drama, or science fiction ideas those plot holes tend to be more egregious.
Plus, TWOK never had anything as testing of an audience's suspension of disbelief as Kirk just happening upon Spock Prime in an ice cave.
Kirk saying he's "never faced death" after losing his best friend (Gary), his own brother and sister-in-law, the love of his life (Edith), his wife (Miramanee), and her unborn child???
I can buy that one, actually. Plenty of people who go through horrible things in life repress rather than actually deal with them; as you correctly note, in the span of about three years, Kirk lost about six people who were incredibly important to him, and yet, throughout most of TOS, he seemed unaffected by their deaths. The idea that he might be repressing those emotional problems and that it wasn't until his middle age crisis combined with Spock's death that he really began confronting death -- the death of his loved ones and the inevitability of his own death -- seems believable to me.
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