There's a Tribble in the movie? Where? 

Yeah, Kirk's really one to be talking about her having lots of guys over.


Yeah, Kirk's really one to be talking about her having lots of guys over.

I'm a sappy romantic and I really liked Spock/Uhura in the movie but I couldn't agree more on that.-The fact that there was no real romantic entanglement that had a direct bearing on the story at hand.
It was a great moment. Even if their relationship starts off differently (understatement of the yearThe bit on the Jellyfish between Spock and Kirk when Spock calls him "Jim" for the first time. It was as if, in spite of all that they had between them thus far, in the heat of the moment, we got the first true glimpse of the Kirk/Spock friendship in full force. Spock quotes the likelihood of success and Kirk just exudes pure-Kirk confidence that the plan will work. Great, great moment that kind of slipped by me the first few times.
It makes Amanda's death even more believable, IMO. I didn't find myself thinking "Oh come on, Chekov could have saved her easily, she was already beaming up" because it had been made clear in previous scenes that this was the early stages of transporting, when you weren't quite sure to arrive in one piece.The transporters. Yes, yes, yes! Make transporting seem difficult and dangerous again! It takes skill to operate a transporter...not just punching buttons and letting the computer do the work. Makes it a much more dramatic device and less of a cop-out.
In a cage just besides Scotty when Prime Spock and Kirk start to talk to him at the outpost. I've only spotted it at my third viewing and it was because I had read here that there was one.There's a Tribble in the movie? Where?![]()
In a cage just besides Scotty when Prime Spock and Kirk start to talk to him at the outpost. I've only spotted it at my third viewing and it was because I had read here that there was one.There's a Tribble in the movie? Where?![]()
The two times before I had only heard that odd noise I vaguely remembered from somewhere but couldn't place![]()
Ok, I only read about half of the posts in this thread, but has anyone mentioned the Gorn rock? I thought that was really cool. Loved all the cool TOS references thown in just for us fanatics.
Ok, I only read about half of the posts in this thread, but has anyone mentioned the Gorn rock? I thought that was really cool. Loved all the cool TOS references thown in just for us fanatics.
Gorn rock? I'm guessing you mean the mountains on Vulcan where the High Command were hiding out when Spock went down to get them?
Ok, I only read about half of the posts in this thread, but has anyone mentioned the Gorn rock? I thought that was really cool. Loved all the cool TOS references thown in just for us fanatics.
Gorn rock? I'm guessing you mean the mountains on Vulcan where the High Command were hiding out when Spock went down to get them?
Well, it is on Vulcan. Spock's mother looks out her window and the shape of the Gorn rock is unmistakable. The shot pans, and there are actually dozens of them. I loved it.
There's a Tribble in the movie? Where?
Yeah, Kirk's really one to be talking about her having lots of guys over.![]()
Two small things I loved that nobody has really brought up yet:
1) the sour, silent, long faced alien barfly reminded me greatly of Morn. I don't know if it was a sly nod to DS9 or just coincidence.
2) (obvious paraphrase) "...and if there is any common sense to the design, you should beam right into the cargo bay. There won't be a soul in sight."...and then Scotty beams Kirk and Spock right into the middle of a bridge full of pissed off Romulans. I thought it was fitting that a villain completely devoid of common sense captained a ship lacking the same. It got the biggest laugh from me.![]()
2) (obvious paraphrase) "...and if there is any common sense to the design, you should beam right into the cargo bay. There won't be a soul in sight."...and then Scotty beams Kirk and Spock right into the middle of a bridge full of pissed off Romulans. I thought it was fitting that a villain completely devoid of common sense captained a ship lacking the same. It got the biggest laugh from me.![]()
I agree with a good number of the points mentioned here.
But the moment where I really wanted to cheer--though it was very bittersweet indeed in how it came about--was to see Pike at the end, there to commend Kirk.
Most of the characters are (in my opinion) twisted versions of themselves, and this is to be expected considering the horrible things that have happened in their universe as compared to Timeline A. But Pike...I would say he is the one individual in this timeline who truly gained. He may not know it--but he definitely has. The cost to everyone else in that universe was horrible. And it was nice to have one bright spot to latch onto at the end.
(BTW, does anybody know whether he's intended to be a paraplegic now, in the new timeline, or if his injuries are more temporary in nature?)
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