The two starship captains weren't shipped in. They were seen before the court martial proceedings in the M-11 Starbase Club. Apparently, this was the result of editing the episode.
Did you forget that the Enterprise transporter was working fine?
And have you ever heard of recusal?
Changing the meaning of the chart is not necessary to repair any of these supposed plot holes....
Oof . . . and in dress uniform for trial, even. That badly contradicts the Captain's Log that "the officers who will comprise my court-martial board are proceeding to Starbase 11".The two starship captains weren't shipped in. They were seen before the court martial proceedings in the M-11 Starbase Club. Apparently, this was the result of editing the episode.
Kirk then reveals Jamie was aboard and Finney freaks out (more). The "captains all" comment would seem to specify the board, not the Starbase 11 population or anything else.
I mean, do you seriously believe that Kirk would deliberately put an innocent like Jamie in immediate danger?!
Or that Stone would allow it, for that matter, who explicitly said they would stay to hear the witness out instead of beaming off??![]()
And anyway, how do you know there wasn't another ship standing by, aware of the situation, just in case things got out of hand?
Still no need to retcon the chart.
The supposition is supported by the episode and I could give a rat's ass what fanwankery Okuda did in TOS-R.That's supposition unsupported by the chart and the Jein/Okuda conclusion that has been canonized . . . on that chart, Intrepid 1631 is at 100%, plus an extra simonize, apparently.
The supposition is supported by the episode and I could give a rat's ass what fanwankery Okuda did in TOS-R.
Except that the episode doesn't say that the first meeting takes place immediately upon arrival and in fact takes place at night (Jamie: I was just so upset that night), so probably at the end of the workday, after repairs have begun (It would be Kirk's first priority to make sure those repairs were underway).I'm perfectly fine with the rejection of the Jein/Okuda "fanwankery", but you're still stuck with claiming the chart shows ship repair status at 82% "complete" for a ship where repairs expected to last a couple of days have not even begun.
It is noted in Kirk's log entry after that initial meeting that the situation is "full repairs in progress".Except that the episode doesn't say that the first meeting takes place immediately upon arrival and in fact takes place at night (Jamie: I was just so upset that night), so probably at the end of the workday, after repairs have begun (It would be Kirk's first priority to make sure those repairs were underway).
Most likely, the deposition meeting was usually a scandal-free formality that was scheduled around the more important repair work, since there wouldn't be any urgency to get it done, as long as it got done.
{...}
And of course one would expect a flag officer in charge of a repair base to be wearing red and not green/gold.
That would be a wild stroke of luck for Jein, but in any case I don't think you can make that assessment.About what the chart is tracking: we have the Commodore looking up seemingly at the 1631 line, which is at 100%.
If that were true then the chart isn't about repairs. It says "% COMPLETE".Kirk says the damage to the Enterprise is "considerable" so I think showing 82% of full readyness is a reasonable way of tracking condition.
It's noted in the log entry before joining that meeting that a full report had already been made.So Stone is both in charge of the repair base and also not relevant enough to report damages to on arrival.
That would be a wild stroke of luck for Jein, but in any case I don't think you can make that assessment.
Past tense, but we see it being delivered, including the computer records from Spock which had not been provided or apparently even collected previously.It's noted in the log entry before joining that meeting that a full report had already been made.
It would also mean that the remaining starships in the chart are even more damaged than the Enterprise. Perhaps there drive systems were offline, so they could not be counted on to aid USS Enterprise.
The commodore's eyeline is perfect.
His eyes aren't even visible in the Trekcore HD capture
@DSG2k You keep selling it but no one's buying it.![]()
The intent is clear.
Nonsense. It's the only thing that makes the presence of the chart necessary. Percy Rodriquez scans the chart and then delivers the line of dialog about switching maintenance to the Enterprise. If the dialog is not linked to the chart, then there is no story reason to have the chart there at all. (The fact that we don't see the chart in the Inquiry scene would seem to reinforce the idea that the chart is just there for that line of dialog.)I'm just seeing if the 'repair status' assumption everyone made for years is rationally defensible. So far, it doesn't appear to be.
I actually agree with this. When I watch this scene, I see actors on their marks waiting and can almost hear the director "Pan the camera. Pan the camera, And action."No eyes, no eye line. I'm sorry, but claiming he's looking at 1631's status is just wishful thinking.
That's your argument, not mine.
Kirk's intent was to bring her aboard in the hopes that she would be able to calm Finney. That was before learning of the sabotage. Once he learned of this sabotage, he made note that she was there in the hopes that Finney would cut the crap, but instead became locked in combat.
Stone didn't know why Cogley departed. He wasn't told.
You may want to reconsider your attitude, e.g. use of the laugh emoticon. It isn't going well for you.
"With luck, I would be able to effect repairs before our orbit decayed completely."
Why rely on luck if there was a ship with tractor beam handy?
1. You haven't demonstrated that by your argumentation.
2. It's not a retcon. It's rejection of an invalid assumption.
Where have I said how many Starship-class vessels I think were present, especially those that were operational?So your argument is that a dozen starships were present but none of those captains were willing to perform their duty?
Yeah, captain's log dialog is pretty clear regarding the intent [transcript]: "The officers who will comprise my court-martial board are proceeding to Starbase Eleven." I'm going with that and chalking up the continuity problem (IIRC, long since known and previously discussed on the BBS) as an editing error.The two starship captains weren't shipped in. They were seen before the court martial proceedings in the M-11 Starbase Club. Apparently, this was the result of editing the episode.
I think it comes done more to the fact that Intrepid is supposed to be there, undergoing maintenance or whatever, which Stone orders to be rescheduled. Her absence is planned.The question of course is, if Intrepid is the same kind of ship as Enterprise, and is on the same mission, why should Enterprise be rushed and Intrepid allowed to wait for its last, few, fixes?
To me the inference is Intrepid may be a starship, but its mission isn’t as pressing as Enterprise’s.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.