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The Borg Vs. The Romulans.

Eh, I'd blame Stewart. From what I understand he wanted a more happy 'light' movie in the vein of Star Trek IV, and convinced TPTB to go along with it. It really sucks that Michael Piller's last big Star Trek contribution was 'Insurrection.'

Thank you for the compliment, though! :) I'd have loved it if the Romulans were the TNG movies' equivalent of the TOS movies' Klingons. Especially since that's pretty much how it worked on the show.
 
Eh, I'd blame Stewart. From what I understand he wanted a more happy 'light' movie in the vein of Star Trek IV, and convinced TPTB to go along with it. It really sucks that Michael Piller's last big Star Trek contribution was 'Insurrection.'

Thank you for the compliment, though! :) I'd have loved it if the Romulans were the TNG movies' equivalent of the TOS movies' Klingons. Especially since that's pretty much how it worked on the show.
:eek:WOW! whose worse? Shatner and TVF ''or'' Stewart and st9?:lol: I have to say ''praetor'' I think you and me are on the same page when it comes to ideas and concepts to explore within the TREK verse! (I too would like to expand upon the romie's)It's a shame we weren't in charge of ''ENTERPRISE'' It might not have made 7 season's, but it shure would have made for a great run!:techman: By the By I'm still looking for my book(Really almost a series bible!) with all my idea's on what I would have done ''differantly''. I'll either post it up, or if it's real long I'll start a new thread.
 
Eh, I'd blame Stewart. From what I understand he wanted a more happy 'light' movie in the vein of Star Trek IV, and convinced TPTB to go along with it. It really sucks that Michael Piller's last big Star Trek contribution was 'Insurrection.'

I'll get to your thought-provoking previous post in a sec, Prae, but I want to gawk at this for a second--Insurrection was really their attempt to try to emulate the snappiest and most outright entertaining Star Trek adventure of all time? My God, I knew Insurrection was a failure, but now I can appreciate its failure on a whole new level. It's really quite sad.

Oh, and, with all due respect to the man, screw Stewart's mid-life macho crisis. I blame him for a lot of what went wrong with the TNG films. Maybe he was getting tired of his tea-sipping alter ego, but if that's the case, kill Picard, don't have him try to become something he's not, namely some kind of action hero. It's Jean-Luc Picard, not Jean-Luc McClane, spouting "Engage, motherfucker" with a footfull of broken transparent aluminium.

I agree. I personally would not have been able to 'pull the trigger' on the Romulans. (Obviously I have a personal affinity for the Romulans. :rommie:) I think the simplest solution for Maurice Hurley is to have used another less important TOS adversary race - the Gorn, just for an example - as the race that is exterminated by the Borg but also manages to defeat a cube and fuels the Enterprise's quest to understand how. Either possibility would have negated the need to 'replace' the Romulans with someone else in the Dominion arc on DS9, and offered the chance for us to see more of the Romulans.
Hey, or the Klingons. Maybe it's hindsight and their later overexposure talking, but I wouldn't mind seeing the Klingon Empire wiped off the face of the galaxy.:p But the Gorn could work, I suppose. Surprising we never saw them after Arena (Mirror Darkly doesn't count)--maybe no one wanted to go to trouble of making (decent) Godzilla suits for the reptiloids.

The Romulans have always been underutilized - to some regard, the limit that we have seen of them has IMO added to their intrigue, in contrast to the Borg, who many argue were diminished by overuse. What we have seen, for me at least, has made me want to know and see more. I think they suffered in some regard from the 'personality transplant' that occurred between them and the Klingons between TOS and TNG. Really, I suppose it is TNG that is to blame for this.
I thought it was largely a result of Star Trek 3--that it was decided that the enemies should be Klingons instead of Romulans, in order to not confuse casual movie-goers with pointy-eared good guys and pointy-eared bad guys. My understanding was they added some of the nastier elements (the targ or whatever-it-was-dog-thing and such) to Klingon it up, but the dialogue and plot remained mostly unchanged, so that the Roms-cum-Klingons spoke of honor and stuff--not to mention, flew around in a cloaked bird-of-prey. Ultimately, I think that it was a good change--Kirk's loss on Genesis flows naturally into his role in Star Trek 6 as reluctant and conflicted peacemaker--but it did leave the Romulans somewhat rudderless as an enemy, consigning them to the unenviable role of an alien Oceania.

On the other hand, I find this decision, if in fact true, somewhat insulting as a movie-goer, as I doubt most people would be confused by different pointy-eared characters and factions than they would be confused by the varying motivations of different round-eared characters found in many major Hollywood productions. "Why is Jet Li fighting that guy? They both have epicanthal folds on their eyes--I am truly befuddled!" :rolleyes:

I'll admit my source on this: the TrekBBS. I have no idea if it is true. :D

The Klingons seen in the films prior really didn't appear to have much in the way of honor. Obviously, there were Cold War metaphors involved there: the UFP was meant to represent the USA and her allies, the Klingons the Russians, and the Romulans the Chinese.
They could do well in any future Romulan appearances to play up the Chinese analogy, in my opinion. This emphatically does not mean, although Garak would have us believe this, that they have to be uninteresting commissars in ill-fitting gray suits. If that was ever an accurate stereotype of Chinese society, it certainly is no longer, and they'd do well to not only try to represent a real-world divide (as they did with the Fed-Kling Cold War), but do so in a way actually relevant to the real-world divide. Which would perforce mean a rather less bland Romulus.

I can't help but wonder if the modern Romulan culture reflects what Vulcan would be like if the Awakening of Surak had not happened? Why were the Romulans able to survive, if in the pre-Surak dark times the Vulcans were fighting constantly and on the verge of destroying themselves as Spock infrequently described? Is it, as TMoST seems to suggest, that where the Romulans dedicated themselves to total logic and peace, the Romulans dedicated themselves to 'warrior stoicism' and it is only the poverty of the Empire that prevents it from being something greater?

...
They go out of their way to show a heavily stratified society on Romulus, but a man could make the case that it's really the Romulans who are free. Vulcan social organization borders on theocracy. Ever met a Vulcan who didn't practice logic? Okay, yeah, that one guy.

The Romulans may have political and economic dictatorship, but from their perspective, the real gray ones are those emotionless drones back there on what might as well be Arrakis. And I imagine they live in constant fear, mostly imagined but backed up somewhat by attempts by people like Spock to undermine their military-industrial aristocracy, that one day the Vulcans are going to use the vast resources of the Federation to come and enforce their totalitarian vision of what they ought to be on Romulus.

This might be the reason they kept their identities so secret during the war (I suspect the other reason is to keep species-specific biological weapons from being brought to bear against them by the Andorians, who I am sure had a big stockpile of anti-Vulcan viruses they were just itching to use). At any rate, the perceived need to defend themselves is the primary justification for their own dictatorship.

The formative years of the Romulan world-state were probably easier in many respects than those of their Vulcan cousins. We don't know the Roms never fought a nuclear civil war of their own--it's never been mentioned--but the Vulcans did.

It's key to remember that the Vulcans evolved, physiologically, psychologically and sociologically on what I like to call Planet Hell (no, not the one from Voyager). If we believe the fly-bys from TOS, they have pinkish-purple oceans--purple oceans being possible by the mechanism of purple sulfur bacteria living in nearly completely anoxic waters without a thermohaline current, deadly to any sort of life we would care to know, belching out hydrogen sulfide gas to unwary beachgoers. The entire continental surface of the planet appears to be a red, iron oxide-rich desert. Vulcan, in a word, sucks. It sucks immeasurably. That humanoid life exists there would have to be both a miracle and a curse.

I like to think that there was a great debate before the Sundering (as Duane puts it, iirc), between the Romulans-to-be and the Vulcans who remained. On the Romulan side, I suppose there must have been Duane's S'Task, who'd have argued that only somewhere else could peace and prosperity be attained. And on the other side, there's Surak, arguing with religious fervor the conviction that the monster that torments the Vulcan people is inside them, that to leave would be merely to transplant the evil which besets them. Surak of course, is presently dying--Vulcan's not just a desert, now it's a radioactive desert, the bombs have all gone off and billions are dead. Surak won't leave the survivors behind. As many who can fit into the arkships do.

A few hundred years later...

For a while, maybe, Romulus was a paradise. But even within the lifetimes of the first generation on the ground this paradise must have faltered. Every ecosystem has its limits, and eventually the Romulans hit theirs, and the old problems resurfaced--long after he was dead, Surak was proven right about at least one thing: people are naturally bad.

Eventually, they adapted the archaic Vulcan code of honor and developed the despotic state to deal with and channel their innate drives for violence and conquest. They created a star empire to expand their population and resource base--to extend their ecological niche--even to diminishing returns, even to the detriment of individuals, even to worldwide catastrophe--just like they had on Vulcan, but just like any life form would given the chance to do it.

Just like our life form would, come to think of it.

Yet the Romulans remain free, in a sense: perhaps too free. Free to exploit their own people, free to create a stultifying political structure, free to master entire populations on other worlds. Anarchy breeds dictatorship; libertarianism breeds oligarchy.

One day, perhaps, the Vulcan people would come to a compromise between their equally extreme solutions to the key problem Surak posed. I think it's clear from the evidence we have that neither logical zealotry and socially-enforced self-denial nor interstellar military adventurism and survival-of-the-fittest politics really make much of anybody happy.

I mean, Sybok seemed happy, but he rejected both approaches for full-on lunacy.:p

In this respect, the Vulcans and Romulans represent, really, the crossroads humanity sits at--between bankrupt spiritualism on one hand and an abyss of materialism on the other. There ought to be another way, but no one's really found it yet.

I have always thought it would have worked better dramatically had the Romulans actually 'broken' Yar, and Sela actually turned out to be a brainwashed, alternate Yar from 'Yesterday's Enterprise.' There would then be a possibility of redemption, and still the bitterness of facing down a familiar face.
I see your angle, here, and like it, but at the same time I'd find it tough to swallow that a brainwashed Yar would be given the responsibility necessary for her to be a credible villain. Then again, I have the same question about Shinzon.

I don't know... while intriguing, that might have been too much. However, Sela would have worked nicely in the original version of 'Insurrection' that featured the Romulans as the antagonists trying to gain control of the dilithium-rich B'aku planet. IMO, the 'Fountain of Youth' idea would have been a nice secondary discovery, rather than a main motivation. This would have also set us up for a potentially better 'Nemesis.'
She beats Rufao--hey, wait a minute, wasn't that the kid from Hook?
 
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:eek:WOW! whose worse? Shatner and TVF ''or'' Stewart and st9?:lol: I have to say ''praetor'' I think you and me are on the same page when it comes to ideas and concepts to explore within the TREK verse! (I too would like to expand upon the romie's)It's a shame we weren't in charge of ''ENTERPRISE'' It might not have made 7 season's, but it shure would have made for a great run!:techman: By the By I'm still looking for my book(Really almost a series bible!) with all my idea's on what I would have done ''differantly''. I'll either post it up, or if it's real long I'll start a new thread.

Oh, I have to agree we're in the same head. One of my big beefs with ENT and 'Nemesis' was what I perceived as disservice to the Romulans.

I know no one will probably believe me when I say this, but I had briefly conceived a prequel series (as a boredom exercise as a teenager) before ENT came out that was set in the same timeframe. It was a bit different than ENT, and in many ways not so much better as just 'different.' It was called 'New Dawn.' I have tried a few times to combine it, ideas combed from ENT, and new ideas of my own into a new concept that I tentatively call 'Phoenix' but with my short attention span I haven't gotten far. Perhaps, inspired by you, I'll revisit that (while I have the time, being unemployed) and start a thread about it.

Eh, I'd blame Stewart. From what I understand he wanted a more happy 'light' movie in the vein of Star Trek IV, and convinced TPTB to go along with it. It really sucks that Michael Piller's last big Star Trek contribution was 'Insurrection.'

I'll get to your thought-provoking previous post in a sec, Prae, but I want to gawk at this for a second--Insurrection was really their attempt to try to emulate the snappiest and most outright entertaining Star Trek adventure of all time? My God, I knew Insurrection was a failure, but now I can appreciate its failure on a whole new level. It's really quite sad.

Yeah, from what I understand that was basically the case. They saw FC as their TWOK, and wanted this to be a combo TSFS-TVH. :wtf:

Oh, and, with all due respect to the man, screw Stewart's mid-life macho crisis. I blame him for a lot of what went wrong with the TNG films. Maybe he was getting tired of his tea-sipping alter ego, but if that's the case, kill Picard, don't have him try to become something he's not, namely some kind of action hero. It's Jean-Luc Picard, not Jean-Luc McClane, spouting "Engage, motherfucker" with a footfull of broken transparent aluminium.
Exactly. When did Picard become Riker? ;)

Hey, or the Klingons. Maybe it's hindsight and their later overexposure talking, but I wouldn't mind seeing the Klingon Empire wiped off the face of the galaxy.:p But the Gorn could work, I suppose. Surprising we never saw them after Arena (Mirror Darkly doesn't count)--maybe no one wanted to go to trouble of making (decent) Godzilla suits for the reptiloids.
That's probably it - the effects. I could have lived with the Klingons being offed, but I know part of the idea of Worf and TNG was that the Klingons had joined the Federation. Eventually it was decided that wasn't literal... ;) And TNG Seasons One and Two had some interesting character effects. They might have been able to pull off the Gorn okay. I think Berman had a specific aversion to some of the TOS races he perceived as 'campy.'

I thought it was largely a result of Star Trek 3--that it was decided that the enemies should be Klingons instead of Romulans, in order to not confuse casual movie-goers with pointy-eared good guys and pointy-eared bad guys. My understanding was they added some of the nastier elements (the targ or whatever-it-was-dog-thing and such) to Klingon it up, but the dialogue and plot remained mostly unchanged, so that the Roms-cum-Klingons spoke of honor and stuff--not to mention, flew around in a cloaked bird-of-prey. Ultimately, I think that it was a good change--Kirk's loss on Genesis flows naturally into his role in Star Trek 6 as reluctant and conflicted peacemaker--but it did leave the Romulans somewhat rudderless as an enemy, consigning them to the unenviable role of an alien Ingsoc.
I think that was the original impetus of it, yes. The adversaries in TSFS were most definitely meant to be Romulans, and then they were replaced with Klingons, as you suggest, by just plugging them in for the Romulans, keeping the ship and at one point having a line to suggest it was a stolen Romulan ship. (In fact, the targ creature even predated the change to Klingons - there is a production drawing of the Romulan Commander on his throne showing it beside him.) However, I don't think those characters behaved very honorably - particularly Kruge. They were sneaky, and behaved very much like 'privateers.' In that regard, I feel they are closer to TOS Klingons. However, one might argue that these examples were less than paradigms of their race, Romulan or Klingon.

On the other hand, I find this decision, if in fact true, somewhat insulting as a movie-goer, as I doubt most people would be confused by different pointy-eared characters and factions than they would be confused by the varying motivations of different round-eared characters found in many major Hollywood productions. "Why is Jet Li fighting that guy? They both have epicanthal folds on their eyes--I am truly befuddled!" :rolleyes:

I'll admit my source on this: the TrekBBS. I have no idea if it is true. :D
I agree, and I don't know what the specific reason is. If that's the real reason, it's rather stupid. I believe there was some perception on the part of the producers that the Klingons were more threatening, and it may also have been more economical given there were already costumes from TMP.

Personally, I find the notion of Romulans interfering with the rebirth of the Vulcan Spock rather deliciously ironic. As an obscure bit of trivia, there was a problem with casting the Commander, and they originally wanted Edward James Olmos. When he proved unavailable, Lloyd was chosen, despite fears that he could not pull it off. I think Olmos would have been a great Romulan. :)

They could do well in any future Romulan appearances to play up the Chinese analogy, in my opinion. This emphatically does not mean, although Garak would have us believe this, that they have to be uninteresting commissars in ill-fitting gray suits. If that was ever an accurate stereotype of Chinese society, it certainly is no longer, and they'd do well to not only try to represent a real-world divide (as they did with the Fed-Kling Cold War), but do so in a way actually relevant to the real-world divide. Which would perforce mean a rather less bland Romulus.
Indeed and agreed. China is to me the Sleeping Dragon, and I see parallels to the Star Empire and our current political situation. And you're right, the Chinese drive Hummers now for crying out loud! Even Senator Cretak enjoyed a jumjaa stick on DS9 and mentioned there is a similar Romulan confection that is very tart. I greatly enjoyed her interactions with Kira, and later Bashir.

They go out of their way to show a heavily stratified society on Romulus, but a man could make the case that it's really the Romulans who are free. Vulcan social organization borders on theocracy. Ever met a Vulcan who didn't practice logic? Okay, yeah, that one guy.

The Romulans may have political and economic dictatorship, but from their perspective, the real gray ones are those emotionless drones back there on Arrakis. And I imagine they live in constant fear, mostly imagined but backed up somewhat by attempts by people like Spock to undermine their military-industrial aristocracy, that one day the Vulcans are going to use the vast resources of the Federation to come and enforce their totalitarian vision of what they ought to be on Romulus.

This might be the reason they kept their identities so secret during the war (I suspect the other reason is to keep species-specific biological weapons from being brought to bear against them by the Andorians, who I am sure had a big stockpile of anti-Vulcan viruses they were just itching to use). At any rate, the perceived need to defend themselves is the primary justification for their own dictatorship.
Very good points, and agreed. I'm sure they see the Vulcans as the drones. They may have 'warrior stoicism' but I'd argue that they live their lives to the fullest, and relish every minute of it. I also find that there simply must be another reason, as you suggest, perhaps one of biological weapons, beyond honor, or desire to avoid capture, that they would not reveal themselves. Surely revealing themselves would have made great strides to splitting the fledgling Coalition fighting against them. Perhaps then, they viewed it as a dishonor to acknowledge they descended from logic-propelled drones?

The formative years of the Romulan world-state were probably easier in many respects than those of their Vulcan cousins. We don't know the Roms never fought a nuclear civil war of their own--it's never been mentioned--but the Vulcans did.

It's key to remember that the Vulcans evolved, physiologically, psychologically and sociologically on what I like to call Planet Hell (no, not the one from Voyager). If we believe the fly-bys from TOS, they have pinkish-purple oceans--purple oceans being possible by the mechanism of purple sulfur bacteria living in nearly completely anoxic waters without a thermohaline current, deadly to any sort of life we would care to know, belching out hydrogen sulfide gas to unwary beachgoers. The entire continental surface of the planet appears to be a red, iron oxide-rich desert. Vulcan, in a word, sucks. It sucks immeasurably. That humanoid life exists there would have to be both a miracle and a curse.

I like to think that there was a great debate before the Sundering (as Duane puts it, iirc), between the Romulans-to-be and the Vulcans who remained. On the Romulan side, I suppose there must have been Duane's S'Task, who'd have argued that only somewhere else could peace and prosperity be attained. And on the other side, there's Surak, arguing with religious fervor the conviction that the monster that torments the Vulcan people is inside them, that to leave would be merely to transplant the evil which besets them. Surak of course, is presently dying--Vulcan's not just a desert, now it's a radioactive desert, the bombs have all gone off and billions are dead. Surak won't leave the survivors behind. As many who can fit into the arkships do.

A few hundred years later...

For a while, maybe, Romulus was a paradise. But even within the lifetimes of the first generation on the ground this paradise must have faltered. Every ecosystem has its limits, and eventually the Romulans hit theirs, and the old problems resurfaced--long after he was dead, Surak was proven right about at least one thing: people are naturally bad.

Eventually, they adapted the archaic Vulcan code of honor and developed the despotic state to deal with and channel their innate drives for violence and conquest. They created a star empire to expand their population and resource base--to extend their ecological niche--even to diminishing returns, even to the detriment of individuals--just like they had on Vulcan, leading to worldwide catastorphe, but just like any life form would.

Just like our life form would, come to think of it.

Yet the Romulans remain free, in a sense: perhaps too free. Free to exploit their own people, free to create a stultifying political structure, free to master entire populations on other worlds. Anarchy breeds dictatorship; libertarianism breeds oligarchy.

One day, perhaps, the Vulcan people would come to a compromise between their equally extreme solutions to the key problem Surak posed. I think it's clear from the evidence we have that neither logical zealotry and socially-enforced self-denial nor interstellar military adventurism and survival-of-the-fittest politics really make much of anybody happy.

I mean, Sybok seemed happy, but he rejected both approaches for full-on lunacy.:p

In this respect, the Vulcans and Romulans represent, really, the crossroads humanity sits at--between bankrupt spiritualism on one hand and an abyss of materialism on the other. There ought to be another way, but no one's really found it yet.
That was abso-frakkin-lutely brilliant and I believe completely plausible and quite likely completely correct. I have very little else to add to that, except to do the service of quoting it here in the hopes that anyone else who hasn't read it should have a second chance.

Really. Read it. Now. :D

I have always thought it would have worked better dramatically had the Romulans actually 'broken' Yar, and Sela actually turned out to be a brainwashed, alternate Yar from 'Yesterday's Enterprise.' There would then be a possibility of redemption, and still the bitterness of facing down a familiar face.
I see your angle, here, and like it, but at the same time I'd find it tough to swallow that a brainwashed Yar would be given the responsibility necessary for her to be a credible villain. Then again, I have the same question about Shinzon.
Well, I should clarify that in my mind Yar (as Sela) would be acting of her own accord. She would have been subtly brainwashed until broken. She would no longer be Yar, she would be Sela. She would essentially have Stockholm Syndrome. She would have come to identify with and appreciate the Romulans, and her attitudes towards the Federation could potentially be accordingly conflicted. Still, in my view, the reborn Yar, as Sela, would now be a Romulan patriot. She would join their military, perhaps as little more than a gesture of the Romulans at first, and would have earned her position.

Shinzon is a whole other mess... ;)

I don't know... while intriguing, that might have been too much. However, Sela would have worked nicely in the original version of 'Insurrection' that featured the Romulans as the antagonists trying to gain control of the dilithium-rich B'aku planet. IMO, the 'Fountain of Youth' idea would have been a nice secondary discovery, rather than a main motivation. This would have also set us up for a potentially better 'Nemesis.'
She beats Rufao--hey, wait a minute, wasn't that the kid from Hook?
:guffaw::guffaw::guffaw:

That took me a minute. It was Rufio.

"Ru-feee-OOOOOHHHHH!!!" :rommie:
 
Praetor said:
I know no one will probably believe me when I say this, but I had briefly conceived a prequel series (as a boredom exercise as a teenager) before ENT came out that was set in the same timeframe. It was a bit different than ENT, and in many ways not so much better as just 'different.'

Oh, don't be so self-deprecating. I'm sure it's better than ENT.

Remember: atomic weapons were used during the Romulan War, damnit.:p

And TNG Seasons One and Two had some interesting character effects. They might have been able to pull off the Gorn okay. I think Berman had a specific aversion to some of the TOS races he perceived as 'campy.'
That explains why no Scalosians or Cheronese, I guess. :(

I think that was the original impetus of it, yes. The adversaries in TSFS were most definitely meant to be Romulans, and then they were replaced with Klingons, as you suggest, by just plugging them in for the Romulans, keeping the ship and at one point having a line to suggest it was a stolen Romulan ship. (In fact, the targ creature even predated the change to Klingons - there is a production drawing of the Romulan Commander on his throne showing it beside him.) However, I don't think those characters behaved very honorably - particularly Kruge. They were sneaky, and behaved very much like 'privateers.' In that regard, I feel they are closer to TOS Klingons. However, one might argue that these examples were less than paradigms of their race, Romulan or Klingon.
Concur, I use Kruge as an example of a Klingon behaving badly all the time.

Personally, I find the notion of Romulans interfering with the rebirth of the Vulcan Spock rather deliciously ironic. As an obscure bit of trivia, there was a problem with casting the Commander, and they originally wanted Edward James Olmos. When he proved unavailable, Lloyd was chosen, despite fears that he could not pull it off. I think Olmos would have been a great Romulan
Crazy, I thought he was vat-grown for BSG. I've never seen him in anything else, although I suppose logic dictates he did exist earlier in time.:p I could see him as a Romulan. I don't think I could see Adama as a Klingon, though. I adored Lloyd's performance. But then, I thought Cobra-La was cool.:cardie:

Indeed and agreed. China is to me the Sleeping Dragon, and I see parallels to the Star Empire and our current political situation. And you're right, the Chinese drive Hummers now for crying out loud! Even Senator Cretak enjoyed a jumjaa stick on DS9 and mentioned there is a similar Romulan confection that is very tart. I greatly enjoyed her interactions with Kira, and later Bashir.
Nemesis scored one point with Commander Donatra and her Amazing Technicolor Uniform. I really enjoyed them, especially in comparison to the rather drab mao-suits of TNG.

Very good points, and agreed. I'm sure they see the Vulcans as the drones. They may have 'warrior stoicism' but I'd argue that they live their lives to the fullest, and relish every minute of it. I also find that there simply must be another reason, as you suggest, perhaps one of biological weapons, beyond honor, or desire to avoid capture, that they would not reveal themselves. Surely revealing themselves would have made great strides to splitting the fledgling Coalition fighting against them. Perhaps then, they viewed it as a dishonor to acknowledge they descended from logic-propelled drones?
Perhaps. I also wonder exactly how they managed to get away with. I guess the fighting must have been almost entirely in space. Maybe like in B5--I want to think no human ever actually saw a Minbari, until, you know, what'shisname. Then again, the humans were losing in B5, whereas presumably they won against the Romulans.

That was abso-frakkin-lutely brilliant and I believe completely plausible and quite likely completely correct. I have very little else to add to that, except to do the service of quoting it here in the hopes that anyone else who hasn't read it should have a second chance.

Really. Read it. Now.
Whoa, thanks dude. :) Actually, I've been trying to nail down an alternative telling of the schism for a thing that I ought not be working on but do anyway, as one of the main plotlines of the story is the attempt to reunify the two peoples. Life here (on Romulus) began out there, you know. :p

I have to say that I have great respect for Duane's mythology. I mean, a shitload. She's about the only Trek writer I really like (except anyone who reads this). However, I thought the introduction of the alien would-be-conquerors to crystallize the Surakian/S'Taskian split was a little deus ex machinistic (although it nicely explains the Romulan xenophobia). I also thought she went a little (a lot) overboard with the Vulcans' mental powers. Telepathy, yes; telekinesis capable of boosting a starship to near-lightspeed, emphatically no.

I don't know if she ever explained how the Romulans lost all these bitchin' powers when the ancient Vulcans seemed to have them regardless of their emotional state. Really, I prefer to figure the Vulcans as generally "merely" touch-telepathic as in canon (with a few exceptions, like the apparently superluminal death cry seen in Immunity Syndrome) and even then largely because of the Surakian, cthia disciplines. I don't doubt the Romulans have the latent talent and probably some limited abilities, though. Of course, even the "mere" canonical abilities open up some vast horizons which have been, as far as I can tell, completely unexplored, probably because they open up a huge philosophical can of worms no one wants to inventory.

Well, I should clarify that in my mind Yar (as Sela) would be acting of her own accord. She would have been subtly brainwashed until broken. She would no longer be Yar, she would be Sela. She would essentially have Stockholm Syndrome. She would have come to identify with and appreciate the Romulans, and her attitudes towards the Federation could potentially be accordingly conflicted. Still, in my view, the reborn Yar, as Sela, would now be a Romulan patriot. She would join their military, perhaps as little more than a gesture of the Romulans at first, and would have earned her position.
Actually, I didn't think about the thirty years she'd have to spend gaining their trust. It could work. The only bad part is you've got to age Denise Crosby to like... 60. Then again, there's no real reason why a 60 year-old in a world of medical replicators and therapeutic cloning need look any older than 20 or 30, other than pure production conceit. (Mistake or not, pegging Picard as a septugenarian was a good move.)

You know, Yar might not hate the Romulan system so much. Her earliest life experiences are a direct result of the failure of the Federation's dearest policies. Romulans don't put up with rape gangs. Except maybe during pon farr.

That took me a minute. It was Rufio.

"Ru-feee-OOOOOHHHHH!!!"
See, when Rufio left Neverland, he turned into F. Murray Abraham, and for this insult he demanded vengeance.
 
Myasishchev said:
Oh, and, with all due respect to the man, screw Stewart's mid-life macho crisis. I blame him for a lot of what went wrong with the TNG films. Maybe he was getting tired of his tea-sipping alter ego, but if that's the case, kill Picard, don't have him try to become something he's not, namely some kind of action hero. It's Jean-Luc Picard, not Jean-Luc McClane, spouting "Engage, motherfucker" with a footfull of broken transparent aluminium.

Exactly. When did Picard become Riker? ;)


I do agree with this. The Picard of 'Generations' I can handle without any problems, because he's exactly the Picard of TNG. He has some fantastic scenes, especially with Troi and Guinan, and gets to hit another pensioner in the desert. Okay, the film's not brilliant, but it's a decent diversion, with some nice bits.

'First Contact' just isn't the Picard we've come to know and respect. Running around the ship in a wifebeater wielding a phaser rifle? Revenge? Slagging off Worf? I don't quite buy it based on previous episodes. I think it's fairly well-known that the first draft had Picard on the planet with Cochrane, whilst Riker fought the Borg on the ship (in even more of an 'Aliens' rip-off). Stewart put his foot down, and got the roles reversed.

Okay, it works for dramatic effect in the film, but cheats the character. It's the easy way out. You might think, as the film tries to suggest, that having the Borg on his ship may have unearthed some deeply hidden post-traumatic issues for Picard, causing him to act irrationally. Unfortunately, the next movie tries the same trick, with diminishing returns. This time it's a load of people we don't really care about causing Picard to don the leather jacket and "lock and load", and it goes down like a lead balloon. It obviously doesn't help that the villain is crap, and woman Picard is supposed to fall for is about as sexy and charismatic as a soggy teabag.

By the time Nemesis comes around, if you even bother to see it, Picard reaches his nadir. This time he's riding around on a dune buggy, fragging some innocent primitives for sport! There's also the now-familiar solo action man scenes, but by now we've all stopped caring. Stewart and the writers seemed to fall into the trap of thinking that Picard running around shooting people is exciting; it isn't. Interestingly, in what I would consider the three best films (yes, the first three even numbered ones. How orthodox am I?), the only things Kirk shoots are an evil earwig and a doorknob.

I think the main reason the TNG movies have never fully convinced is that Picard just isn't a character to build a light action-adventure movie around. 'Generations' worked to an extent, but its shortcomings are obvious; First Contact did on a very basic level, but only by being pretty much the antithesis of the TNG series. Piller's 'Heart of Darkness' script could have been interesting, but I doubt it stood any real chance of getting past Stewart or the studio.
 
Praetor said:
I know no one will probably believe me when I say this, but I had briefly conceived a prequel series (as a boredom exercise as a teenager) before ENT came out that was set in the same timeframe. It was a bit different than ENT, and in many ways not so much better as just 'different.'

Oh, don't be so self-deprecating. I'm sure it's better than ENT.

Remember: atomic weapons were used during the Romulan War, damnit.:p

Oh, trust me, I remember. ;)

And TNG Seasons One and Two had some interesting character effects. They might have been able to pull off the Gorn okay. I think Berman had a specific aversion to some of the TOS races he perceived as 'campy.'
That explains why no Scalosians or Cheronese, I guess. :(
Concur, I use Kruge as an example of a Klingon behaving badly all the time.
'Klingon behaving badly.' :rommie:

'Cheronese' makes me laugh for no good reason. I imagine they were extinct. And there were Scalosians. You just weren't looking hard enough. ;)

Crazy, I thought he was vat-grown for BSG. I've never seen him in anything else, although I suppose logic dictates he did exist earlier in time.:p I could see him as a Romulan. I don't think I could see Adama as a Klingon, though. I adored Lloyd's performance. But then, I thought Cobra-La was cool.:cardie:
I also though Lloyd did well, even though I disliked Cobra-La. :P

Nemesis scored one point with Commander Donatra and her Amazing Technicolor Uniform. I really enjoyed them, especially in comparison to the rather drab mao-suits of TNG.
Those uniforms were a vast improvement, and perhaps the one good contribution to Romulans by 'Nemesis.' I slightly missed the shoulderpads, though. And Dina Meyer made an excellent Romulan.

Perhaps. I also wonder exactly how they managed to get away with. I guess the fighting must have been almost entirely in space. Maybe like in B5--I want to think no human ever actually saw a Minbari, until, you know, what'shisname. Then again, the humans were losing in B5, whereas presumably they won against the Romulans.
I have a theory. I like to think that the Romulans' desire to self-destruct at defeat might also motivate them to take out as many enemies with them as possible, at least during the war. I imagine Earth's first discovery of this having involved an Earth ship or two moving in on a wounded Romulan warbird to take prisoners, only to have the warbird detonate and destroy the Earth ships. Therefore, Earth would order its vessels to not take prisoners, and to make sure to destroy Romulan ships before they could self-destruct and take any friendlies with them.

It might also help if the Romulans had a 'scorched Earth' policy; that is, they would nuke enemy-occupied planets as they come to them. It would fit with their ideals of 'brutal' warfare, and if resources are primarily what they are after, why would they care about ruining an ecology if the metallurgical riches were undamaged? It might provide a nice excuse for the preclusion of ground battles.

Whoa, thanks dude. :) Actually, I've been trying to nail down an alternative telling of the schism for a thing that I ought not be working on but do anyway, as one of the main plotlines of the story is the attempt to reunify the two peoples. Life here (on Romulus) began out there, you know. :p

I have to say that I have great respect for Duane's mythology. I mean, a shitload. She's about the only Trek writer I really like (except anyone who reads this). However, I thought the introduction of the alien would-be-conquerors to crystallize the Surakian/S'Taskian split was a little deus ex machinistic (although it nicely explains the Romulan xenophobia). I also thought she went a little (a lot) overboard with the Vulcans' mental powers. Telepathy, yes; telekinesis capable of boosting a starship to near-lightspeed, emphatically no.

I don't know if she ever explained how the Romulans lost all these bitchin' powers when the ancient Vulcans seemed to have them regardless of their emotional state. Really, I prefer to figure the Vulcans as generally "merely" touch-telepathic as in canon (with a few exceptions, like the apparently superluminal death cry seen in Immunity Syndrome) and even then largely because of the Surakian, cthia disciplines. I don't doubt the Romulans have the latent talent and probably some limited abilities, though. Of course, even the "mere" canonical abilities open up some vast horizons which have been, as far as I can tell, completely unexplored, probably because they open up a huge philosophical can of worms no one wants to inventory.
Totally agreed there. Duane has my utmost respect, and I clearly haven't studied her wor as much as you have. I'd be delighted to see if you could reconcile a more 'tame' version of what she depicts. :)

Well, I should clarify that in my mind Yar (as Sela) would be acting of her own accord. She would have been subtly brainwashed until broken. She would no longer be Yar, she would be Sela. She would essentially have Stockholm Syndrome. She would have come to identify with and appreciate the Romulans, and her attitudes towards the Federation could potentially be accordingly conflicted. Still, in my view, the reborn Yar, as Sela, would now be a Romulan patriot. She would join their military, perhaps as little more than a gesture of the Romulans at first, and would have earned her position.
Actually, I didn't think about the thirty years she'd have to spend gaining their trust. It could work. The only bad part is you've got to age Denise Crosby to like... 60. Then again, there's no real reason why a 60 year-old in a world of medical replicators and therapeutic cloning need look any older than 20 or 30, other than pure production conceit. (Mistake or not, pegging Picard as a septugenarian was a good move.)
Agreed. Ah, if wishes were horses... ;)

You know, Yar might not hate the Romulan system so much. Her earliest life experiences are a direct result of the failure of the Federation's dearest policies. Romulans don't put up with rape gangs. Except maybe during pon farr.
That was also a part of my thinking. She did come from a 'failed' Federation colony after all. Who knows how she really felt about the Federation political system? Starfleet might have just been an escape for her. She might welcome some 'warrior discipline.' That's why the idea of the alternate Yar 'fleeing' from the Romulans with the baby, when there was obviously nowhere to run to (unless it was the Unificationists, but I have my doubts there) never really rang true for me.

For all we know, Sela was alternate Yar, surgically altered to have pointed years, and was just telling a lie that she thought Picard could more easily swallow. Alternatively, the 'lie' could fall under the Obi-Wan clause. :p

That took me a minute. It was Rufio.

"Ru-feee-OOOOOHHHHH!!!"
See, when Rufio left Neverland, he turned into F. Murray Abraham, and for this insult he demanded vengeance.
And it also explains why he wanted a fountain of youth, and makes the original film ending where he deages into a child before deaging into nothingness make even more sense... :eek:

Myasishchev said:
Oh, and, with all due respect to the man, screw Stewart's mid-life macho crisis. I blame him for a lot of what went wrong with the TNG films. Maybe he was getting tired of his tea-sipping alter ego, but if that's the case, kill Picard, don't have him try to become something he's not, namely some kind of action hero. It's Jean-Luc Picard, not Jean-Luc McClane, spouting "Engage, motherfucker" with a footfull of broken transparent aluminium.

Exactly. When did Picard become Riker? ;)


I do agree with this. The Picard of 'Generations' I can handle without any problems, because he's exactly the Picard of TNG. He has some fantastic scenes, especially with Troi and Guinan, and gets to hit another pensioner in the desert. Okay, the film's not brilliant, but it's a decent diversion, with some nice bits.

Agreed, and for those reasons its why I like 'Generations' - it feels like TNG on the big screen. (Plus there's the D.)

'First Contact' just isn't the Picard we've come to know and respect. Running around the ship in a wifebeater wielding a phaser rifle? Revenge? Slagging off Worf? I don't quite buy it based on previous episodes. I think it's fairly well-known that the first draft had Picard on the planet with Cochrane, whilst Riker fought the Borg on the ship (in even more of an 'Aliens' rip-off). Stewart put his foot down, and got the roles reversed.

Okay, it works for dramatic effect in the film, but cheats the character. It's the easy way out. You might think, as the film tries to suggest, that having the Borg on his ship may have unearthed some deeply hidden post-traumatic issues for Picard, causing him to act irrationally.
Now, as much as I know that it was literally a dramatic reversal with Picard and Riker (akin to what was done with the Klingons and the Romulans), I could actually buy that Picard did have some hidden post-traumatic stress with regard to the Borg, and that the various recent events in his life (the loss of his brother and nephew, the loss of his ship, and now the return of the Borg and the subsequent losses to the Borg, culminating with the rewrite of history) brought him to a boiling and then breaking point. Indeed, since the Borg seemed to be whispering in Picard's ear the whole time, it might have been partly manipulation on their part - trying to make him snap. The Queen-as-personified-collective did seem to have a bit of vendetta against him after all. One might also aruge that Kirk's advice to Picard about remaining on a bridge of a starship might have played in his more 'hands-on' approach, but I'm not sure how much mileage that will give you, dramatically.

However, I thnk a key part of the climax and denouement of FC is that Picard finally dealt with his Borg issues and should, by the next movie, be more or less 'back to normal.'

Unfortunately, the next movie tries the same trick, with diminishing returns. This time it's a load of people we don't really care about causing Picard to don the leather jacket and "lock and load", and it goes down like a lead balloon. It obviously doesn't help that the villain is crap, and woman Picard is supposed to fall for is about as sexy and charismatic as a soggy teabag.
This is where it hit the breaking point for me. The 'rejuvenating' factors could have been making Picard feel younger, but there was nothing really personal about it this time to take him from Picard to Bruce Willis for this movie. It made little to no sense. I think the original treatment maintains a stronger motivation for Picard - because in essence it is the Federation he is fighting. Again here, I feel that if the Romulans (namely Sela) had been the adversary, it would have made it more personal for him. I'd still prefer to avoid 'action hero Picard' at all costs. The climax of this movie made no sense.

'Me Picard! Me go fight Rufio on collector! Me beam out, leave him to die as Enterprise fly over exploding collector dramatically for no apparent reason!'

:rolleyes:

By the time Nemesis comes around, if you even bother to see it, Picard reaches his nadir. This time he's riding around on a dune buggy, fragging some innocent primitives for sport! There's also the now-familiar solo action man scenes, but by now we've all stopped caring. Stewart and the writers seemed to fall into the trap of thinking that Picard running around shooting people is exciting; it isn't. Interestingly, in what I would consider the three best films (yes, the first three even numbered ones. How orthodox am I?), the only things Kirk shoots are an evil earwig and a doorknob.
Exactly. And again there is promise of Romulan antagonists, and what do I find? A twentyish Picard clone created for reasons that make little to no sense. :scream:

I think the main reason the TNG movies have never fully convinced is that Picard just isn't a character to build a light action-adventure movie around. 'Generations' worked to an extent, but its shortcomings are obvious; First Contact did on a very basic level, but only by being pretty much the antithesis of the TNG series. Piller's 'Heart of Darkness' script could have been interesting, but I doubt it stood any real chance of getting past Stewart or the studio.
Very eloquently summed up, and I agree. I think a Romulans-as-villains version of Piller's version of 'Insurrection' (perhaps killing Data here if it must be done) would have in turn set up 'Nemesis' as a far better movie.
 
It's Ru'afo I believe.

And great back story for the Romulans. However, I think the conflict with the Earth ended in a draw, not victory for the humans
 
Praetor said:
I think the original treatment maintains a stronger motivation for Picard - because in essence it is the Federation he is fighting. Again here, I feel that if the Romulans (namely Sela) had been the adversary, it would have made it more personal for him.

I had a look at the Terry Erdmann 'making of' book, and interestingly Piller initially approached it with the intention of making a lighter movie, or at least not the full-on horror/action spectacle of 'First Contact'. The 'Heart of Darkness' idea came later, and then Stewart vetoed it.

As much as I love the Romulans, I don't think they are the magic bullet to make 'Insurrection' a good film. Sela certainly isn't the answer - I never found her an interesting or compelling villain, and frankly Denise Crosby just isn't up to carrying a major film. Her leaving TNG was probably the best thing that could have happened. Even in the marvellous 'Yesterday's Enterprise', she stands out to me as the weak link. Probably one of the reasons why I like the Romulans is that we still don't know much about them. Nemesis wasn't about them in any real way, and we've only seen brief glimpses in other episodes. I'm looking forward to seeing what the new film does to them, though with some trepidation.

Reading about it, it's clear that the Romulans were only intended to be peripheral to the plot. The real issue, as the title still suggests, was Picard rebelling against Starfleet. That's still a great concept, and I remember my jaw dropping when I saw the trailer, which of course was cut to make it look like a massive conflict with the Enterprise fighting other Starfleet ships. However, the more I think about it, the more I can see why it was dropped. Something like this could never be done effectively in the confines of a 100 minute film, and it would have repercussions on DS9 (they're still in the middle of a war, and the Romulans are their allies to boot).

I think once it was clear that the original idea was unworkable, they needed to drop it and try a different concept. They persevered with this vague 'fountain of youth', but stripped it of its meaning. Initially it's an old friend, Duffy, who rebels. Picard kills him, and later finds out he was being used by Starfleet, and that Duffy was right all along. The love interest is originally Duffy's wife, but turns into the aforementioned soggy teabag. Duffy becomes Data, who doesn't die, which guts Picard of his main motivation. In the end, we're left with something that just didn't really satisfy anyone, which is a real shame.

And great back story for the Romulans. However, I think the conflict with the Earth ended in a draw, not victory for the humans

Yes, that makes sense. I always saw the Neutral Zone as essentially the Iron Curtain, intended to keep them apart. The Earth-Romulan War was more like the Korean War than anything else I suppose, with the basic conflict still unresolved, so they agree to stay out of each other's way.
 
It's Ru'afo I believe.

It is, in 'Insurrection.'

In 'Hook' the lost boy who is the rival for leadership to Robin Williams' Peter Pan is called 'Rufio.'

And great back story for the Romulans. However, I think the conflict with the Earth ended in a draw, not victory for the humans
Well, that was definitely the original intent I'd say - if you go back up, my quote from 'The Making of Star Trek' specifically says 'inconclusive.'

Praetor said:
I think the original treatment maintains a stronger motivation for Picard - because in essence it is the Federation he is fighting. Again here, I feel that if the Romulans (namely Sela) had been the adversary, it would have made it more personal for him.

I had a look at the Terry Erdmann 'making of' book, and interestingly Piller initially approached it with the intention of making a lighter movie, or at least not the full-on horror/action spectacle of 'First Contact'. The 'Heart of Darkness' idea came later, and then Stewart vetoed it.

Interesting. I wonder what the original lighter movie was to be like?

As much as I love the Romulans, I don't think they are the magic bullet to make 'Insurrection' a good film. Sela certainly isn't the answer - I never found her an interesting or compelling villain, and frankly Denise Crosby just isn't up to carrying a major film. Her leaving TNG was probably the best thing that could have happened. Even in the marvellous 'Yesterday's Enterprise', she stands out to me as the weak link. Probably one of the reasons why I like the Romulans is that we still don't know much about them. Nemesis wasn't about them in any real way, and we've only seen brief glimpses in other episodes. I'm looking forward to seeing what the new film does to them, though with some trepidation.
I have never quite seen Denise as that bad. Maybe I'm just generous? I don't know. But you're probably right that there is no magic bullet for 'Insurrection.'

Reading about it, it's clear that the Romulans were only intended to be peripheral to the plot. The real issue, as the title still suggests, was Picard rebelling against Starfleet. That's still a great concept, and I remember my jaw dropping when I saw the trailer, which of course was cut to make it look like a massive conflict with the Enterprise fighting other Starfleet ships. However, the more I think about it, the more I can see why it was dropped. Something like this could never be done effectively in the confines of a 100 minute film, and it would have repercussions on DS9 (they're still in the middle of a war, and the Romulans are their allies to boot).

I think once it was clear that the original idea was unworkable, they needed to drop it and try a different concept. They persevered with this vague 'fountain of youth', but stripped it of its meaning. Initially it's an old friend, Duffy, who rebels. Picard kills him, and later finds out he was being used by Starfleet, and that Duffy was right all along. The love interest is originally Duffy's wife, but turns into the aforementioned soggy teabag. Duffy becomes Data, who doesn't die, which guts Picard of his main motivation. In the end, we're left with something that just didn't really satisfy anyone, which is a real shame.
Ah, thanks for that. I can see why they dodged that too. Still, it's a shame they couldn't have made it work in a pre-war timeframe, and, if Spiner had been insisted, have Picard kill Data. (I could have sworn I'd read a version where that happened...)

And great back story for the Romulans. However, I think the conflict with the Earth ended in a draw, not victory for the humans

Yes, that makes sense. I always saw the Neutral Zone as essentially the Iron Curtain, intended to keep them apart. The Earth-Romulan War was more like the Korean War than anything else I suppose, with the basic conflict still unresolved, so they agree to stay out of each other's way.

Good comparison.
 
I wonder just how many races have an Area 51 type facility for reverse-engineering Borg tech?

Seems like risky business, and those facilities probably don't last too long considering VOY gave us the impression that Borg technology is riddled with hidden subspace transponders that magically reactivate and invite additional Borg to crash the party.
 
Ah, thanks for that. I can see why they dodged that too. Still, it's a shame they couldn't have made it work in a pre-war timeframe, and, if Spiner had been insisted, have Picard kill Data. (I could have sworn I'd read a version where that happened...)

Data dying was certainly mooted, but I can't tell if it made it into the script stage. I'd be surprised if it was seriously considered - even when they finally killed him off in Nemesis, they still had to have an escape clause just in case. Certainly something like that wouldn't have fitted into Stewart's wish for a lighter film. Another thing that annoys me about Data in this one* is that they dropped the emotion chip business like a stone. I don't know whose idea it was, whether it was Piller or Spiner or Berman preferring TNG Data, but the "he didn't take it with him" line is shocking.

I wonder what a third Moore-Braga film would have been like? They both seemed to count themselves out very quickly, but who knows. Maybe in a mirror universe, they stroked their Spock beards and gave us the ultimate Romulan movie?


* Aside from the "floatation device", the boob gag, and the excerable "lock and load"....
 
In this respect, the Vulcans and Romulans represent, really, the crossroads humanity sits at--between bankrupt spiritualism on one hand and an abyss of materialism on the other. There ought to be another way, but no one's really found it yet.

That was abso-frakkin-lutely brilliant and I believe completely plausible and quite likely completely correct. I have very little else to add to that, except to do the service of quoting it here in the hopes that anyone else who hasn't read it should have a second chance.

Really. Read it. Now. :D

I have, I have - at least three times.

Well, I just got caught up on this thread, and I don't have much to add, except to say that I just LOVE this. Never thought of it that way, and it adds a whole new dimension.
 
:)

I have a confession to make, one that puts my credibility, if not my sanity, into question:

I liked the floatation device line. It's retarded, and has no place in a civilized society, but it made me laugh. About the only thing that made me laugh in Insurrection, mind you...
 
^Well if I can like ''most'' of STV, then I see no problem with you laughing at a ''retarded'' line in ST9.
 
Basically Picard plays Marlow, Data is Kurtz.

It's probably simplest just to look at the Memory Alpha entry. That is basically all the information we've got, as I don't think the first draft of the script has made it onto the net. I've never seen it anyway.
 
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