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The Kobayashi Maru Solution.

Spock Prime's ship knew the date. It even converted from the prime universe stardate standard.

Where do you get the idea that Kirk needed the crew to defeat Nero? Chekov came up with the idea to use the magnetic field of Saturns rings to hide behind Titan. (scientific note, the magnetic field comes from the planet, not the rings). Other than that, Spock piloted the ship to collide with Nero's ship. Two people is hardly the crew.

Which brings up another point. When they are trying to disable the drill over Vulcan, why send your first officer, chief engineer and helmsman? Were there no security people on board? Sulu was the only one with combat experience?

They made the ship bigger. They gave it more crew and then they ignored them. Chekov even had to operate the transporter. What were the rest of the crew for? Set decoration?
 
Chekov operated the transporter because he was better at it than anyone else. What more reason do you need??

TOS, ENT and Voyager sent their senior staff on away missions all the time. It doesn't make sense, but it's true to Star Trek.

Spock Prime's ship knew only it's launch date of 2387, not the current date.

Spock was needed to find out where Pike and the Jellyfish were on Nerada. He melded with a Romulan and got the info. Sulu's piloting was needed to get Enterprise to Titan, and to lead the rescue of Kirk, Spock and Pike at the end. Scotty was needed to get from Delta Vega to Enterprise and he saved everyone with his core detonation plan at the end. McCoy snuck Kirk on the Enterprise in the first place. Without any of the crew members, the mission would have failed. The crew do more to help in this film than most of TOS, and all the TNG movies combined.

Kirk's a jerk, true, but he's not the one-man army you seem to think he is. He's the driving force behind the army.
 
Of all the various people who I've heard from who dislike the film, I have to say you're among the most level-headed.

I really appreciate you saying so. Though I do get frustrated sometimes myself, and can get defensive, I'm trying to foster the mentality that there can be intelligent, thought-provoking discussions with people who didn't like the movie. If I may say so, it seems to me that a lot of proponents of the movie act like anytime someone makes a statement against the movie (no matter how intelligent or polite), that it's just a troll. I'm trying to show that having people on both sides of the issue can actually be beneficial to the overall discourse of this board, as long as people on both side can be polite.

That said, it's more of a distant dream, as I usually get caught up in the petty bickering myself. It makes me happy that you feel I've somewhat achieved my objective in this case. :)

That someone doesn't like the film is fine with me, but I get bothered when they express their opinion venomously, or come across as judgmental of those who liked the film, or just can't seem to stop talking about their dislike. We get it, move on, y'know?

Yeah, I know what you mean. I get bothered by those people, too, because they poison the well for people like me (and, I would say, kkozoriz1), who want to discuss the pros and cons of the movie in a civilized, intellectual way.

I've had the same problem with a few Janeway fans who, even when I grant that they may have the right idea and I may be wrong, won't grant me the same concession. One claimed that they've come to feel so persecuted that they're unwilling to yield at this point...but to me that just damages their credibility.

I must say, I know how they feel about persecution. There are people who definitely think that anyone who doesn't like the movie only feels that way because they made a deliberate choice to hate it before ever seeing a moment of footage (which is, of course, not true). But still, if I can't learn anything from these discussions myself, then they're not worth the time. And I have learned a lot already, and have conceded points along the way.

Frankly I'm sorry you didn't like the film more.

Me too. My life as a Trek fan would be more enjoyable if I'd been able to like the film.

I hope you're at least open to the possibility that the sequel may be more to your tastes.

I certainly am. I'm trying not to get extremely hopeful, to hedge against disappointment, but if they make Kirk's attitude a little more toward what I consider heroic, there's a very good chance that I'll be able to enjoy it.

I'll freely admit that for the bulk of the film Kirk comes across as a belligerent ass, though not completely without reason. Happily I find it amusingly snarky rather than utterly annoying and irredeemable.

I'm kinda sensitive about my heroes acting heroic (especially one as big for me as Kirk), so for me it was more depressing than amusing.
I thought the changes they made to Sherlock Holmes were amusing (of course, they were supposed to be), but I'm afraid I couldn't see this that way.

If the consensus is that PrimeKirk's resolution of the KM scenario was non-violent...I'm not sure I would concur...

Well, what I meant by "consensus," is that the depiction of the KM (where Kirk changes the simulator to have the Klingons respect and fear him) was put forth in Julia Ecklar's novel, The Kobayashi Maru, and then echoed in an issue of the DC Star Trek comic, and the Starfleet Academy computer game. So, it's the consensus in that it's the one that's been most often used in official (but non-canon) materials.

I doubt the average viewer (or me, really) thought too much about NuKirk's blowing up of the ships, because in the end they are just simulations, Kirk's contempt of the entire situation is obvious, and...his actions just don't seem meant to be taken very seriously here, or be indicative of how he'd act if the scenario was real. Remember at the time under ordinary circumstances he'd still be years away from sitting in that chair.

True, they were only simulations. But I think that if the instructors couldn't give the cadets an appreciation for treating the simulations like real life, they probably wouldn't bother putting that cadet in the simulator. That's purely my opinion, but I think that logically, it wouldn't make much sense to have such elaborate simulations for people who weren't gonna take them seriously.

Anywho, you're not being a downer and I greatly appreciate your curiosity. It's a hell of a lot better than some of the single-minded negativity and apparent unwillingness to moderate their opinions that some users have exhibited.

Well, thanks again, but can I offer one more negative opinion? This is purely subjective, of course, but I thought that the Ecklar version was simply more creative. It gave Kirk a certain panache that nuKirk just hasn't exhibited. I do hold out hope that that can be developed in later films, but it was one more thing that I miss from Prime Kirk. (YMMV, of course.)

In this movie the moral is, it doesn't matter if you work hard and bring people together as a team. The only one that matters is James T. Kirk. He who doesn't have to follow any rules at all.

I have to agree with this. It did seem like the movie was making the statement that "James T. Kirk is always right, period." To me, that makes it too easy for him.

And Kirk pushed the situation to his advantage. He deliberately provoked the commanding officer of his vessel. Kirk should have had McCoy declare Spock unfit for duty under 619 if he felt he was unable to command. No hearing necessary at that time. That would come later.

Well, if it works the same way is it did in "The Doomsday Machine," McCoy would've had to produce medical records proving his claim (which would require an actual psychological evaluation).

Putting Kirk off the ship in an escape pod onto a planet with a hostile environment and dangerous animals isn't acting stupid? Why did he do it? Because that's there Spock Prime and Scotty were and Kirk had to meet them. Spock was apparently just hanging out in a cave until Kirk showed up for some reason. He knew about the Starfleet base. he just waited until Kirk showed up to go there.

I must say, I felt that this was the weakest part of the movie. I believe in the novelization, Alan Dean Foster excuses it by saying the timeline was trying to right itself, but that doesn't work for me. If the timeline was trying to right itself, it should be doing stuff a lot more drastic than having Old Spock in a cave where Kirk's gonna end up.

However, I do understand why Spock Prime didn't go to the star base right away. If he had, then Scotty would have thought that Spock was his relief. Pay careful attention on his reaction the next time you see the movie again.

But would Spock have known that?

I've said before I don't have any trouble suspending my disbelief and accepting the coincidences. To me it's just the same as the TOS, DS9 and ENT mirror crews all getting together somehow or any other Trek silliness. We obviously disagree there.

But I bet if they tried to dramatize how those mirror crews got together, it would end up looking pretty ridiculous. Some things are better left to the imagination (things that take massive shoehorning and coincidences to explain).

A character acting weak to make Kirk look good? Harriman in Generations.

Good point, but don't most people offer that as one of many reasons that GEN wasn't a good movie?

Watch TMP.

I just did, twice. I'm not trying to be snarky by saying that, but I did greatly appreciate it, so I might be a bit impassioned about my remarks...

Kirk's a selfish jerk in that,

I don't think that's quite fair. He is selfish, in that he wants to be back in command of a ship, but it's also true that he's the man best equipped for the job. (It's interesting that in the original draft, Admiral Nogura convinces him to come away from the desk. However, that wouldn't have fit with the theme of the various people getting that one thing they're desperately seeking.) Even though he makes some foul-ups not knowing the refit, he's still ultimately known for being able to think on his feet, and adapt to situations. Which is what he did with V'Ger and the Ilia-Probe, and something Decker, a green Captain, probably wouldn't have been able to do.

...with far less immediate danger driving his actions.

I don't understand. Nero was gonna destroy Earth, V'ger was gonna wipe out all life on Earth. True, V'ger took slightly longer, but I think it was still rather imminent.

He gets his ship back, demoting her captain because he can (despite his massive unfamiliarity with the rebuild), he gets McCoy forcably re-enlisted because he can when Dr. Chapel could do everything Bones does in that movie...

I disagree. He needed McCoy there as a counselor, not as a doctor. And McCoy served the function invaluably, helping to figure out the psychology of V'ger (as well as keeping Jim in check as he began to drift toward obsession with command).

And I know this is a deleted scene, but it was in the DE, so I think it counts. When Kirk tells McCoy that he was the one that drafted him, and then says "I need you," and offers his hand, I interpret that as a tacit request for McCoy to come back. If McCoy hadn't taken it, my opinion is that Kirk would've let him go back to his little mountain retreat. McCoy came willingly, because he saw that he was needed.

Chekov operated the transporter because he was better at it than anyone else. What more reason do you need??

I'd like a reason why transporter operators weren't better at operating a transporter than a navigator was. True, supplemental materials say he cross-trained, but somebody who's actually worked in the field should still be better, especially at something so non-standard. To me, it makes the transporter operators look completely worthless.

TOS, ENT and Voyager sent their senior staff on away missions all the time. It doesn't make sense, but it's true to Star Trek.

Agreed.
 
I agree that there's precedent for sending a senior officer on an away mission. Someone has got to be in charge after all. The problem I had was with sending Sulu. You're looking for someone with combat training and the best person on your ship is the helmsman? What are your security people there for? It's apparent that they wanted an iconic Sulu moment and this was a way to get sword-fighting Sulu into the action.

By the same token, Chekov shouldn't have been the one operating the transporter at Vulcan. Put him on the sensors and be relaying information to the transporter. Leaving your post on the bridge to run to the transporter room to take over from someone who is supposed to be highly trained came across more like the most badly written Wesley Crusher moment.

Harriman suffered from the same sort of treatment. Rather than writing the hero characters as competent it's easier to simply make the secondary characters incompetent. It's lazy writing no matter what movie it's in. The same would hold true for Kirk being the one to repair the deflector. Are there no damage control or engineering personnel on the Enterprise-B?

The situation with Kirk taking command is similar to the Doomsday Machine and could have been written as such. It would have also given McCoy some much needed screen time. After all, Decker was removed from command due to being unfit. Just because it happens one way doesn't mean that it has to happen exactly the same way later. The way it played out in IX it was just another way to show Kirk being right when everyone else is wrong. Have Kirk make a good, logical argument to Spock as to why they should go directly to Earth and have Spock refuse for increasingly illogical reasons. Show Spock losing his control for a good reason rather that a cheap, personal attack.

The movie could have been so much more than it was. It came close many times. However, the flaws are numerous and glaring. Star Trek should be an intelligent science fiction film, not a summer popcorn flick. TWOK was written intelligently. It had it's flaws of course, every piece of work does. But in the end it was Kirk's intelligence that saved the day, not his ability as a brawler.
 
Which brings up another point. When they are trying to disable the drill over Vulcan, why send your first officer, chief engineer and helmsman? Were there no security people on board? Sulu was the only one with combat experience?
Sending Kirk is fairly easy to rationalize. Pike explained, “You’re not supposed to be here anyway.” In his assessment, Kirk was remarkably talented and sending him was good for the operation’s chance of success.

Sending the chief engineer and helmsman may not seem logical, but you could raise the same objection to most episodes of the TV series. Not to mention TNG, DS9, and VOY. (Probably ENT too, but I have seen only a few episodes of that series.) Realistic or not, it’s a convention of the Trek universe and has been since the original pilots.
 
The execution of the movie is a matter of opinion. I thought the film was great :)


Chekov "relaying information" to the transporter would have been no use. Cheesy as it sounds, Chekov's operation of the transporter resembled playing a fast-paced videogame, him trying to "keep up" with Sulu and Kirk while trying to compensate for the gravitational disturbances of an imploding world and the gravity of two guys falling at terminal velocity. It was the sort of reaction-based stuff kids excel at.
 
However, Sulu was chosen for his "combat experience". Of course, it ends up that his experience was fencing. Was everyone on the ship except Pike and Spock a cadet? We know that cadets were being sent to different ships. It doesn't seem likely that there were no officers on any of them except for the captain and first officer. Shouldn't your security officer be the one you look to for combat experience? Kirk often took security people with him as well. If Sulu was on a landing party I'd imagine he'd be in command of it since he's in gold.

The chief engineer I can see. He could be there to figure out how to disable the thing. Kirk is there as the commander of the landing party strange as it is for a stowaway to be given a job like that. But he is Pike's fair haired boy so he gets the job.

If the idea of a reboot or nu-universe is to start with a blank slate, why not take the time to update some of the sillier aspects of Trek history?
 
However, Sulu was chosen for his "combat experience". Of course, it ends up that his experience was fencing. Was everyone on the ship except Pike and Spock a cadet? We know that cadets were being sent to different ships. It doesn't seem likely that there were no officers on any of them except for the captain and first officer. Shouldn't your security officer be the one you look to for combat experience? Kirk often took security people with him as well. If Sulu was on a landing party I'd imagine he'd be in command of it since he's in gold.

If the idea of a reboot or nu-universe is to start with a blank slate, why not take the time to update some of the sillier aspects of Trek history?

I saw it as a celebration of the cheesier elements of TOS. STXI wasn't just a reboot, it was a tribute to TOS - one which some fans obviously didn't appreciate :lol:.

A deadly serious film would have been terrible. The cheesiness and humour are integral to TOS and STXI's charm.
 
I don't recall calling for a deadly serious film. Trek has always been able to tell all sorts of stories.

No, you're absolutely right. I didn't appreciate the "tribute" at all. I'm just pointing out weak parts of the movie just because I can. Just like you are willing to overlook and encourage the dumbing down of Trek.

Are we done with the name calling now? Can we get back to discussing the film or do you want to continue to get personal in our arguments? :vulcan:

<sheesh>
 
I think one of the reasons I tend not to discuss the film with people who didn't enjoy it is that many of them seem absolutely humorless while discussing it. If I'm going to have a conversation with someone I'll probably never even meet IRL, I'd at least like to maintain some levity (and not the "LOL that was so stupid!!!!" kind).

It's no fun discussing a media franchise with someone who is or appears to be only out to attack it (or at least the aspect of it presently being discussed), so why bother? Nobody has anything to prove to each other, most of the time it doesn't seem like anyone's opinions are going to change, and I doubt anything that could be said about pretty much anything Trek related is going to have a large impact on my life.
 
But would Spock have known that?

He might if he knew when Scotty graduated the academy. Because, according to Scotty anyway, he was having an argument with one if his instructors on relative physics as it relates to transwarp beaming when both agreed to experiment on an actual life form. That life form turned out to be Admiral Archer's prized beagle. It disappeared.

Now just picture that this Admiral Archer himself had some pull in choosing cadet assignments once they are fresh from the academy, or if he was Commandant of Starfleet academy. Would you let your prized beagle disappear without some form of punishment to the one who actually did it? I wouldn't. He might have slipped in an order to make Scotty "out of sight, out of mind," much like the Commandant of the academy did when he assigned Kirk to command the Enterprise in relief of Admiral Pike after Nero was destroyed.
 
Cheesy as it sounds, Chekov's operation of the transporter resembled playing a fast-paced videogame, him trying to "keep up" with Sulu and Kirk while trying to compensate for the gravitational disturbances of an imploding world and the gravity of two guys falling at terminal velocity. It was the sort of reaction-based stuff kids excel at.

But it does sound cheesy. The thing is, you can't argue that "that was how it had to be," because the only reason they were in that situation is that the writers made those parameters for how the transporter worked, and postulated Chekov was the only one who could do it, just to give Chekov something to do. This despite the fact that it didn't fit his character's job description as indicated in this movie, not to mention the series it was based on. I say they should have just found something for Chekov to do that actually fit the character (and didn't make the transporter operators look like retards). Then that would've entirely avoided the situation looking cheesy.

I saw it as a celebration of the cheesier elements of TOS. STXI wasn't just a reboot, it was a tribute to TOS - one which some fans obviously didn't appreciate :lol:.

Well, "These Are the Voyages" was meant as a tribute, too. A lot of fans didn't appreciate that. And I don't even mean to say that this was as bad as that (I don't think that), but the point is that just because something was meant as a tribute to something else, doesn't mean that everyone who's a fan of that thing should automatically fall in love with it.

But would Spock have known that?

He might if he knew when Scotty graduated the academy. [snip]

But all that happened after the divergence in the timeline, so it's possible (or even likely, since so much else was changed) that none of that happened in Prime. If that were the case, then Old Spock would've had no way to know about it.

Well, anyway, I guess this doesn't have much to do with the KM scenario. I'm sorry if I've turned this into just another "STXI Pros and Cons" thread.
 
But it does sound cheesy. The thing is, you can't argue that "that was how it had to be," because the only reason they were in that situation is that the writers made those parameters for how the transporter worked, and postulated Chekov was the only one who could do it, just to give Chekov something to do. This despite the fact that it didn't fit his character's job description as indicated in this movie, not to mention the series it was based on.

It isn’t faithful to the original series, but I think it is consistent with the film’s characterization. Chekov is portrayed at being not only exceptionally skilled with the transporter, but also a “Russian whiz kid” who is given the conn (which he never was in the original series, except briefly as an old man in The Final Frontier) and conceived the Saturn tactic (something we would not expect from TV’s Chekov).
 
But it does sound cheesy. The thing is, you can't argue that "that was how it had to be," because the only reason they were in that situation is that the writers made those parameters for how the transporter worked, and postulated Chekov was the only one who could do it, just to give Chekov something to do. This despite the fact that it didn't fit his character's job description as indicated in this movie, not to mention the series it was based on.

It didn't have to go that way: Chekov could have stayed at the con, the transporter operator could have failed, Sulu and Kirk could have died and Nero would have destroyed Earth.

Better? :)
 
But would Spock have known that?

He might if he knew when Scotty graduated the academy. [snip]

But all that happened after the divergence in the timeline, so it's possible (or even likely, since so much else was changed) that none of that happened in Prime. If that were the case, then Old Spock would've had no way to know about it.

I hate to play theory craft with a non-canonical source, however I must.

The whole motion of transwarp beaming has been floating around for years. According to Scotty, the process is like "trying to hit a bullet with a smaller bullet whilst wearing a blindfold, riding a horse." In other words, the process has a high margin for error, in the 99.9% range, that the whole process has been deemed impossible by Starfleet.

Now Scotty, as a cadet presumably, comes along, and says that he could not only take something about the size of a grapefruit and beam it from say Earth to Mars, but he can also do it to a life form. So Scotty works out his equalization and tests it out on the beagle. It disappeared.

What did Scotty do wrong. According to the 'Star Trek' novelization, the only thing that was missing from the experiment was the field equalization for the recrystallization of dilithium while the transport is in progress. The formula would allow the steady use of power during transport. It was this discovery in the prime universe by Scotty that allowed transwarp beaming to be possible.

After seeing the complete theory, the thought just occured to Scotty that he never looked at the process from the perspective of the one being beamed. Also the fact that there was no receiving pad when Scott and Kirk beamed on board the Enterprise means that the completed formula was accurate to a 4 meter margin of error based on theoretical destination coordinates.

The prime Scotty must have figured this out before his unfortunate crash that forced him to live inside the transporter buffer of the shuttlecraft that he was using. In TNG, there were a lot of incidents that forced Picard to beam someone directly to sick bay, and according to all known viewings of sick bay, there isn't a landing pad in sight. If this isn't proof of Scotty prime working with transwarp beaming, then I don't know what is.
 
Transwarp beaming isn't intra-ship beaming. All that happens there is someone is beamed "up" to the transporter and then straight "down" to their destination (either or both can be inside the ship) without being rematerialized in the interim. It was even done during TOS.

Transwarp Beaming is going from a (relative) stationary start to a vessel moving at hyperlight speeds (hence Trans-warp) far beyond normal transporter range (which is a few hundred miles, as Scotty says).

The way I see it both Scotty's toyed with Transwarp Beaming in their pre-Enterprise years but both failed and shelved it. After his resurrection, Scotty Prime, with the aid of Next Gen-era computing power (where they've already done Subspace Beaming, a dangerous long-range transport between stationary objects, on occasion) finally gets it working. But that's just my speculation.

I do like that Archer's beagle lives on in the end in the novelization (however inexplicably).
 
What I'm saying is that there are plenty of other cases as to where someone on the surface of the planet was beamed directly to sick bay without a landing pad. While granted, they were in standard orbit around the planet, but it does give credence to the fact that Scotty took what was broken with transporters and improved upon them like Dyson does with the vacuum cleaner. Fruits of Scotty's labor came as early as 2293 on the Enterprise-B when he beamed 47 survivors from a ship that was caught in the energy ribbon directly to sick bay.
 
I wonder how much help in refining Scotty's theory came from the incident with Gary Seven and his interstellar beaming. Scotty surely would have gone back over the transporter sensor records as soon as he had a chance.
 
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