It sort of defeats the whole Kirk/Spock story arc, though. In the movie, the two start out as blood enemies, hating each others' guts from the first shared look, the first word uttered.
Defeats it? I think it
motivates it. It shows how the conflict naturally arises as a consequence of their personalities, instead of having them hate each other before they even know each other simply because JJ Abrams told them to.
In the amended version, the Vulcan would be in congenial terms with Kirk at first, sharing a good-natured bet.
I don’t mean this as a complaint, but I’d like to ask a favor for me and for other people who post story ideas. When there are details that we leave out and you have to fill in those details with your imagination, try to do so in a way that flatters the story instead of a way that weakens it.
My story idea does not require them to start out on congenial terms or that there be anything friendly about their bet. The stakes are certainly nothing so banal as money. They’re something that matters to these two people. (I don’t know what the stakes should be. There are still details that would have to be worked out to turn the story outline into a screenplay. Maybe you will come up with a good idea.) Kirk and Spock start out not as friends but as cadet and instructor/advisor, with Spock telling Kirk how to think and act and Kirk not buying it. It’s anger and pride, not friendly sport, that motivates Kirk to face the scenario a second time and bet Spock that he will rescue the ship.
When he figures out that the simulator is rigged and Spock knew it, that fuels his anger and his determination to win. It drives him to defeat Spock by turning his apparent advantage against him. So does Spock’s claim that he is immune to embarrassment. (Kind of like the smug “Certain you don’t know what irritation is?” line from the WNMHGB scene mentioned earlier.)
It would start out the rivalry in a way that makes sense. In the actual film, Kirk says “I don’t think you like the fact that I beat your test,” but he
doesn’t beat the test. What he does is the high-tech equivalent of bringing another test into the exam room and turning it in instead of the test he was given. In my version of the story, Kirk does legitimately beat Spock in the only matter on which they are in actual competition, which is the (carefully worded) bet.
Of course Spock would not respect what Kirk has done. A lot of instructors and other cadets invest their valuable time in the simulator, and Spock doesn’t respect how Kirk wastes their time for the sake of his personal beef with Spock. (He does not, however, have to waste it quite as much as he does in the film.)
Kirk, on the other hand, is pleased with himself. He doesn’t have a hearing like the one in the film in which he argues (ineffectively) that what he did was right and should be commended and that he’s teaching everybody a valuable lesson. Rather, he knows he’s getting into trouble and he’s willing to do so for the sake of sticking it to somebody he dislikes. This is the character who drove his stepfather’s car off a cliff, picked a 1-on-4 fight with Cupcake’s posse, and is “the only genius level repeat offender in the midwest.” My version is much more consistent with that character than what we see in the actual film.
How about having Kirk do Kobayashi Maru over and over again in a bet with Uhura instead? "I beat the Klingons, you tell me your first name."
Interesting thought, but I think it works better with Spock. The film stretches the first name thing kind of thin as it is, and adding more of it would turn it into a bizarre and creepy obsession. More to the point, the dramatic purpose of the KM story is to establish the rivalry between Kirk and Spock, not between Kirk and Uhura.
Starfleet could let Kirk hit his head on the brick wall if they, too, had nothing real riding on the test, save for that "let's teach'im some humility" angle.
Exactly. In the film as is, this doesn’t make sense. In my version, it does.
I agree, the Kobayashi Maru element was thrown in as an "Easter Egg" for TOS fans
Correct. It is thrown in as an Easter Egg and mechanically acts out events previously described and they happen the way they do only because that’s how they were previously described. In my version, things happen the way they were previously described because it makes sense for them to happen that way. Even viewers who aren’t familiar with TWOK are given good reasons for the story to unfold as it does. The reason Kirk takes the test a second time, and the reason he takes it a third time and hacks the simulator arise naturally. The reason the KM scenario is given, and the reason it is given to Kirk in particular, are plausible and follow from the situations and the characters instead of the movie’s nonsense about it being a brutal psychological test that everybody has to endure and everybody hates, and that serves a purpose the film is unable to explain.
and also as a way to start the "mini-rivalry" between Kirk and Spock
But the film does it in a way that doesn’t make sense, while my version does it in a way that does make sense.