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The Supernova.

I only wish one of our self-appointed geniuses would explain how it is that the ridiculously absurd science of the Nexus, or the embarrassing inanity of the Magical de-aging planet gets a free pass, but the science featured in a reboot does not.
Let's take a poll!

Please the answer below which you think best describes the apparent prejudice against nuTrek by self appointed geniuses, and support your choice in the space provided by the "Reply" button below:

A) Prior plots were not driven mainly by alternating bouts of criminality, miracles, and insanity.

B) Characters in previous films reflected better situational awareness.

C) Dialog in previous films portrayed characters with human uncertainties.

D) Prior films at least attempted to show concern for moral actions.

E) NuTrek was the first to whore to such a degree for corporations and the military.

F) Other.

G) All of the above.
:D
 
Lol - actually I would say that nuTrek is actually more effective at c) than any other TOS movie although Spock in TMP and Kirk in TWoK worked for me. Kirk, Spock, and Uhura were refreshingly 'human'.

I agree with d) though. The final battle where Nero refuses to surrender and the Enterprise opens fire at close range left me with a nasty taste in my mouth (I could hear the theme tune from Team America echoing in my head). Kirk and Spock's decision to enact satisfying and bloody revenge on a ship which was, according to their sensors, trapped in the gravity well was pointless. It delayed them escaping the event horizon and left them vulnerable to possible energy discharge from the Narada's exploding engines, and all for revenge.

The Germans were placed under orders to execute the survivors of sunken vessels in the latter part of WWII and in one mindless self-satisfying scene Abrams equates the crew of the Enterprise with the Nazis! It's not the Star Trek message of old that I would want to pass on to the next generation. It was pandering to the video game generation where summary execution is justifiable and moral and scores points in the game! Inglorious Basterds dealt with this kind of double standard extremely effectively without being preachy.

I'd have had far more respect if Kirk had told the transporters to beam off as many of the crew as possible as soon as the Narada's shields were down.
 
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I only wish one of our self-appointed geniuses would explain how it is that the ridiculously absurd science of the Nexus, or the embarrassing inanity of the Magical de-aging planet gets a free pass, but the science featured in a reboot does not.
Let's take a poll!

Please the answer below which you think best describes the apparent prejudice against nuTrek by self appointed geniuses, and support your choice in the space provided by the "Reply" button below:

A) Prior plots were not driven mainly by alternating bouts of criminality, miracles, and insanity.

B) Characters in previous films reflected better situational awareness.

C) Dialog in previous films portrayed characters with human uncertainties.

D) Prior films at least attempted to show concern for moral actions.

E) NuTrek was the first to whore to such a degree for corporations and the military.

F) Other.

G) All of the above.
:D


Lovely, but what does any of that have to do with science?


.
 
I only wish one of our self-appointed geniuses would explain how it is that the ridiculously absurd science of the Nexus, or the embarrassing inanity of the Magical de-aging planet gets a free pass, but the science featured in a reboot does not.
Let's take a poll!

Please the answer below which you think best describes the apparent prejudice against nuTrek by self appointed geniuses, and support your choice in the space provided by the "Reply" button below:

A) Prior plots were not driven mainly by alternating bouts of criminality, miracles, and insanity.

B) Characters in previous films reflected better situational awareness.

C) Dialog in previous films portrayed characters with human uncertainties.

D) Prior films at least attempted to show concern for moral actions.

E) NuTrek was the first to whore to such a degree for corporations and the military.

F) Other.

G) All of the above.
:D


B! B! Totally B!

Although, I'm confused by what you mean with E when you said they "whored the military?" Trek XI still dances around the issue and refuses to call Starfleet a military, instead settling on "humanitarian peacekeeping armada." Which still sounds like a military to me, but apparentally Abrams and Cohorts think otherwise.
 
I'm coming a bit late to the party in this thread, but what the heck...

The movie itself features no plot hole in this respect.

Nowhere in the movie is it suggested that the supernova would have been anything but the very homestar of Romulus going kaboom...

Romulans would not believe Spock's warnings that the star was acting up, so they wouldn't react until it was too late.
Sorry, but this makes no sense. First of all, the kind of stars that can support life as we know it (Type-G and -K stars in the main sequence sizewise) cannot go supernova, and stars that can go supernova cannot support life as we know it. It stands to reason that the supernova was not Romulus's home star. Second, if it somehow was the home star, supernovae take a long time to happen (centuries at the very least), with preliminary stages that would make it clear to the Romulans well in advance what the final outcome would be (and, realistically, would have rendered the system uninhabitable long before the explosion).

(Main-sequence stars can suffer a nova, if they collapse to a white dwarf first or happen to be paired with one. However, a nova is not remotely the same thing as a supernova, and Spock certainly would not confuse one with the other. And in any event, it still doesn't happen by surprise.)

Timo said:
The only thing left unclear in the movie is why Spock bothered to stop the supernova from expanding after Romulus was already lost.
Well, hardly the only thing, but it is one thing. "How" is as big a question as "why" here, too, since it's unclear how Spock could get close enough to seed the Red Matter (never mind how its "black hole" could absorb an explosion that already had an expanding wavefront apparently measured in light-years or, even in your hypothesis, AUs).

I don't see any problem with that one. A supernova that destroys Romulus is obviously a threat to the entire galaxy, even if it destroys nothing else...
You're being very generous to the writers here. Nothing about Spock's dialogue ("a supernova threatened the galaxy") suggests he was speaking in terms of political metaphor. Had it been the Romulan home star about to explode, why wouldn't he have simply said so plainly?

Timo said:
We don't know that it would have consumed the star; for all we know, it wouldn't even have created a black hole in those circumstances. And even if it did, having a star with a black hole at its core might not be such a bad thing after all.
We don't really know anything about Red Matter, since it's a McGuffin about which the writers told us nothing whatsoever. However, we can extrapolate from how we see it behave. Every time it's used, it creates a super-powerful "black hole" and/or wormhole that Hoovers up everything in the vicinity (much faster than would a real black hole).

Moreover, even a regular black hole at the center of an aging star would hardly help stabilize it. After all, it's gravitational collapse in the first place -- into a black hole or neutron star -- that creates the heat build-up that expels a star's outer layers into a supernova. You apparently know this, and I confess that your argument...

Timo said:
One may well prevent that back-bounce by eating the material faster, in a controlled manner.
...really makes no sense to me as expressed.

As for Remus being missing, I actually hail that development. Data's PowerPoint demonstration in ST:NEM shows that the planets don't orbit each other: they are depicted as being on separate orbits that brush against each other, supposedly at regular intervals. ...
The supernova simply caught Romulus when Remus wasn't in the neighborhood.
On this, at least, we agree. (Although of course if Remus was anywhere in the same star system, it would hardly escape the destruction.)

Sudden supernovas have recently been discovered actually.
Really? That's news to me. Can you link an article? (And what exactly qualifies as "sudden" in astronomical terms?...)

You are right, they don't say which star. Our current theories say a Supernova w/in 100ly of Earth would likely destroy 99% of all life. We don't know what the risk is beyond 100ly. I still see only 3 options. The star was the parent or nearby companion star or traveled FTL... Maybe it was actually a subspace shockwave which threatened Romulus.
Indeed, a nearby supernova can be a real threat. However, at a scientifically plausible speed (01.c), the wavefront from an event 100ly away would take 1000ly to get here, leaving plenty of time to prepare. An FTL/supspace shockwave is thus the only explanation that makes "sense" in the movie... except of course there's no explanation of how such a thing could happen.

Perhaps the FTL wave from the supernova similarly leaked STL components from subspace back to our universe when it went past, and those components then did the destruction?
See, now, that's good fanwank. IMHO it makes "sense" of what we were shown on screen. Still doesn't explain how/why, though.

It's not a plot hole, the film is just a bit vague on the actual operation...
IOW, the film doesn't provide clear information about what's happening; instead, the story just moves on. If that's not the definition of a "plot hole," what is?

Which is probably for the best. Nero isn't the sort of villain who's supposed to make sense. He's a madman type of villain ... Nero has his loco motive, needs his loco motive, and the more fantastic it sounds, the easier it is for us to sympathize with the heroes (who really need our sympathy as they all start out as assholes), not with the villain.
You don't consider this just another sign of cheap-and-easy writing? Wouldn't it have been a much better film if the protagonists weren't assholes from the start and had to face down an antagonist with some actual plausible motivation?

I like to think the Hobus star was due to die millennia ago, and that an ancient super-race did something to extend it’s lifespan with dire consequences in 2387.

Something like: They put an inter-dimensional machine in the heart of the Hobus star, to power it long beyond it’s natural life with vacuum-flux energy from a protouniverse. Then, in 2387, long after said civilization died out, the prototuniverse exploded in it’s Big Bang. Virtually infinite energy was poured though the machine into the Hobus star, which exploded like nothing before.
I like this. Hell, even a single line in the movie about how the exploding star's internal processes had been manipulated by some ancient alien technology would have sufficed to rationalize what they depicted. No "technobabble" required. It's handwaving, but it would've been better than no rationale at all.

KingDaniel said:
Also: It’s just a film. Pretend. Make-believe. Is it really that much sillier than warp speed, time travel and teleporting people?
Actually, yeah, I think it is. There's a difference between story elements that are presented as workarounds for familiar science, and misrepresentation of familiar science itself. Decent SF understands that difference. (If we were told that the ship traveled at FTL speeds powered by ordinary rocket engines, for instance, that would be a similarly egregious problem.)

I am Sooo tired of people on this board saying that things like "The Supernova that will destroy the entire galaxy" aren't plot holes.
You and me both. Events that happen without explanation or motivation, for scientifically impossible reasons, or as a result of compound coincidences, are what "plot holes" are all about. It's lazy writing, and shows disrespect for the audience.

As in nearly all of the film, Here again the science is pretty far off: shock waves from supernova only travel at about 10% of the speed of light, meaning it would take hours for such a shock wave to travel from our own star to the earth. If we sent something to our nearest stellar neighbor at .1c, today’s babies could easily be having great-grandchildren by the time it arrived, 42 years later. Further, we might reasonably suspect that any red matter would need to be delivered at or near the center of the nova, (we will ignore problems of travelling into the supernova remnant and across a “galaxy threatening” shockwave), thus: travelling at the speed of light, the effect would need 4.62 more years to reach and effect the advancing shock wave, depending on the wave’s thickness.

Torturing the language is less productive to me than simply recognizing that the script was hammered out by people who had little time to know or care about science, ST canon, the military, logic or consistency.
This. Exactly.

The guys who wrote the script are pretty big fans of Trek who not only watched the shows but develed into the novels for ideas. So I think they might know their canon.
Shame they didn't demonstrate that in the film, then... or tell a story even a fraction as satisfying as the Trek novels they pointed to as favorites.

It's Hollywood writing in general. I think a lot of Americans have become desensitised to drivel
Bingo. Too many Hollywood studios (and producers, and writers...) feed us nothing but "junk food" entertainment, conditioning us to accept and even expect that... then defend themselves by saying it's what we have an appetite for. Sorry, but I'd prefer more of a well-balanced meal.

Science currently forbids any meaningful form of FTL.
True. However, SF as a genre has a long history of finding (and explaining) ways around this constraint. It's an accepted trope.

We know virtually nothing about Supernova.
This is simply not true. And even if it were, it would be no excuse for misrepresenting what we do know.

Meh - a line of technobabble would have covered exactly this. They used language that they knew would make sense to 'lay people' (black holes, supernova) while giving them properties that are inconsistent with those phenomena. It's swings and roundabout but calling it a 'subspace supernova shock wave' would probably have covered them.
Again, yes. As with many aspects of this film, even slightly better dialogue would have papered over a lot of the problem. Frankly, most of the dialogue was cringeworthy, laden with clichés and non sequiturs (on top of the scientific errors).

Given Star Trek's notoriety when it comes to bad technobabble, Abrams and his cohorts probably wanted to avoid the blank stares and confused masses that terms like 'subspace supernova shock wave' cause.
So they opted for the blank stares and confusion that come from bad dialogue about actual science, rather than pseudoscience? :confused:

In the end you have to look at it from the perspective of making money. A splosion makes money. Make it a huge-ass galaxy-threatening splosion, to up the stakes and make it "exciting." Call it a supernova so that the audience knows it's a "space thing." That's the end of that.
That's crap. That's lazy, lowest-common-denominator writing, and no self-respecting writer approaches things that way. "The perspective of making money" is something for the studio and producers to worry about, not the creative types. Their interest, indeed their duty, lies in telling the best story they can. (The SFX crews obviously lived up to that duty. The writers, no.)

The Wormhole said:
Anything more complicated would have scared potential audience members away...
A story that makes sense would have scared people away? Do you really have such a low opinion of your fellow moviegoers?

Since I don't want to be treated this way, it seems unethical for me to justify others doing it.

Besides, the real science nearly always makes SciFi more interesting, IMO... The problem is that it costs things like time, effort, and caring.
I'm with you on this. Were you given the chance to write a Star Trek film, would you dumb it down just because some studio beancounter thinks audiences want it that way? Roddenberry and Coon fought against that kind of thinking on a regular basis during TOS. Abrams, Orci & Kurtzman, apparently not so much.

(Of course, that's giving them the benefit of the doubt by assuming they understand why and how their story is dumbed-down.)

My ethics require me to be as honest with children as possible. If they are old enough to question magical or supernatural myths, they deserve the truth from us, IMO.
Bit of a tangent, but I agree with you on this too.

BurntSynapse said:
I think this [audience satisfaction] only holds when people are ignorant of science, or any area of knowledge for that matter. We cannot care about something about which we're oblivious.
And this.

We seem to have very different ideas on whether the ability to buy a ticket for a summer action flick qualifies one as "the right person" to assess film "goodness" and "level of entertainment".

In 100% realistic sci-fi, FTL is not possible, so therefore space ships won't be going anywhere.
I disagree: unless science can explain what distance actually is, there is no restriction *in principle* on circumventing the intervening distance between point A and B, and excellent reasons (as seen in the double-slit experiment) to believe that distance is no more real than the apparent movement of the sun.

False science is a necessity to tell a sci-fi story,
I agree that suspending disbelief and granting some creative license to creators is reasonable, but I also believe there is such a thing as really bad writing in films, and that based on the evidence, this film is an exceptionally fine example. :drool:[/QUOTE]

The supernova/Hobus star/Red Matter thing is much less easily handwaved because they threw a bunch of known science and Trek-science terminology at us like none of us would know what it meant or have any context. Complete and utter technobabble might have been better, since then we could have thought "Hmmm.. guess maybe they'll explain that at some later point" but the explanation they gave left many of us instead thinking "I sorta know how that works, and that sounds like bullcrap."

That's what I thought, but I'm less of an obsessive Treknologist than some of our fellows here, so I let it pass and enjoyed the movie anyway. But when I think about that part of it, I can definitely feel their pain.
That's how it came across to me, too. And if you enjoyed the movie anyway, thanks at least for understanding where the rest of us are coming from, rather than insisting we have no right to complain and/or nothing to complain about.

They wanted a cgi monster and contrived an lengthy, unnecessary scene to shoe horn one in.
Yeah, that pretty much sums up the whole Delta Vega sequence.

The final battle where Nero refuses to surrender and the Enterprise opens fire at close range left me with a nasty taste in my mouth (I could hear the theme tune from Team America echoing in my head). Kirk and Spock's decision to enact satisfying and bloody revenge on a ship which was, according to their sensors, trapped in the gravity well was pointless. It delayed them escaping the event horizon and left them vulnerable to possible energy discharge from the Narada's exploding engines, and all for revenge. ...

I'd have had far more respect if Kirk had told the transporters to beam off as many of the crew as possible as soon as the Narada's shields were down.
Me, too. That scene really seemed not merely to misunderstand but deliberately to reject the basic humanistic sensibility that used to be at the heart of Star Trek.

Let's take a poll!...
B! B! Totally B!
I'd go for "all of the above," but yeah, the lack of situational awareness by characters in this film was really disconcerting. It started with Robau's inexplicable responses to the Narada, both before and after going aboard, and continued pretty much through the entire film.

The Wormhole said:
...Trek XI still dances around the issue and refuses to call Starfleet a military, instead settling on "humanitarian peacekeeping armada." Which still sounds like a military to me, but apparentally Abrams and Cohorts think otherwise.
Actually, to be precise, they have Pike call the Federation an "armada." Talk about painfully sloppy writing... might as well mix up the United States with the U.S. Navy!
 
I only wish one of our self-appointed geniuses would explain how it is that the ridiculously absurd science of the Nexus, or the embarrassing inanity of the Magical de-aging planet gets a free pass, but the science featured in a reboot does not.
Let's take a poll!

Please the answer below which you think best describes the apparent prejudice against nuTrek by self appointed geniuses, and support your choice in the space provided by the "Reply" button below:

A) Prior plots were not driven mainly by alternating bouts of criminality, miracles, and insanity.

B) Characters in previous films reflected better situational awareness.

C) Dialog in previous films portrayed characters with human uncertainties.

D) Prior films at least attempted to show concern for moral actions.

E) NuTrek was the first to whore to such a degree for corporations and the military.

F) Other.

G) All of the above.
:D

H. None of the above.

Your "E" choice is about as absurd as anything I've seen posted here.
 
lawman said:
Nerys Myk said:
The guys who wrote the script are pretty big fans of Trek who not only watched the shows but develed into the novels for ideas. So I think they might know their canon.

Shame they didn't demonstrate that in the film, then... or tell a story even a fraction as satisfying as the Trek novels they pointed to as favorites.
They just demonstrated in ways you don't like or missed. Star Trek's fans are a diverse group.
 
:

A) Prior plots were not driven mainly by alternating bouts of criminality, miracles, and insanity.
I kind of like Star Trek III, in spite of the bouts of criminality, miracles, and insanity it contains.
 
[Orci & Kurtzman] just demonstrated [their appreciation of canon] in ways you don't like or missed. Star Trek's fans are a diverse group.
Okay, please enlighten me and point out a few examples.

Myself, I saw plenty of "easter eggs" that nodded to prior Trek, but in every way that actually mattered, they changed it at their whim... and (IMHO) seldom in ways that improved anything.

For example (just off the top of my head):
* Winona Kirk's name was never even mentioned, she was turned into an absentee mother, and Jim's brother got edited out (all the better to eliminate Jim's family life and position him as a stereotypical "angry young rebel" type ready to defy authority and destroy property)
* The Enterprise was built 13 years later than before, in Iowa rather than in space (as has already been discussed to death), for unspecified reasons which would be incredibly hard to link plausibly to the attack in 2233
* Robert April, Number One, Gary Mitchell, Dr. Piper, Finnegan, Carol Marcus, and essentially every other character ever associated with Kirk or the Enterprise — beyond the "TOS seven" plus Pike — have from all appearances been wiped from history
* Chekov had his age changed and was retconned into the original bridge crew
* This version of Starfleet is somehow simultaneously a much more militaristic one (e.g., Robau's response to the Narada's appearance, Kirk and Spock's treatment of it at the end) and a much less militaristic one (in terms of having any coherent planetary defense strategy, shipboard chain of command, promotions policy, etc.) than any interpretation seen before
* Vulcans seem to be almost universally bigoted, peevish, and short-tempered (granted, ENT had this problem too, and I blame a lot of it on actors who just aren't good at playing "stoic" because they're trained to emote)

... and so on, and so forth.

None of which has anything to do with the supernova, so I know we're digressing like all get-out, but it all just bolsters my impression that these writers care no more about the prior legacy of Trek than they do about how science works.
 
For example (just off the top of my head):
* Winona Kirk's name was never even mentioned, she was turned into an absentee mother, and Jim's brother got edited out (all the better to eliminate Jim's family life and position him as a stereotypical "angry young rebel" type ready to defy authority and destroy property)

Was Kirk's mom to be nameless? You didn't say what they changed at the "whim" here. And you do realize that Jim's brother was an editing choice, not something that the writers were responsible for (hence why the scene was filmed.) So that can't be blamed on the writers.

* The Enterprise was suddenly built 13 years later, in Iowa rather than in space (as has already been discussed to death), for unspecified reasons which would be incredibly hard to link plausibly to the attack in 2233
This has been discussed to death and put in the vault a long time ago.

* Robert April,
Didn't exist.

Number One, Gary Mitchell, Dr. Piper, Finnegan, Carol Marcus, and essentially every other character ever associated with Kirk or the Enterprise — beyond the "TOS seven" plus Pike — have from all appearances been wiped from history
Would you mind stating what precludes that their existance?

* Chekov had his age changed and was retconned into the original bridge crew
Not the first time something similar has happened either (Enterprise's age for example in "The Search for Spock.")

* This version of Starfleet is somehow simultaneously a much more militaristic one (e.g., Robau's response to the Narada's appearance,
"Where are you from" is military like?

Kirk and Spock's treatment of it at the end) and a much less militaristic one (in terms of having any coherent planetary defense strategy, shipboard chain of command, promotions policy, etc.) than any interpretation seen before
Chain of command was fine. Kirk was the first officer. Captain no longer has control, so first officer takes over. Simple.

* Vulcans seem to be almost universally bigoted,
And Spock always took it as a compliment when his human side was diminished because of...?

and short-tempered
Falls perfectly inline for a younger a Vulcan. Nothing changed.

but it all just bolsters my impression that these writers care no more about the prior legacy of Trek than they do about how science works.
You didn't even give really give great examples of these supposed "on the whim changes" though. Your impression would still be off the mark regardless.
 
Although, I'm confused by what you mean with E when you said they "whored the military?"
Within this film's production context, I think making money by stripping away Star Trek's modest bits of good science, dumbing-down her science, and pimping her up to better service military and corporate war-hawks suggests to me the term "whoring" is more-or-less appropriate...and certainly more generous than "raping", which could probably be defended, but I think the film does deserve some generosity.

Trek XI still dances around the issue and refuses to call Starfleet a military, instead settling on "humanitarian peacekeeping armada." Which still sounds like a military to me, but apparentally Abrams and Cohorts think otherwise.
I would disagree that this is apparent, unless "serving" and "enlisting" in an "Armada" were used in common English for non-military activity or employment.

Lovely, but what does any of that have to do with science?
It is not meant to have anything to do with science, it addresses why the science in the other films seems to get a pass, while nuTrek does not.

I agree with d) though. The final battle where Nero refuses to surrender and the Enterprise opens fire at close range left me with a nasty taste in my mouth (I could hear the theme tune from Team America echoing in my head).

I'd have had far more respect if Kirk had told the transporters to beam off as many of the crew as possible as soon as the Narada's shields were down.

Team America is a great analog! :klingon:
 
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Devon-

True to course, you steadfastly defend everything about this film, regardless of how far out on a limb you have to go to do it. I'll cop to the fact that brother Sam was originally in the screenplay, so I guess the blame for losing him falls to Abrams, rather than O&K. Likewise an earlier draft has Robau actually ordering "first contact protocols" on seeing the Narada, rather than immediately arming weapons as shown on screen... so perhaps they were originally trying for a slightly less militaristic sensibility, although that obviously didn't last.

As for the rest, however... well, saying that the built-late-and-in-Iowa Enterprise has been discussed to death only repeats what I already wrote, but the fact remains that in all that discussion it's never been plausibly explained.

And on what basis do you conclude that Robert April "didn't exist," or for that matter that any other supporting character potentially did? My point was that none of them were so much as mentioned in this film, even though doing so would have been a great way to show that O&K knew and respected the show's backstory. Instead, the writers consistently took the story along the most expedient path they could find, moving directly from action set-piece to action set-piece and slotting the "famous" bridge crew into their familiar roles as quickly as possible, plausibility be damned.

And in that vein, Chekov's age and position was blatantly a major retcon... whereas the Enterprise's age in ST III is a very weak analogy to bring up, as it could easily be written off as a poorly informed Admiral just spouting off. And you know perfectly well that a stowaway cadet up on disciplinary charges winding up as on-the-fly First Officer (or in any other position than "in the brig") shows what nonexistent chain of command the ship had. Were there no senior officers aboard other than Pike himself?

(If not, that of course begs the additional question of why Starfleet had seven perfectly good starships hanging around in Earth orbit, including the new flagship, yet no experienced officers ready to crew them. Which goes to my remark about poor organizational management and planetary defense strategy...)

So, all told: saying that you don't recognize any of the inexplicable changes I've described doesn't mean they don't exist. Or do you have some evidence you'd like to point to that O&K actually did value past canon, aside from them claiming so in interviews?

The fact is, the writers had the opportunity to give this thing depth and context, layers and complexity, to build on what's gone before rather than discarding it. A few less (literal!) cliffhangers, in exchange for a little more time spent on character-building and integrity of plot and theme, would have made this a far stronger story, and one more in keeping with the best of Trek's history.

BurntSynapse-


When discussing the corporate and military shilling, don't forget the product placements!
 
And in that vein, Chekov's age and position was blatantly a major retcon... And you know perfectly well that a stowaway cadet up on disciplinary charges winding up as on-the-fly First Officer (or in any other position than "in the brig") shows what nonexistent chain of command the ship had. Were there no senior officers aboard other than Pike himself?

(If not, that of course begs the additional question of why Starfleet had seven perfectly good starships hanging around in Earth orbit, including the new flagship, yet no experienced officers ready to crew them. Which goes to my remark about poor organizational management and planetary defense strategy...)

These are examples of where simple changes could have have improved the story. Put Number One in as first officer and Janice Rand as Pike's Yeoman and leave out Chekov. Kill (or preferably maim) Number One at Vulcan so that young Spock has to step up to a role that he isn't familar with as well. You could even put Gary Mitchell at navigation as a little nod. If Spock is also undergoing a rapid promotion to first officer Kirk's rise doesn't stand out quite so much and isn't such an insult to the more experienced Vulcan.

Rand has a history as a transporter operator in TMP and could have dealt with the transporter scene, and the character has plenty of comic potential. With her and Number One you would be tripling the number of significant female crew while covering the plot bases.

I do understand why they wanted Chekov I just disapprove of the changes they had to make to justify his being there when other established characters could have filled his role (it's not as if Chekov was ever established as a transporter wizard - in fact I can't think of a single occasion when he used the transporters in TOS). While one of the 'seven' he wasn't such a major character that his absence would have harmed the movie significantly but would have helped with the internal consistency.

Plus with Number One in there Starfleet looks less like a bunch of incompetent sexist chumps sending a ship out with only a handful of experienced crew.

Trek has always been wildly inconsistent when it comes to planetary defence - look at TMP where no other ship can intercept anywhere between klingon space and earth. NuTrek is sillier because nobody even saw the Narada coming and planetary defences are brushed aside as an inconvenience not worthy of discussion but hey ho.
 
These are examples of where simple changes could have have improved the story. Put Number One in as first officer and Janice Rand as Pike's Yeoman and leave out Chekov. Kill (or preferably maim) Number One at Vulcan so that young Spock has to step up to a role that he isn't familar with as well. You could even put Gary Mitchell at navigation as a little nod. If Spock is also undergoing a rapid promotion to first officer Kirk's rise doesn't stand out quite so much and isn't such an insult to the more experienced Vulcan.

Rand has a history as a transporter operator in TMP and could have dealt with the transporter scene, and the character has plenty of comic potential. With her and Number One you would be tripling the number of significant female crew while covering the plot bases.
Terrific ideas!

I'm firmly convinced that any number of people on these boards are more qualified to be collecting six-figure paychecks in Hollywood than the guys who actually wrote this thing.

I do understand why they wanted Chekov I just disapprove of the changes they had to make to justify his being there... it's not as if Chekov was ever established as a transporter wizard...
Indeed not, and his use in that role struck me as odd. (As did having him deliver the shipwide announcement... especially after they'd already established his "funny" accent, and the presence of communications staff on board!)
 
[Orci & Kurtzman] just demonstrated [their appreciation of canon] in ways you don't like or missed. Star Trek's fans are a diverse group.
Okay, please enlighten me and point out a few examples.

Myself, I saw plenty of "easter eggs" that nodded to prior Trek, but in every way that actually mattered, they changed it at their whim... and (IMHO) seldom in ways that improved anything.

For example (just off the top of my head):
* Winona Kirk's name was never even mentioned, she was turned into an absentee mother, and Jim's brother got edited out (all the better to eliminate Jim's family life and position him as a stereotypical "angry young rebel" type ready to defy authority and destroy property)
* The Enterprise was built 13 years later than before, in Iowa rather than in space (as has already been discussed to death), for unspecified reasons which would be incredibly hard to link plausibly to the attack in 2233
* Robert April, Number One, Gary Mitchell, Dr. Piper, Finnegan, Carol Marcus, and essentially every other character ever associated with Kirk or the Enterprise — beyond the "TOS seven" plus Pike — have from all appearances been wiped from history
* Chekov had his age changed and was retconned into the original bridge crew
* This version of Starfleet is somehow simultaneously a much more militaristic one (e.g., Robau's response to the Narada's appearance, Kirk and Spock's treatment of it at the end) and a much less militaristic one (in terms of having any coherent planetary defense strategy, shipboard chain of command, promotions policy, etc.) than any interpretation seen before
* Vulcans seem to be almost universally bigoted, peevish, and short-tempered (granted, ENT had this problem too, and I blame a lot of it on actors who just aren't good at playing "stoic" because they're trained to emote)

... and so on, and so forth.

None of which has anything to do with the supernova, so I know we're digressing like all get-out, but it all just bolsters my impression that these writers care no more about the prior legacy of Trek than they do about how science works.

Most of those are covered by it being an Alternate reality. A Divergent timeline. If they had set the movie in the Prime Universe, you'd have a point.

Earth's planetary defense always suck. Thats why the Enterprise had to save the planet in three movies.

Based on TOS Vulcans are almost universally bigoted. Spock was quite adept at pointing out the human race's short comings.

Trek fans are diverse. That they like different aspects of Trek than you is indicative of that. (IDIC) Some fans think the movie recaptured the spirit of Star Trek. (YMMV)
 
Maybe they should have called it a Hyper Nova...

That title would have fit in perfectly with the underlying tone of this thread...
 
Most of those are covered by it being an Alternate reality. A Divergent timeline. If they had set the movie in the Prime Universe, you'd have a point.
It's an alternate reality that diverged with one event set in 2233, an attack on a single starship, after which everything else went on uninterrupted.

I know, you can wave your hands and say "butterfly effect" to justify (almost) anything 25 years later, but the fact is, the writers could plausibly have kept as much of the original history as they wanted to, with the obvious exception of Kirk's father. They chose to do otherwise. Sometimes in ways (the ship's construction, Chekov's age) that even the divergent timeline can't really explain. Since the question was about how they chose to demonstrate their appreciation of past Trek canon, this is entirely relevant.

When discussing the corporate and military shilling, don't forget the product placements!
You guys must have hated 2001. ;)
The corporate logos in 2001 were there for a story reason, and made sense in the context of the time and place in which it was set. (Of course, product placement wasn't really a profit center back in 1968.)

Maybe they should have called it a Hyper Nova...
Actually, that term is already taken. (And it doesn't apply to what's show in this film...)
 
This is definately the Bad Science of the movie, but the closest real-world phenomena I can think of is if the Hobus Star (the one that went SuperNova) emitted something like a GRB (Gamma-Ray-Burst).

Doesn't fit though. Star Trek science has things such as the Omega Particle, Protomatter and Subspace XXXX involved, so it's possible that there was something unique/weird about the star.

My Fanwank Explanation:

- The Hobus Star contains a rare mutation of Dilithium, in massive quantities.
- When the star exploded, the Dilithium turned into an almost infinite producer of Energy, which simply fed the explosive material with a constantly-increasing subspace phenomena.
- The destructive subspace shockwave, being fed from the center of the Supernova explosion, produced holes in Subspace through which the Star's remnants seeped, like swiss-cheese.
- The fragments from Subspace into Normal Space were attracted to large gravity-wells, and the destructive wave simply increases exponentially, destroying planets in it's path.
- Spock created the Black Hole using Red Matter because it could absorb the infinite-energy source at the center, allowing the wave to dissipate without being fed further energy.

I imagine something like this perhaps happening, but in terms of the movie itself: It really didn't need much of an explanation betond "it happened".
 
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