Nope, he apologises to the crew. After Marcus does the long winded equivalent of 'nyeh, nyeh, nyeh-nyeh nyeh' and cuts the transmission off, Kirk turns around and says 'I'm sorry' to the Bridge (and looking specifically at Spock).
The conversation with Marcus was him trying to convince Marcus that the crew were not a loose end that Marcus had to clean up - they didn't know about S31, and had no investment in protecting Khan. He was tying to spin that Marcus could get rid of him and Khan, and all Marcus problems would be over. His apology to the crew was acknowledging it was his decisions that put them in that position in the first place.
Nor was he apologising for doing the right thing - he was apologising for purposefully following orders that he knew were illegal (going to Kronos), knew could have consequences (starting an interstellar war), and that he knew that he should have considered further before accepting (Spock, Scotty and McCoy berating him before they left).
It just occurred to me that in TWOK Kirk pleads with Khan to take him but, "Spare my crew." I can't think of any other examples right now, but I think there were a few other times he made similar requests in TOS. Vaguely, I think Picard did it more than once in TNG, too, but again an example escapes me.
It just occurred to me that in TWOK Kirk pleads with Khan to take him but, "Spare my crew." I can't think of any other examples right now, but I think there were a few other times he made similar requests in TOS. Vaguely, I think Picard did it more than once in TNG, too, but again an example escapes me.
I'm not sure, I can't really remember any instances. Closest I can come to is Picard begging Q to save them from the Borg in "Q, Who".
It's common enough to have its own page at TV Tropes:It just occurred to me that in TWOK Kirk pleads with Khan to take him but, "Spare my crew." I can't think of any other examples right now, but I think there were a few other times he made similar requests in TOS. Vaguely, I think Picard did it more than once in TNG, too, but again an example escapes me.
I'm not sure, I can't really remember any instances. Closest I can come to is Picard begging Q to save them from the Borg in "Q, Who".
I know. It's just a feeling, and it's too vague a thing to Google.
It could be that the "spare them take me" kind of sacrificial offering is rather common in stories too, so my mind is just assuming it's happened a few times in Trek.
- How did Scotty get a shuttlepod and fly it to Jupiter, and why did the baddies not notice him? If basic security is that bad, Marcus's scheme is doomed before it's begun. (Remember when Scott says "Are you Starfleet or private security?"; he was probably thinking "If you were Starfleet, you would have arrested me by now instead of making chit-chat, yer daft bugger.")
I thought the best EWW vids were some of the earliest ones, where they kept it under four or five minutes. Once the running time started creeping past six or seven minutes, it was starting to feel like there was a lot of filler; the clips were dragging more and more, as the ratio of entertaining/on-point material to self-indulgent snark-noise dropped.I preferred them when they used to be reasonably short like that one. I swear, their last one ( POTC3) was nearly 40-fucking-minutes minutes long! I could have just watched the movie myself and made notes.
Yeah, for me, it was McCoy's concern over Jim's stress levels, and how it was affecting his body. That's how I've seen it from the first time up until the last time I watched it.I think they were implying the opposite - Kirk's state of mind was affecting his physical health.
And before you say it, yes what is on screen can go either way.
Might even be McCoy flat out lying about Kirk's vitals, because he wants Kirk to stop the idiocy and pulling medical rank is his only way of doing that...Yeah, for me, it was McCoy's concern over Jim's stress levels, and how it was affecting his body. That's how I've seen it from the first time up until the last time I watched it.
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