Look, I didn't mean anything by it, okay? I've already said I'm sorry.
I never liked how GEN brought this Antonia one out of thin air, someone we'd never heard mentioned before yet who was supposedly so important in Kirk's life.
If it were up to me the name would have been Edith.
Love of his life who died by his own actions. He prevented McCoy from saving her even though he save millions of others. I would imagine that didn't make Kirk feel any better about it though. When he found himself in the Nexus he could have had her in the back of his mind as I'm sure she always was. Seeing Edith and realizing that it was all a dream would have been much better than the silly "I wasn't afraid to make that jump" bit. His emotional mind may have wanted Edith to be alive but he KNEW that she was dead. Once he realized that she could be real he would have questioned the rest of it and the story would have carried on as it did.
Okay, I'm sorry. I've seen it done many times in years past, so I'm sensitive about it.
And I guess I'm too aware of the filmmaking/creative process to be able to think about the topic "what I'd like to see in a movie" as separate from "what's logistically/practically achievable in a movie." The practical limitations and compromises are just too fundamental a part of the film/TV production process, as opposed to prose fiction where you can do just about anything. As a writer myself, I look at a work from the creators' point of view, so I'm thinking more in terms of the thought process that went into it than in terms of what an audience might've liked to see in the abstract.
I never liked how GEN brought this Antonia one out of thin air, someone we'd never heard mentioned before yet who was supposedly so important in Kirk's life.
If it were up to me the name would have been Edith.
Love of his life who died by his own actions. He prevented McCoy from saving her even though he save millions of others. I would imagine that didn't make Kirk feel any better about it though. When he found himself in the Nexus he could have had her in the back of his mind as I'm sure she always was. Seeing Edith and realizing that it was all a dream would have been much better than the silly "I wasn't afraid to make that jump" bit. His emotional mind may have wanted Edith to be alive but he KNEW that she was dead. Once he realized that she could be real he would have questioned the rest of it and the story would have carried on as it did.
I've never bought Edith as the love of Kirk's life, no matter what the fandom's opinion on it might be. She was just a disposable love interest like any of the others. His true love was the Enterprise.
Besides if you're going to pick a woman from Kirk's past then why not Miramanee? I mean she was his one and only wife! If anybody was going to be the love of his life then it was most likely to be her.
However, when the change would consist of, at most, a few words of dialog and perhaps simple costuming I don't see where that would enter into the realm of impossible.
While it would have been very cool if Joan Collins could have played Edith one last time that would run into the limitations you spoke of. WOuld she agree to a cameo? Could the budget support it? Would her appearance actually take some of the viewers out of the movie if they didn't know who Edith was? (Hey, what's Alexis Carrington doing with Kirk?).
^ The other point is that while both Miramee and Edith may have been written as 'babes of the week' for Kirk, City on the Edge of Forever and Edith have really made their mark and are remembered as particularly significant in Trek lore. I don't think Miramee has spawned as much discussion or response as Edith.
However, when the change would consist of, at most, a few words of dialog and perhaps simple costuming I don't see where that would enter into the realm of impossible.
While it would have been very cool if Joan Collins could have played Edith one last time that would run into the limitations you spoke of. WOuld she agree to a cameo? Could the budget support it? Would her appearance actually take some of the viewers out of the movie if they didn't know who Edith was? (Hey, what's Alexis Carrington doing with Kirk?).
As Greg explained above, it's not just about budget, it's about what serves the story, a story that needs to be standalone and accessible to new or casual viewers. As I said, knowing what a big TOS fan Ron Moore was, I'm sure he considered the possibility of using Edith or Carol or someone, so he or his collaborators must have had a reason for deciding against that approach and going with a new character. Maybe that reason is something that hasn't been mooted in this thread yet. There are all sorts of factors that filmmakers have to contend with that we armchair quarterbacks aren't aware of.
The question is, what was the story purpose of Kirk's love interest in that sequence? Was it satisfying the fans' desire for continuity callbacks? Certainly not; that should never be the sole or primary reason for doing anything in a story. I'd say the purpose was to symbolize the choice Kirk had to make: the choice between his desire for personal fulfillment and his duty to others, between the temptations of the Nexus and the difficulties and dangers of the real world. Could Edith have symbolized that? Perhaps, since Kirk faced a similar choice there, between his love for Edith and his duty to the universe. But the difference is, in that case, there was only one choice he could have made. Saving Edith may have been what he wanted, but it was never a realistic option and he knows it. But with Antonia, he really could have chosen to stay with her, to embrace love and family and "a beach to walk on." He had a genuine choice between staying retired and going back to Starfleet, and the fact that the alternative Antonia offered was real and feasible makes it a more effective temptation within the Nexus. Because he would've been aware for nine years that he actually could have made the opposite choice (without destroying the universe as he knew it), so he would've wondered what might have been. Unlike Edith, it's a fantasy that would've actually been attainable, so that makes it more potent dramatically at that point in the story.
Also, since the point of including the love interest is to symbolize that temptation and that choice, it would not have been enough just to hear a name drop and see some Joan Collins stand-in off in the distance. Loyal fans would've gotten it all from the name alone, but most of the movie's audience would've needed it explained to them, so it would've been necessary to recap the rather complicated premise of "City on the Edge" -- which is a needless distraction in a story that's already got enough time travel going on.
There's also the fact that if Kirk were recreating events from that far in his past, he probably would've imagined himself looking the way he did at the time, and that would've been unattainable. Shatner in 1994 may have looked significantly older than Shatner in 1982, but he was a lot closer to that than he was to the Shatner of 1967. Plus setting the Kirk sequence just a couple of years before TWOK let them use the uniforms and props that would've been on hand from previous films and that movie audiences would've been familiar with. (Although there is an anachronism in the set dressing, a cast photo from TUC, which was set nearly a decade after Kirk's relationship with Antonia ended.)
Maybe simple flexibility was also a consideration. Movie scripts usually have to go through a lot of rewrites. Tying that part of the film into the specifics of a past episode would've locked them in to certain things. Making it a new relationship from an unchronicled part of Kirk's past gave them free rein to revise it however they needed to fit the demands of the latest draft of the script.
So I can see a lot of reasons why they might've decided to go with Antonia instead of Edith. The logistical and budgetary considerations are just some of the possible factors behind the decision. There are plenty of creative reasons as well as practical reasons why it might've been deemed the better choice.
I've always wondered if the mention of Idaho was supposed to be Iowa.
Regarding Edith Keeler being used in Generations -- it could also just as well have been that they (Moore & Braga, Paramount, Rick Berman, whoever) didn't want to have to pay out any royalty to Harlan Ellison for use of the character.
Generations was also short on lead time. They were writing it while wrapping up TNG. It's possible that they simply didn't consider it that important.
If they had more time, perhaps they would have.
And it's not just Ron Moore that wrote the script. Bragga and Berman were also involved. That lowers the quality bar a few notches as well.
One thing to remember though is that what happened in the Nexus wasn't real. It didn't have to be based on whether Kirk could have saved Edith or not, it could be based if what he wished he could have done.
If it were up to me the name would have been Edith.
It appears to have been changed on the set. Shatner's got a ranch in Kentucky so it doesn't appear to be a similar situation to him changing the dogs name. Who knows where the change came from.I've always wondered if the mention of Idaho was supposed to be Iowa.
Regarding Edith Keeler being used in Generations -- it could also just as well have been that they (Moore & Braga, Paramount, Rick Berman, whoever) didn't want to have to pay out any royalty to Harlan Ellison for use of the character.
Right, it could be as simple as that. It would be a lot of trouble to go to for such a minor cameo.
Generations was also short on lead time. They were writing it while wrapping up TNG. It's possible that they simply didn't consider it that important.
And it wasn't. The woman herself wasn't the relevant thing. She was just a plot device to set up the choice Kirk had to make.
And you've been offered a panoply of reasons why they might not have. I think it's profoundly unlikely that they would've gone to the trouble.
And it's not just Ron Moore that wrote the script. Bragga and Berman were also involved. That lowers the quality bar a few notches as well.
That's needlessly petty. The issue on the table isn't quality, but continuity. How would a cameo appearance that only the loyal fans care about constitute an increase in quality? That's not quality, it's just pandering.
One thing to remember though is that what happened in the Nexus wasn't real. It didn't have to be based on whether Kirk could have saved Edith or not, it could be based if what he wished he could have done.
The problem is that you're focused on wanting this cameo and treating everything else as secondary to achieving that goal. That could not and should not have been the mindset of the people actually writing the movie. I've explained why I think that Edith would not have been the right choice dramatically or practically, and doubleohfive has offered a very good suggestion for why it might simply not have been on the table at all.
Okay, you sold me. That works.RPJOB wrote:
It's not like you'd need to summarize the whole plot. For the non-fans Edith is just as generic as Antonia. For the fans it would be one big easter egg wrapped up in a big bow.
Kirk - Edith...?
Picard - A friend?
Kirk - Someone I knew a long, long time ago. But it can't be her. She died.
Picard - I'm sorry
Kirk - But if she's not real (glances around) then is any of this real either..
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Your objection that using Edith would necessitate stopping the movie while someone filled in the audience about the plot of COTEOF is something I adressed earlier when Greg Cox raised the same objection. I responded as follows:
My comment about Bragga and Berman lowering the quality bar a bit is simply acknowledging that Ron Moor is generally regarded by the fans as being a superior writer to either of them.
Petty is referring to some fans as "fanboys engaged in idle chatter" as you did earlier. I know that you apologized for that but that doesn't negate the fact that the only person who threw an insult in all of this is yourself. You've already surrendered any moral high ground you might have had.
It's just a simple discussion about a minor tweak to a movie that we've enjoyed. A chat about how we feel that it could have been even better than it was. Should we only discuss films in glowing terms, setting aside any perceived shortcoming because we're not the writers and don't know exactly why they made the decisions they did?
Orci retconned the line about only 10,000 Vulcans surviving when he was in a chat after the last movie was already released. He said something to the effect of "let's just say that Spock was only speaking of the Vulcans on the planet" when he was asked about the low number of survivors.
If slipping something into a work of fiction that is aimed at a small portion of the audience is pandering, as you say, then what exactly was the Tardis and the Time Machine doing in Watching the Clock? Why is using Edith pandering and what you did simply an easter egg? The only difference I see is that one is actually rooted in the fictional universe that the story is in.
Having a random woman in Kirk's paradise is a big wtf, when there are so many women in his past that fans, and casual viewers might remember.
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