In Star Trek, the navigational deflector dish is supposed to deflect objects out of a starship. So during TMP’s wormhole scene, why didn’t that happen. They had to use photons. I know excitement and Special effects are the real reason.
“…AAARRRMMMEEEDDDD!”Because it was more fun to say "PHOOOOOTONNNNN...TOR-PEEEEE-DOOOOOOOES...."
"PHOOOOOTONNNNN...TOR-PEEEEE-DOOOOOOOES...."“…AAARRRMMMEEEDDDD!”
Because padding.
"PHOOOOOTONNNNN...TOR-PEEEEE-DOOOOOOOES...."
"......"
"......."
"AVAYYYYYYYYY!"
It also emphasizes the metaphor that the ship/crew doesn't work because Spock isn't there.I'm not really sure the scene was padding, though. It served to put the huge question mark on Kirk's fitness for command, and was crucial to the theme of conflict between he and Decker.
Well, not so much Spock but that not all of the crew are in place. he being the last one to the party.It also emphasizes the metaphor that the ship/crew doesn't work because Spock isn't there.
It also emphasizes the metaphor that the ship/crew doesn't work because Spock isn't there.
Exactly. Scott thought it would take weeks with a row of computers working on the right formula. Spock managed the job in under five minutes.To be fair, the idea of Scott sometimes needing Spock's help with the engines was seeded way back in the early first season, when Spock calculated the antimatter restart formula in "The Naked Time." So it was nothing new or revisionist.
Eddie Murphy had a whole bit on how Scotty was always freaking out and then Spock would be the one to actually fix the ship.To be fair, the idea of Scott sometimes needing Spock's help with the engines was seeded way back in the early first season, when Spock calculated the antimatter restart formula in "The Naked Time." So it was nothing new or revisionist.
It's always seemed galling to me when he swoops in and shows Scotty how to fix everything. I know, charitably, he might just be making the process faster, but Scotty personally overseen the whole damn refit but still doesn't seem capable of fixing shit until Spock turned up with his big brain. The whole Cult Of Spock stuff feels alarmingly like it's pandering to the audience's expectations of the big reunion/big reveal (him being the stand-out character in TOS) rather than the sensible narrative. That the rest of the crew don't seem to be able to pull themselves together until he arrives feels like it cheapens all the other characters.
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