I like it.![]()
Yeah, me too.
Same here, although I still wish they'd retained the Star Trek V bridge. the one in VI was too drab and military looking.
I like it.![]()
Yeah, me too.
In TOS Spock used his 'spooky' mind powers to trick a guard on Eminar 7, the Chief's girlfriend in 'The Omega Glory'. He also tried it on the Kelvans and (presumably) wiped out some unpleasant memories for Kirk in 'Requiem for Methuselah'..A forced mind meld is at least as severe a violation as rape. An argument can be made that if a single act of rape will prevent an interstellar war, it's worth it. Even if justifiable, however, it's horrific.
I like it.![]()
Yeah, me too.
Same here, although I still wish they'd retained the Star Trek V bridge. the one in VI was too drab and military looking.
I like it.![]()
Yeah, me too.
Same here, although I still wish they'd retained the Star Trek V bridge. the one in VI was too drab and military looking.
To me, this was the worst sin of the movie. As a telepath, Spock has always been especially mindful of respecting boundaries (I'm sure someone will come up with some contraexample from TOS). To see him forcibly penetrate her mind was completely out of character.
The Trek characters always stuck to their principles (as best they could in any given circumstance), even if they had to go the long way around the barn to do it. As Kirk told Tharn in Mirror Mirror, he could use force... but he (and the Federation) wouldn't.
As I've been saying since 9/11/2001, principles only matter when they're tested.
I can totally see yours and a lot of other people's point of of view on this scene, I really can, but time was against them and she had the information they all needed, what was the alternative? Not to split hairs but she only tried stepping back a bit, it's not like Spock pinned her to the floor or anything.
Them over there. *gestures vaguely*
I'll add to that.![]()
Yeah, me too.
Same here, although I still wish they'd retained the Star Trek V bridge. the one in VI was too drab and military looking.
If the TUC bridge is drab, what is the TMP bridge?
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I never had a problem with the TUC bridge either, that picture looks great. I don't think it looks particularly 'military' - it's a million miles away from Klingon bridges for example.Same here, although I still wish they'd retained the Star Trek V bridge. the one in VI was too drab and military looking.
If the TUC bridge is drab, what is the TMP bridge?
[~snip]
That's a good point. I agree.I never had a problem with the TUC bridge either, that picture looks great. I don't think it looks particularly 'military' - it's a million miles away from Klingon bridges for example.If the TUC bridge is drab, what is the TMP bridge?
[~snip]
Klingon bridges are a bit on the extreme side to begin with. But modern day military bridges tend to look cold, hard, and efficient, and I'd say the TMP bridge achieves that effect closer (albeit unintentionally, probably, since it predates Meyers). Silver and gray tend to be US military colors through and through.
The TUC bridge, on the other hand, looks like something closer to a kind of NASA-inspired mission command/ground control, minus the captain's chair. The plethora of screens that are always on but surround the whole well-lit room, complete with the two bridge stations facing forward towards the giant screen, just drives that home to me. While NASA isn't purely military (though the military has a hand with it), NASA's emphasis was always on exploration over military use, and as such I think it's a fine aesthetic for a Trek bridge to evoke.
And that scene at the very end where they'e all standing heroically in front of the crowd, like someone said to me once "It was like they were all posing for a picture that noone took."
Questions: Is the TUC bridge set larger than the TMP/TFF set? It looks larger. Was it a redress of the Excelsior bridge?
And that scene at the very end where they'e all standing heroically in front of the crowd, like someone said to me once "It was like they were all posing for a picture that noone took."
Yes, I found that moment rather cheesy.
That's why I don't think it breaks the 4th wall. It's the kind of 'hero saves the day' scene you'll find at the end of hundreds of movies. These guys had just prevented a major interstellar incident and probable all out war, the crowd's reaction is justified for me.
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