Yes, the goal is fun and interesting characters. Succeeding on both counts.I did meet some of the cast 2 weeks ago, and they seem to be having a lot of fun! So if that's the goal for this show, it's succeeding at it.
My inclination is the fact that they'll probably go with the idea that "Timing is everything."
However, they never formally broke it off and by the time Spock arrives, he's in a state of homicidal murder that will only be satisfied with T'Pring and would result in Stonn dying (or Spock).
T'Pring, also suffering Pon Farr at the time because we know women do now, has her logic come up with a pretty nasty and ruthless solution on the fly.
Per Blood Fever (VOY) the ritual combat option actually resolves the pon'farr in addition to breaking the betroval per Amok Time.
It's also possible that Spock was partly to blame for that being the only option for him, by refusing to address the issue until it was almost too late. I could see a scenario where T'Pring has been trying to communicate with him for some time to break it off the usual way, but he's been ignoring her, setting up the events of the episode.
Possible. Also, T'Pring might have been hoping he would came to Vulcan to stay snd resigned from Starfleet.It's also possible that Spock was partly to blame for that being the only option for him, by refusing to address the issue until it was almost too late. I could see a scenario where T'Pring has been trying to communicate with him for some time to break it off the usual way, but he's been ignoring her, setting up the events of the episode.
It's also possible that Spock was partly to blame for that being the only option for him, by refusing to address the issue until it was almost too late. I could see a scenario where T'Pring has been trying to communicate with him for some time to break it off the usual way, but he's been ignoring her, setting up the events of the episode.
But I could be wrong on some or all of the above. YMMV.
I thought about this after some posts I made in the Gen Trek forum, but one of the things I love about Strange New Worlds is the way that it makes certain aspects of the Original Series so much better than they already were. Here's a list of a few I could think of:
1) This was the first one I thought of, and that's T'Pring. SNW has really expanded and improved her character, along with adding depth to her relationship with Spock AND providing a motivation for her actions in Amok Time that is sympathetic.
2) Along the same lines, it also adds a lot of depth to the relationship between Spock and Chapel. Whereas on TOS Chapel just seemed like someone with an unrequited crush on Spock, in SNW we see that it's much deeper than that, and the Spock we see in TOS is probably reacting to Chapel the way he does because he's still very emotionally damaged from how their relationship ended.
3) Speaking of relationships, we get a much stronger explanation for why Spock would literally risk his career (And death, apparently, har-har) to take Pike to Talos.
When you consider that Spock knew Pike was aware of his own fate, and chose to live with it anyway in order to save Spock's life, that is a powerful motivator for what Spock did to help Pike.
4) Another relationship that really gets fleshed out? The explanation of Sarek's attitude towards Spock. Now it's not just a trite "Oh, my son didn't pursue the career I WANTED him to pursue", it's literally a slap in the face to Sarek since he sabotaged Burnham's choice with the assumption Spock would take her place. So Spock tossed all of Sarek's plans in the bin and damaged his reputation in the process. Suddenly, the bitterness makes a lot more sense.
5) The war with the Klingons goes a long way in contextualizing the animosity we see towards the Klingons in TOS, as well. It explains the Fed's actions all the way up to Star Trek 6 and Cartwright's conspiracy.
SNW Chapel is a completely different character from TOS Chapel.
I'm not sure, but does Spock really know that, or has Pike just hinted at it?
Yes. Cold and self-serving.No. SNW took what was truly 'alien' culture wrt to mating and relationships, and completely 'normalized' it for drama and teen-style relationship angst. Her motivations in Amok Time were plain as day.
She had a character in TOS?More unneeded drama and relationship angst. Spock is younger and less experienced in SNW, but SNW Chapel is a completely different character from TOS Chapel.
To what end? And what would you change them to?But if I could, I would.![]()
Yes, he knows.I'm not sure, but does Spock really know that, or has Pike just hinted at it?
Nah, they just gave the character some depth.SNW Chapel is a completely different character from TOS Chapel.
Yes. Cold and self-serving.
To what end? And what would you change them to?
But, what if, like Spock, she's the head of her department. I've pretended that was the case since I was a teenager.About the only thing I can say that makes TOS "better" is a more in-depth characterization for Uhura, although is some ways I also think her inclusion in SNW hurts the character somewhat. She's presented in SNW as something of a wunderkind, an absolute genius-level intellect... ending up at the Comm station straight out of the Academy... and then... staying there for the next decade or so. I don't necessarily think that's a problem, she does get promotions and the position is a high-profile, high-demand one... but for someone has incredibly qualified as Uhura, one would think she would have attained greater success in that time period.
Pretty sure he will be after the events of the Crossover and Musical.I do think it's time to cool it with the "experimenting with humanity" thing... he should be long over this.
But, what if, like Spock, she's the head of her department. I've pretended that was the case since I was a teenager.
Hasn't it been established that only the most extraordinary people serve on the bridge of the Enterprise?Oh i'm sure that she is. She has an incredibly important position. Always has. And I think that's perfectly acceptable for a "normal" person. SNW has tended to portray Uhura as beyond normal. She excels in most fields and is "above average" in nearly every way... the only thing really holding her back is being unsure of what she actually wants to do with herself, which by S2 seems to have largely been resolved.
About the only thing I can say that makes TOS "better" is a more in-depth characterization for Uhura, although is some ways I also think her inclusion in SNW hurts the character somewhat. She's presented in SNW as something of a wunderkind, an absolute genius-level intellect... ending up at the Comm station straight out of the Academy... and then... staying there for the next decade or so. I don't necessarily think that's a problem, she does get promotions and the position is a high-profile, high-demand one... but for someone has incredibly qualified as Uhura, one would think she would have attained greater success in that time period.
I don't think the inclusion of any of the other TOS characters helps anything. Chapel is problematic by just being a totally different character. Some might like the new character, but I don't see completely altering a character as "helping" anything.
How so? These characters live? I feel like that's the only outcome they are bound by.Of course, since I'm in the camp of 'it's an alternate 'verse', I guess it shouldn't really matter to me. It's just the principle of it, and the way it stifles their potential character growth moving forward.
*snip* In the Federation, they've outgrown the idea that career success requires constantly chasing greater status; it's enough to find something you excel at and enjoy, and just stay there.
I don't get it when people are opposed to changing things in fiction.
why it's Starfleet instead of UESPA, why Spock stopped being shouty, why Picard lost his Chekov-like caricatured devotion to France after season 1,
why Data was retconned as not using contractions after using them frequently before "Datalore" and retconned as not having emotions despite displaying emotion clearly in seasons 1 & 2
And why we accept in retrospect that the Federation was at war with Cardassia in TNG seasons 1-2 even though "Peak Performance" made it clear that Picard considered war games an atavism for a Starfleet that had been at peace for ages.
Change is part of how series fiction works. But we fool ourselves into forgetting the older changes, glossing over them in our minds, so we convince ourselves that the old stuff was consistent when it actually wasn't, and that's why we have trouble with the new changes.
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