Doctor McCoy! I loved how he just balanced everything with Kirk and Spock.
James T. Kirk. The character portrayed in the TOS, not the fratboy, rebel-without-a-cause, rule-breaking, arrogant, stereotype that formed the basis for the JJ Abrams film.
Bones is my second favorite character. The way De Kelly could hit his lines was perfect. Spock is third and Sulu is 4th-he is my favorite secondary character. I think he could have made a convincing Spock.
Isn't TOS Kirk a fratboy rebel-without-a-cause rule-breaking and arrogant as well? I mean, if you look at him with 60s society behavioural standards he is just like that.
Kelvin Kirk is the same man but more in-tone with the early 2000's society standards, at least that's what I think
Isn't TOS Kirk a fratboy rebel-without-a-cause rule-breaking and arrogant as well? I mean, if you look at him with 60s society behavioural standards he is just like that.
Kelvin Kirk is the same man but more in-tone with the early 2000's society standards, at least that's what I think
Not even close.
Right from the start, in the second pilot, the first with Shatner, Mitchel referred to Kirk as a stack of books with legs.
In TOS Kirk was very by-the-book, very professional and not a rule breaking rebel. That perception of the character really didn't come about until the movies and has snowballed out of proportion considering how many time he actually breaks, or even bends, the rules.
Now that you mention, beside his cowboy attitude (which is arrogant, at least to me) most of what makes kirk a bad boy comes from the movies, where he disobeys almost every order except when it comes to save whales (still he broke temporal laws by going to the past).
At least if you think that sleeping with alien women is not breaking the first directive
Koloth over Kor and Kang? Koloth was a bumbling fool who lost to tribbles (not Kirk as his noble adversary), and probably started the tribble plague in Klingon space, too boot.Koloth
Kang
Kor
I mostly agree with this analysis, but Kirk was less than perfect (near awful) and the butt of jokes in The Trouble With Tribbles. Only through a comedy of errors was the day saved.Kirk has relatable moments and of course, since he's the main character and hero, it's easy to want to be in his shoes. But sometimes he comes across as a Marty Stu, so perfect, always having the right answer. That's fine for the time, but in a modern context it gets kind of old. He's a little too perfect. But he's like Indiana Jones too.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.