For me, Alley's Saavik is just a much more interesting character. She has wants, desires, and ambitions of her own. She's devoted to Spock, but she's got her own stuff going on, too. The character we met in TWOK positively crackles with potential. It's a shame that the dialogue confirming her half-Romulan heritage was edited out of the finished film, though. What a fascinating backstory that is!
But at the end of the day, Alley's Saavik works because she's obviously passionate and she has a little mystery about her. You want to know more about her.
In contrast, Curtis' Saavik is, quite frankly, dull. The script for TSFS just uses her as a device to get Spock back and never really delves into her feelings about it. This isn't really Curtis' fault, BTW. Nimoy directed her to play it as completely emotionless, and she did her job. (I wonder if there was a bit of self-interest on Nimoy's part there... Who needs Spock if we have a new, young, sexy, female half-Vulcan hybrid who's got all-new possibilities? So instead he gave us a flat, emotionless, full Vulcan who can't help but come off as rather boring next to the resurrected Mr. Spock.) I think the loss of Saavik's original writer Nick Meyer was a factor, as well. I'm sure that he could've developed her better if he'd stayed on for TSFS.
I do think she's very good in the scene where she comes face-to-face with the resurrected Spock for the first time, though.
The problem with Alley is that it's Alley -- that lady from Cheers and Look Who's Talking, not Saavik.
Never a problem for me, since I saw her as Saavik long before I ever saw her in either of those two projects. (I do love her in
Cheers, though. Rebecca > Diane.)
Plus, it has to be mentioned that Alley was smoking hot. Yeah, superficial but true and that definitely plays into the discussion.
Yep! That's definitely a factor. Alley had a clear sensuality to her that was a total plus and really worked for the character. She doesn't do anything for me these days, but 1980s Kirstie Alley...
WOW!
Curtis is also handicapped there by the fact that her 80s California girl perm looks pretty dated these days, while Alley's more practical hairstyles still look fine.
Exactly. Vulcan's aren't emotionless. To the contrary, they're so repressed because their emotions are too powerful to be let loose (or so they've been taught). Playing a Vulcan is a tricky, but when done right, actors like Nimoy or Lenard or Alley manage to convey the strong emotions and personalities beneath the stoic facades.
Yeah. For my money, we've only had about six decent Vulcans throughout
Star Trek: Nimoy, Lenard, Alley, Tim Russ, and a few others. The people who do it wrong just play them as robotic, which is horribly dull. TNG was especially bad at this.
Nimoy once said that he played Spock as a man of tremendous passion, it was just held in check. Other Vulcan actors would do well to remember that.