This is a good point. It's a scene I find so annoying that I generally skip it on my ID rewatches.I'd add the space jump to that list . Even though it was a good sequence it was a bit lazy having done something very similar in the previous film.
This is a good point. It's a scene I find so annoying that I generally skip it on my ID rewatches.I'd add the space jump to that list . Even though it was a good sequence it was a bit lazy having done something very similar in the previous film.
Starships are no longer needed if you can just beam from planet to planet.
People say that all the time yet nothing is shown supporting the notion. As a counterexample. Stargate starts out with a teleportal to various worlds, yet for some stupid reason the dumb humans insist upon building starships.Starships are no longer needed if you can just beam from planet to planet.
Starships are no longer needed if you can just beam from planet to planet.
Starfleet becomes the Protoss?Nonsense.
Even with TW beaming, you'd need ships for exploration purposes.
SF doesn't just go from one star to another and lands on planets meeting new cultures... they explore nebulas, supernovas, anomalies, star clusters, etc.
Besides, you can't exactly initiate first contact with an unknown alien species by simply beaming onto their planet (which would definitely make you appear hostile).
TW beaming however would make things easier... in the sense that SF could technically just beam a starship from one location to the next. The device might need to be as large as a drydock in that case, but that's a small price to pay if you ask me.
Also, SF could easily use the technology to beam self-assembly facilities to a given location (say outer reaches of UFP space) and assemble a starbase or defense perimeter remotely.
It could also provide other ships with much needed support and supplies very fast.
Starfleet becomes the Protoss?
Well, naturally. Transwarp beaming is very useful. I just found the scifi comparison funny.If you wish to use that particular analogy... fine... but TW beaming would greatly add to SF's logistical capabilities and easier management of remote areas of space where SF activity may be lower.
Well, naturally. Transwarp beaming is very useful. I just found the scifi comparison funny.
I always thought it was similar to the interphase beaming (if I'm recalling the term correctly) that caused some sort of tissue damage. In any case, yes it would be nice to see it in the Prime Universe.The fact Spock knew about it suggests the technology was beginning to be used in some way before he left the prime timeline.
Again, I hope so, but I won't hold my breath. Tech is usually at the service of the plot, such as how it got Khan to Kronos in a short amount of time. However, it did set up one of my absolutely favorite fight scenes and Klingon designs in all of Trek so there is that.Perhaps ST: Prodigy will (finally) touch upon it (and hopefully not just discard it).
Maybe Scotty studying how that was accomplished is where the idea originally came from in the Prime timeline.Gary Seven and The Providers may have been examples in TOS of transwarp beaming in the 23rd century.
Why is this film so despised and received historical revision as a "failure"?
I find Into Darkness no more unenjoyable than The Search For Spock and Generations in the broad scheme of things and it's not objectively the tire fire that The Final Frontier, Insurrection, and Nemesis are.
It was a solid box office success and garnered OK reviews, and is another victim of fanboi groupthink when it had a rather derivative and contrived Act III that hurts it on rewatch.
I just find it a "Eh?" movie at worst with its weaker parts and the nerd rage it provokes as completely hilarious (like with Prometheus, The Force Awakens, and The Last Jedi).
Such power cannot be allowed to stand. That is the Starfleet way.The real loss is Disco S3 not beaming across the galaxy in the tap of a badge (which is what I initially assumed S3E01 was doing), I was very excited for an utterly chaotic future only for them to... sweep it under the rug. And then find technobabble reasons why badge teleporting doesn't work (like they retconned it that it's the ship's transporter doing the work, no longer the badge itself as prototyped in Nemesis)
And that...leads to hate of the entire movie?I just hated that it was Khan, and not either 1) just a disgruntled Star Fleet officer or 2) one of the other augments, accidentally thawed out first, desparately trying to free Khan.
That's easy:But to have the character shift identities in the middle of the movie for...what reason?
Truth is, the name "Khan" and his speculated "probably a Sikh" in-episode description were very late additions to the original story. Until Montalban was cast for "Space Seed," the character had been Scandinavian [ ... ] Character and description were altered just enough to play to Montalban's talent for playing characters of vaguely exotic foreign-but-not-too-specific ethnicity, but the basic story wasn't much affected.
Khan was never really terribly Indian. Even the name / title belongs to neither India nor Sikhs.
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