Yes. He was just trying to start a war. Firing in to Klingon space would do that. They didn't have to go far.
Eh, I guess I don't find that particularly compelling, but fair enough. Otherwise I mostly enjoy the film.
Yes. He was just trying to start a war. Firing in to Klingon space would do that. They didn't have to go far.
Not sure why it needs to be compelling. Marcus wanted a war; Kirk was his tool for that.Eh, I guess I don't find that particularly compelling, but fair enough. Otherwise I mostly enjoy the film.
Not sure why it needs to be compelling. Marcus wanted a war; Kirk was his tool for that.
I mean, I didn't...so Mileage will Vary?But doesn't Marcus also want the Enterprise to actually kill Harrison, along with starting the war? The whole idea is two birds with one stone, yes? Ordering Kirk to fire the special torpedoes doesn't accomplish that if they can't hit their target. Sure, after that attempt fails they can then fire their regular torpedoes, but I think this is sufficient to demonstrate that this is a confusing and rickety plan, and one which even an attentive audience is going to struggle with in real time.
I can't like this enough. Even in my casual research on blood and plasma based treatments there is a variety of options that fit in to the film's idea, from blood doping, platelet doping, as well as the treatments you list.The work done at my wife’s company would have been sci-fi 20 years ago and it essentially involves “magic blood” to treat leukaemia patients with no other options via stem cells from frozen umbilical cord blood (some of it decades old) treated with her company’s “secret sauce” to multiply the stem cell count of the cord blood by a factor of 50. And in another 20 years, perhaps sooner, they will be using this invention with CRISPR technology to repair/replace a number of organs (think liver/kidney/pancreas) as well as curing a number of other blood disorders beyond leukaemia.
I won’t be holding my breath on the transporter or warp drive, though. I’ll leave that to others.
And also why others consider it differently.I would think reading this thread would make it clear why some people consider it the worst of the three films.![]()
I would think reading this thread would make it clear why some people consider it the worst of the three films.![]()
I don't know why "Into the Darkness" is the most hated of the Kelvin Universe movies. I dislike the 2009 movie the most. For me, it was just so badly written.
I'm sorry, but . . . as much as I dislike "Into the Darkness", I still believe that the 2009 movie was a lot worse.
My question is . . . why is anyone supposed to regard "Into the Darkness" as the worst of the Kelvin Universe movies? Personally, I think the 2009 movie, "Star Trek" is the worst, especially when it features a third-year cadet becoming the captain of Starfleet's flagship by the end of the movie.
Yes. We've been reading the comments. I think everyone's got that part.I've already read the comments. I still believe the 2009 movie is the worst of the Kelvin franchise.
I've already read the comments. I still believe the 2009 movie is the worst of the Kelvin franchise.
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