I like Ecclesiastes more than a lot of that book, but suggesting that the very broad and general observations about life's realities there constitute a "moral" for COTEOF is a nonstarter, IMAO. With only a little more effort you could wrap Ecclesiastes around most episodes of Seinfeld.
Nor does having a character observe that he agrees with Keeler's goals but not her timing constitute "preaching."
The moral of Star Trek:
"We changed stuff and we got away with it. Up yours, nerds."
I like Ecclesiastes more than a lot of that book, but suggesting that the very broad and general observations about life's realities there constitute a "moral" for COTEOF is a nonstarter, IMAO. With only a little more effort you could wrap Ecclesiastes around most episodes of Seinfeld.
Nor does having a character observe that he agrees with Keeler's goals but not her timing constitute "preaching."
Please don't accuse me of wrapping somebody else's Scripture around a Star Trek episode. Turn! Turn! Turn! was a #1 Billboard hit almost contemporaneously with City. It was "in the air" at the time the episode was written, and its lyrics therefore hardly some obscure or otherwise arbitrary passage.
There is a direct connection between the passage and the episode, which is that there is a time for war and a time for peace, and the two are distinct. Spock says explicitly that the 1930's was not the time for peace.
By essentially characterizing Edith as naive, and indeed tragically so, Spock is passing judgment on Edith. But he is not delivering a diatribe. So instead of saying he was "preaching", I should have said he was "lecturing".
The moral of Star Trek:
"We changed stuff and we got away with it. Up yours, nerds."
"We got the gig and we'll do it our way."
"We pulled a Lucas on you" is another way to put it as well.
The moral of Star Trek:
"We changed stuff and we got away with it. Up yours, nerds."
Star Track? I love those movies. My favorite character is Dr. Spock! Which one had the Dead Star in it?
It was in the TV series.Just where was the "moral" and "thought provoking" elements of this film????
Outside a few throwaway lines like "positively grim" and "stack of books with legs" do we know anything about Kirk in his youth.
Well, to graduate the Academy in three years it's quite possible that nuKirk hits the books pretty hard too - we just don't see it.
And to the inevitable "he cheats" remarks...the writers made it crystal clear in this movie that he's flaunting what he does in the Kobayashi Maru rather than trying to get by with it (you're welcome to speculate on whether or not oldKirk cheated in earnest, of course). If this were his general approach to his studies he'd have been kicked out in his first semester.![]()
If this were his general approach to his studies he'd have been kicked out in his first semester.![]()
If you think that people with genius IQ can't have jerkass tendencies, you haven't met enough of them.Which is why it was sort of annoying to never see his supposed studious side -- yeah, they told us he had it, at least when Pike referred to him as a "genius-level" intellect, but I had a hard time buying it when all we saw were his jerkass tendencies. Informed attribute, anyone?
yeah, they told us he had it,
yeah, they told us he had it,
And that is quite enough.
That was probably one of those things that was too much to ask for.
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