Zyxpsilon Zyxpsilon

Star Trek **SPOILERS**

Star Trek **SPOILERS**

by JJ Abrams & a whole lot of people!

SPOILERS ALERT;

 

You will see this film eventually, right?

You will even have the urge to share your opinions with the membership here, and to express yourselves clearly with description of scenes, quoting dialogues, snapping images of the new NCC-1701, etc!

Be fair & square, and consider that anything you will write below should automatically spoil the fun & the mystery for others.

Tomorrow at this time, France-Belgium-Switzerland-Vulcan(Alberta) fans will rush out their TRUE world premieres as much as some lucky Austin_Texas & Sydney_Australia people last April who resisted (However futile!) revealing any details after being asked by Orci, Kurtzman, Lindelof & Mr Leonard Nimoy.

Do not read anything below while you still can exit this thread.

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Long enough to fill a browser page?

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STAR TREK is a contest of skills & personalities.

It proves (again) that Humanity can and MUST go to Space and beyond.

And, that even Science is no match for Fiction.

The Galaxy is our only hope.

<3

Enjoy.

 

614,800 views 222 replies
Reply #151 Top

imo crowe craps up his roles pretty well

Reply #152 Top

Quoting EviliroN, reply 24

but Eric Bana also signed instead of Russell Crowe, etc.
 

oh man would that have been a disaster if the opposite actually occurred

I'll even try judging Winona Ryder for her strange cameo as Spock's mother for one reason too many; actors share a fair chunk of contracted millions per role and at times, per spoken conversations; in fact Sarek admits marrying her for <3 rather than decision.

Reply #153 Top

Quoting EviliroN, reply 12

GTFO
English is NOT my main language
and unlile you, I know 3 freaking languages which i can speak (writing and reading is a whole other thing)


 

Oops you made a mistake. English, Spanish, German, Mandarin. Yeah, that is more than you. And I don't go posting in languages I do not have a firm grasp on.

 

The problem is, is that I can not tell if you are being serious or are just joking around with us. Realize that many childish noob posters on forums write that way because they think they are cool. It is not, it is just hard to read; like brushing my teeth with a metal file. And before you go off and get upset again, why not just turn spell check on in your browser?

Amen. I think he just doesn't know how to spell. I can't speak any languages besides English; guess I'm just a condescending, imperialist snob that way. But hey, thas jus' how ah roll!

Reply #154 Top

Quoting Scoutdog, reply 7
It has more than one meaning, but so does "negro". The point is, the use of "gay" as a perjoritive is homophobic and just a little creepy.

 

The word you're looking for is biggoted.  Homophobic implies an irrational fear for which there is no indication so far.  You don't have to respond to an insult with another insult.

Reply #156 Top

The word you're looking for is biggoted. Homophobic implies an irrational fear for which there is no indication so far. You don't have to respond to an insult with another insult.

Bigoted works as well, but a google search will reveal that homophobic is almost exclusively applied to anti-gay statements and actions. It's not an insult when used against someone who is being anti-gay, just like "racist" is not an insult when used on an actual racist. Anyway, he said he was just doing it to see how we all would react, so why bother?

Reply #157 Top

I liked it but a few things made me think,

Kirk gets HIS ASS KICKED IN EVERY FIGHT HE IS IN  literally.

If he is not getting pounded on in the bar, its on the drill, or the deck of the Enterprise, or on the romulan ship, or anywhere really. That man just cannot defend himself in a fistfight.

If Spock only needed a small amount of the "red matter" then why send him will all of it?

 

Reply #158 Top

Maybe he wanted to hi-jack reality too and spoil the fun for everyone watching.

Yep, welcome to the Star Trek Spoilers Thread where people can't stay on Topic and yours truly has had it with the junk.

You wanna know more about this excellent film, go watch it for yourselves.

Once again, Trolls win.

Reply #159 Top

I saw it and i'm with Phaedyme. I think its great they're getting a chance to diverge from the past of the series. No one wants Shatner to stick his face on TV more then it already is.

Why not have the ability to make some more interesting movies that are not having to be crippled by having to connect directly back to the 70's series?

Reply #160 Top

Quoting Sanctorium, reply 9
I saw it and i'm with Phaedyme. I think its great they're getting a chance to diverge from the past of the series. No one wants Shatner to stick his face on TV more then it already is.

Why not have the ability to make some more interesting movies that are not having to be crippled by having to connect directly back to the 70's series?

In other words lets bring some fresh blood and ideas to Star Trek

It can be done, just look at BattleStar Galactica

Reply #161 Top

Quoting Zyxpsilon, reply 20

Spock and Nero could have travelled to the future instead of the past. They could have done the exact same plotline, just with a different crew and ship in the future.
Both came from the future and as a result, altered the timeline & reality for Kirk & co (to use your perception of the past).

For an allllllmmmmmoooosssssttttt exact explanation, i'd have to recommend you (at a minimum) Voyager's episodes Year of Hell or Relativity.

I'll leave the remaining reveals to Star Trek XII (as announced by Paramount)... if only to please the continuity proponents.

I am familiar with both episodes (and most time travel episodes). I'll try to phrase my argument in that context.

Let point A be the year 2387. Yet point B be the year Nero arrived in. Let point C be an indeterminate time in the 25th century.

Nero and Spock travelled from point A to point B, creating a divergent timeline. (They might have also travelled into a different universe, but that's not helpful for this argument.) This is like what happened in that two-part Voyager time travel episode (can't remember) where they go back to present day- they introduce Captain Braxton here.

However, in my theoretical universe, they could travel from point A to point C (the alternate universe works here if you will as well.) This is like what the villain of that aforementioned Voyager episode did. He wanted to go into the future and claim technology. Or it's like how Braxton brought Seven into the future to help fix the timeline from there.

So Nero and Spock could create a divergent alternate universe in the future as well, but it would diverge at that point, not earlier, and wouldn't overwrite anything. They could do a similar story.

 

@minor race: so you mean a setting after/during tng/voy/ds9? that would harldy be a reboot, actually it wouldnt be a reboot at all, it would just be a continuation of things already done. tng wasnt a reboot, tng was successor of tos, because it simply followed an already laid down path (it's called reboot for a reason)

imagine if the movie would have been set during the tng-era and suddenly everyone has new costumes etc, a comepletely new and young crew (which wouldnt fit normal trek at all), much more flashy effects ("wat? where are my phaserstrips and my red torpedos") hardcore fans would cry havoc and complain about continuity-issues. at the same time it would seem to everyone else that this is the usual star trek, not very appealling to mainstream crowd.

i think, to reboot the franchise they've chosen the most logical point, the point where it all started - tos.

I'll respond to your points in a list.

1. I didn't want it in TNG. I wanted it beyond TNG. So why are you imagining it set in the TNG era? I'm talking about a third era (ENT can be considered part of TNG) that would be created as a result of the new movie.

2. It would be a continuation of things already done, yes. But you go on to say people would complain about it as if it was a reboot. Like some have done about TNG, no? So...

3. They didn't have to use the same actors. The actors were picked because they were to play a young crew.

4. Flashy effects would be fine 200 years from TOS. If anything, they make less sense in XI because we know things were less flashy then.

5. Hardcore fans have been crying havoc about canon issues since TNG and probably earlier. There are some people whose definition of Star Trek stops at TNG, some sooner, some earlier. Some likewise approach it from the other end, starting at ENT or VOY, and many will soon approach it starting at the new movie and nothing before (possibly, anyway.)

But how would they cry about continuity issues? The future's been mentioned in a lot of episodes, but probably less than a season would be applicable (because of all the timeline changes) to anything set in the 25th century up to the 28th century (29th and 31st are slightly better defined.) There's no continuity, and any that there is could be worked into it.

6. It could be not "normal Trek" if it took place in the future.

7. Then your definition of reboot differs from mine. I don't think they stand to gain by erasing or overwriting. They could expand and add without using an alternate universe. This would satisfy anyone.

Or, I don't see how it wouldn't.

 

Your points seem to be dealing with TNG, as if 'era three' would be like TNG. But compare TNG to TOS- they are pretty different.

Reply #162 Top

I'm of the opinion that DS9 is the best series in the Trek world. The movie didn't irk me and was a wonderful change of pace from the usual droll we get from Trek.

I can't understand the hate from supposed fans of Star Trek. First Contact had a horrible plot and was absolute crap. Now we are supposed to listen to Fan whines about time travel when in just this one example of a previous movie you have the borg and the enterprise heading back to save Earth? Oh by the way they help cheer on Cochran and offer moral support to boot. Give me a break.

Should they have perhaps made the movie about whales so we can travel back in time on a rusted out ghetto bird of prey with a bunch of old farts that can't even have a regular bowel movement?

 

Reply #163 Top

Quoting Torval, reply 12

Should they have perhaps made the movie about whales so we can travel back in time on a rusted out ghetto bird of prey with a bunch of old farts that can't even have a regular bowel movement?

 

And to make it an even better back-in-time travel concept, we could call it Star Trek IV

Reply #164 Top

I said this before, I know I did, but I really liked how Kirk hung a lampshade on the whole time travel thing before beaming back onto the Enterprise.

I hope that the next film does not rely on time travel as a storytelling device, though. For the most part, I am done with Trek time travel stories, and have been since Generations.

Except for "More Troubles, More Tribbles." That was fun.

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Reply #165 Top

Well, having finally SEEN the movie, I can actually post an opinion on it:

It was a good movie, and I LOVED not seeing William Shatner's mug plastered across my screen, but it wasn't Trek. Out of deference to (the) Spock(s), I will call it Trek Prime. It also looked like the creators are actually going to try to make another TV show or at least another movie judjing by the closing sequence (who wouldn't try to recreate SUCH a money-maker!), and while Trek will always hold a special place in my heart, I am willing to give Trek Prime a go, provided that the quality keeps up. My political philosophy is "integrate, don't segregate", but in this case I think that "seperate but equal" might be a good description. It also had more nits than I can easily count, and I will get to those in a following post.

Reply #166 Top

Kirk had a childhood twice as fast as his father's death it seems, the disbelief is more about how Ambassador Spock had to reveal some confusing truths for the yet to be Captain, Phaedyme.

To think that writers would bother making the difference for us (as Kirk is "reasoning" over the validity of elder Spock story) is to admit instinct kicked in his mind while he was beaming back.

He sure cleared up the thick air simply by nodding his way off Delta Vega.

Reply #167 Top

Nits in numerical order:

  1. Why are there still farms in Iowa? Doesn't the Federation have REPLICATORS??? (But then again, we're changing everything ELSE in the seires, so why not that?)
  2. When ever McCoy shoots him with a hypo, Kirk yells or does something else to indicate that it hurts. Star Trek hypos use an atomization system, which is painless.(But then again, we're changing everything ELSE in the seires, so why not that?)
  3. OK, so McCoy's mud-(something) vaccine causes Kirk's hands to swell dramatically. Ok, the vaccine seems a bit rapid in its effects (It can take hours for something to get absorbed into a person's system), but not being a doctor, I will refrain from comment. However, with that much fluid or blood or air or whatever in his hands, Kirk should be in EXCRUCIATING pain. But he doesn't seem to notice the swelling until he looks at himself.
  4. Not only do Kirk and gang make it from hard vacuum (probably ORBIT) to breatheable atmosphere in a surprisingly short period of time, but there is also no re-entry heat. And, they slow down from sevearl hundred KPS to survivable fall speed in an instant: the G-force from that sort of thing would puree any human, even with a shock-absorbing suit. Finally, they do this with PARACHUTES! I don't have the #s in front of me, but that does not seem like it would work.
  5. Ok, so for whatever reason Nero is compelled to drill into Vulcan's core to drop the hole. Then, the planet is destroyed in a matter of minutes. However, I read somewhere that it would take hours or even days for a black hole at an Earth-sized planets's core to destroy it. Granted, the planet would become uninhabitible long before then, but in the movie the whole thing implodes in a few minutes.
  6. There seems to be an absecnce of the usual acceleration ring around all of the movie's black holes, but then again, these ARE the Magical "Red Matter" Kind Of Black Holes.
  7. In order to produce a black hole of the size pictured in the movie, the "Red Matter" would have to be EXTREMELY dense, dense enough that the blob in Spock-Prime's ship would be distorting the light around it. Yet we see no warping or other odd effects (then again, maybe THAT'S why it looks red....)
  8. When Kirk's pod crashes onto Delta Vega, it makes a rather small hole in the ice, considering that it FELL FROM SPACE!!!! (I have seen several complaints that this Delta Vega does not look like the Delta Vega in TOS, but most Earth-like environments DO have polar ice caps, so that can be explained.)
  9. The large, red entity that chased Kirk seems to see remarkebly well, considering that it does not appear to have any eyes!!
  10. Spock-Prime then fends the creature off with a burning torch. Why did Nero give him a TORCH? "I'm going to stick him on this ice cap to watch his planet die, and I'd better give him a torch in case he gets attacked by a large ice preditor with ESP(see #9)"? And, how did he light it?
  11. The size of Vulcan in D-V's sky indicates that it is about as far away from Vulcan as the moon is from Earth, maybe a little farther. If so, a) Spock-Prime would experiance a considerable lag in watching the fireworks, and b ) [ EDIT: bloody smilies] the tidal forces from the balck hole would quickly destroy D-V, as well. Even if my math is off, the effect would not be pretty.
  12. A regular super-nova could never threaten anything more than it's immediate system in the time frame depicted by the movie, unless it had some sort of Subspace component that allows it to travel fater than light. Even then, I find it hard to beieve that it would threaten the ENTIRE UNIVERSE!!
  13. Also, how come these universe-destroying celestial events never seem to happen in a place or time where the Fed cannot correct them?
  14. This is just a complaint about beaming in general, but it especially applies to the water scene: unless someone is beaming into a perfect vacuum, there is going to be air or something in their place. Where does it go? The only thing I can think of is that it is somehow displaced by the transport process, but that would create a definate "pop" whenever someone beamed down.
  15. An average human can hold their breath for around a minute before passing out, which in water means drowning (some people can do more, but they are swimmers etc. who have special training). Now, even assuming that there is air in the tank itself, Scotty is underwater for considreably longer than that, and he comes out conscious and sputtering.
  16. The tank again. When Kirk opens the hatch, there is surprisingly little water, considering that the tube was full and apparently under some level of pressure. I would have expected an absolute torrent.
  17. Nero bores a hole into San Francisco. The problem is, that hole looks like it goes deep into the seabed, probably penetrating the crust. If so, even though Kirk saves the day, there is going to be MASSIVE geological disruption all through the city. Earthquakes, probably some lava, maybe an few islands forming in the bay, that sort of thing. Yet, at the end of the movie, eveything seems hunky-dory.
  18. The Narada lingers in that black hole for an awefully long time. It shouold have gone right in in the space of a few seconds.
  19. Also, the black hole that swallows the Narada seems about the same size as the one that ate Vulcan. Since there was hundreds of times more "Red Matter" involved in the creation of the latter, it seems like it would have been, i dunno, HUNDREDS OF TIMES BIGGER?
  20. Finally, I find it a bit odd that a black hole destroys the Narada, considering that it passed through A BLACK HOLE in the beginning with no ill effects. (Actuaolly, this could be explained by #19, if the second hole actually WAS larger.
  21. Yep, one last one: In the conversation between the two Spocks, yound Spock taks to his older self. This seems odd, considering that Prime would remember everything he though in the "old days". (Spock is widely considered to have a photographic memory.)
Reply #168 Top

I thought the movie was great as well..  Much better than I truly expected.     The question I was left with was the destruction of Vulcan..   What did I miss?   I do not remember in the original series or any other series the mention of Vulcan being destroyed.    And we know it remains that way because OLD Spock mentions finding a new planet to become the new Vulcan.. not to mention that he was even IN the past still at that point.

The 'Engine Room' I also thought was out of character as well.   I was looking for something that would be of a cross between the engine room of the first U.S.S. Enterprise seen in the series 'Enterprise' vs the engine room of the original series Enterprise ship.   This engine room I think would be much more in tune with being in the very first built ship with all those pipes and such.. and as things progress of course we get to the more 'modern' designs.

The interaction of the actors, the humor.. all were done outstanding in terms of 'Star Trek' as those of us who grew up on the original series remember.  I seriously did not think they could pull this off.  But not only did they pull it off, they exceeded everything I think. 

It is a movie I definitely will see again and I do recommend.

Now I need to find some place to try a sky dive like that one!  Most awesome!   I never got to experience anything quite like that combat jump in my military career.. ohh how I would jump at the chance!  THAT was cool for those of us who know what combat jumps are like.

 

 

 

Reply #169 Top

Zyx,

I have no idea what you're talking about. That is, I don't know what you think I'm responding to. I just wanted to link to tvtropes to expand upon what I'd said earlier, and to point out my own distaste for Trek time travel. I was not making a comment on Kirk's childhood (which, no matter how quickly it passed, was more than we'd seen previously).

I was strictly responding to the time travel conversation.

 

Scoutdog,

Yeah, I agree with several of those. I think somewhere around the time they shot red matter into the Vulcan core, I just decided to give up on scientific explanations for anything. Now, I'm going to be a geek:

1. Replicators were invented after TOS, and before TNG.

3. I have had one of my hands swell up dramatically, and it wasn't really excrucating. It was itchy, though - and I noticed it because my hand felt fairly stiff. That said, I think that was played for laughs, which I think brings about another set of criticisms.

8. The pod probably had some kind of deceleration thing going on.

9. It might have seen via sonar, or tracked via scent, or had some other means to sense its surroundings.

10. I imagine Spock improvised. but also, Nero wanted Spock to survive to see Vulcan's destruction. It's not as if a torch would enable him to get back to Nero's ship to seize control.

18. This is about as dramatically problematic as all those times people live long enough to deliver a few last words, before their eyes close and they fade away.

21. I can't figure out what your objection is here - that Spock spoke to his younger self, or what?

Reply #170 Top

Nits in numerical order:

Seriously, why should anyone care about little things like these? It just a movie! It is just as realistic/unrealistic as any other movie. I thought that the film was very well done.

 

When ever McCoy shoots him with a hypo, Kirk yells or does something else to indicate that it hurts. Star Trek hypos use an atomization system, which is painless

This one is a prequel. Maybe atomisation hasn't been invented yet. Did you ever think of that?

 

Not only do Kirk and gang make it from hard vacuum (probably ORBIT) to breatheable atmosphere in a surprisingly short period of time, but there is also no re-entry heat.

Thats because they don't show you what happened every second of the journey. They cut out the boring bits. People do not complain that in the film Apollo 13, they didn't take long enough to reach space. Its a very dumb argument.

 

The large, red entity that chased Kirk seems to see remarkebly well, considering that it does not appear to have any eyes!!

Maybe it used sonar like a bat. The creature from Alien has no eyes, but people don't complain about that. Anyway, who cares about such a silly little detail?

 

A regular super-nova could never threaten anything more than it's immediate system in the time frame depicted by the movie, unless it had some sort of Subspace component that allows it to travel fater than light. Even then, I find it hard to beieve that it would threaten the ENTIRE UNIVERSE!!

It only threatened the galaxy, not the whole universe! Where did you get that from? Anyway, the radiation alone is enough to kill lifeforms in nearby systems. Maybe the star that went supernova was the star that Romulus orbited or atleast close by.

Reply #171 Top

I have no idea what you're talking about.

Suspension of disbelief (hung a lampshade, as you put it) is a well known story device experimented with for a number of reasons;

-- Unless you clearly define what is it that Kirk says or does to create such an observation from you, how can i rationalize your thoughts within context other than through wild guesses?

So, from this perspective, i must resume;

- The story paradigm might be illustrated with these rather simplistic terms.

1) Narada targets two planets for revenge.

2) Enterprise meets it twice, fails once.

3) Narada is destroyed.

- The story structure then exploits what is called the mid-point and spins (as per Syd Field's theory)

1) Kelvin encounters (accidental i might add)

2) Starfleet recruits train for years

3) Vulcan under attack (spin)

4) Pike captured, tortured and refuses to reveal Earth defense (MID-POINT, but not in *my* mind)

5) Sulu & Kirk beamed up after failing

6) Spock dumps Kirk on Delta Vega (spin)

7) Ambassador Spock's reveals, Montgomery+Kirk back aboard

8) Spock fails to save his mother

9) Kirk battles it ALL (everything is on the line at this point) out with him (*True* MID-POINT)

10) On route to Earth

11) Chekov's Saturn trick

12) Spock & Kirk split apart (spin)

13) Narada mining drill sabotaged by Spock

14) Enterprise covers Jellyfish for the ramming *attempt* but red triggers under control (spin)

15) Kirk beams out

16) Black Hole collapses, Nero stuck on the Horizon for awhile.

17) Warp core down - implosion.

 

9 to 17 are in Act-3; usual paradigm delayed by Orci/Kurtzman pattern.

Innovation in basic principles of screenwriting.

 

Reply #172 Top

Zyx,

Kirk turns to Spock, says "Time travel is cheating" and then enters the transporter. That specific comment hangs a lampshade on the whole premise.

Reply #173 Top

I really disapointed with the plot.

Each time authors become too lazy to learn the Star Trek story they invent some "alternative universe" or timeline change ...

And btw: I liked "old style" Romulans way more.

Reply #174 Top

1. I have seen a replicator in TOS. Of course, it's called a "food synthesiser", but is sure looks like a replicator. (They are most prominent in "the trouble with tribbles".

3. I suppose it might not be painful, but he would definately notice something was up...

10. I could imagine Nero giving Spock a fire, but improvising? There is nothing but ice there, i.e. no flammable organic matter.

18. True. I also noticed that the black holes in the movie look like a 2-D disc. The real kind are perfect spheres. But then again, these ARE the Magical "Red Matter" Kind Of Black Holes.

21. No, that the older spock needed to wait for the younger one to speak: he remembers the conversation from when he was younger. Therefore, he does not need to actually HEAR his younger self speaking, because he remembers saying those exact same words and thinking those exact same thoughs when HE was younger.

22. Yes, some more! In the prologue, the crew of the Kelvin monitors their capitain's vital sins and can tell when his heart rate rises and when he dies. However, when Pike comes aboard the Narada and is captured and tortured, the Enterprise crew doesn't know about it. They should have, if they had used the same monitoring tech, which at this point is at least 20 years old!

23. Spock blows open the hangar doors on the Narada and escapes. However, in the interior scenes, there is no outrushing air. I realise there might be a force field or something, but it would take a few seconds to come up.

24. The enterprise needs to use a warp core explosion to escape the black hole. However, at this point, they have not reached the event horizon, so the escape vbelocity should be BELOW light speed.

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Reply #175 Top

1. Those really aren't replicators as of TNG canon.

3. Totally agreed - like I said, i think they played that for laughs. My comment about swelling probably being itchy was just minor detail.

10. Did you follow the link I gave you? Kirk improvized a gorram mortar while fighting the Gorn captain. :) What I mean is, Trek characters are more like pulp characters and pull off implausible MacGyver stuff all the time.

18. Red matter's darned weird, really. I wouldn't be surprised if it were some kind of freaky holographic matter (as in every piece carries the blueprint for the whole, not that it's literally a hologram) that causes the same effect no matter the quantity, just to handwave the ending away. Probably with some technobabble about zero point or dark energy and/or dark matter thrown in.

21. Spock doesn't remember the conversation from when he was younger, because that conversation never happened in his past. His past was one in which Vulcan was never destroyed. The movie created a branching timeline. But whether or not he remembered it, I'm sure he had his reasons for meeting himself and letting his younger self initiate contact.

I'm pretty sure nothing in the movie actually resembled a singularity or a supernova. I'm surprised you didn't mention how not only did a supernova spread several light years at ftl speeds as well as threaten worlds that far away with literal destruction could be instantly snuffed out by a black hole. I mean, you mentioned it wrt Vulcan, but that exploding star was even more egregious.

And 24 made absolutely no sense to me. I mean, "Scotty, rocket jump the Enterprise out of the black hole!"