Modding is a process
by JJ Abrams & a whole lot of people!
Published on May 5, 2009 By Zyxpsilon In Everything Else

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?

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.

Enjoy.

 


Comments (Page 5)
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on May 12, 2009

Very much liked it as a stand-alone movie, absolutely hated it for the way it radically alters the established Trek timeline and blows overs so many established details and relationships. In too many ways, this movie has absolutely nothing to do with the Trek we fans know and love. They pretty much ignored 43 years of established Trek history.

I think they're going to have to write another movie, where they go back and patch up the timeline, so it falls back in with the established history of the Star Trek universe. Trek has a huuuuuuuuge, and obsessed, fan base; they're seriously screwing with that fan base here, and that's a big risk.

on May 12, 2009

I might add that this "altering" of the timeline is one of the reasons "Enterprise" was never fully accepted by the fans.

on May 12, 2009

Rightwinger
I might add that this "altering" of the timeline is one of the reasons "Enterprise" was never fully accepted by the fans.

I don't think this can be compared to Enterprise, though.

ENT made a handful of changes to established continuity in TOS and TNG, but for the most part the only continuity it messed with was "fanon/licensed continuity". An example would be the Klingon ridges. An unofficial explanation was provided in a book somewhere, and at that point people just accepted it because it was never really established in the official continuity. Suddenly it is established officially though, and people might get a little annoyed about ENT messing with 'established' continuity. Not saying there aren't changes in ENT, but I don't think there are drastically more than, say, any other ST series.

Whereas this... I get the feeling it was designed as a reboot, but the producers realized it would be better to pitch it as an alternate universe story. So they created the blanket 'alternate universe' explanation for all their changes- but made additional changes that aren't really explanable by the alternate universe explanation. So the alternate universe doesn't look like an alternate timeline really should.

For what it's worth, I agree- great movie. But not as good as a Star Trek story.

on May 12, 2009

ENT made a handful of changes to established continuity in TOS and TNG, but for the most part the only continuity it messed with was "fanon/licensed continuity". An example would be the Klingon ridges. An unofficial explanation was provided in a book somewhere, and at that point people just accepted it because it was never really established in the official continuity. Suddenly it is established officially though, and people might get a little annoyed about ENT messing with 'established' continuity. Not saying there aren't changes in ENT, but I don't think there are drastically more than, say, any other ST series.
---minor race

There were other things in "Enterprise" that messed with continuity, though. I could deal with the different Klingon look; but, for example, the show took place about 150 years before TOS, yet, they had "phase pistols" and "phase cannons".

However, in "The Cage" which takes place just a few years before Kirk's 5-year mission, they had lasers.

The writers changed the term between times, because the term "laser" had become common knowledge by 1966.

Also, in the "Enterprise" era, Earth would just have been coming out of the last of the Romulan Wars. Yet, they encountered a Romulan vessel and didn't recognize the ship. I can't remember if they met the Romulans face-to-face, but if they did, this, too, was a continuity error. In the first-season TOS episode, "Balance of Terror", it was established that, despite the brutal war they fought, neither race had ever seen the other until then. There were other errors, too, and it just bugged me. You don't screw with the details, y'know?

on May 12, 2009

Are we all forgeting about Keenser? HEY YOU GET DOWN FROM THERE! :Shakes head:. Great action movie, with great humor.

on May 12, 2009

Transporter wavy white streams is another obvious mistake you may think?

I have another question for those who really watched that film.

Was Spock kneeling as a form of respect to the Vulcan council chamber, out of a spontaneous guess that his mother would stand there, incapable of controlling his youth emotions about the risky situation that may kill him too?

I dunno, but Zachary Quinto made me realize that Spock struggled all his life for logical explanations of defending one's truth. No matter how far it may be.

on May 12, 2009

Yet, they encountered a Romulan vessel and didn't recognize the ship. I can't remember if they met the Romulans face-to-face, but if they did, this, too, was a continuity error. In the first-season TOS episode, "Balance of Terror", it was established that, despite the brutal war they fought, neither race had ever seen the other until then.

Cannon driven argumentatives were dismissed as soon as the Kelvin failed against a ROMULAN warbird prototype caught by and within a timeline on purpose -- fair enough?

The error is not from design(s), it is by fans' interpretation of *A* different future or past, uncloaking when it matters.

on May 12, 2009

Rightwinger

ENT made a handful of changes to established continuity in TOS and TNG, but for the most part the only continuity it messed with was "fanon/licensed continuity". An example would be the Klingon ridges. An unofficial explanation was provided in a book somewhere, and at that point people just accepted it because it was never really established in the official continuity. Suddenly it is established officially though, and people might get a little annoyed about ENT messing with 'established' continuity. Not saying there aren't changes in ENT, but I don't think there are drastically more than, say, any other ST series.---minor race


There were other things in "Enterprise" that messed with continuity, though. I could deal with the different Klingon look; but, for example, the show took place about 150 years before TOS, yet, they had "phase pistols" and "phase cannons".

However, in "The Cage" which takes place just a few years before Kirk's 5-year mission, they had lasers.

The writers changed the term between times, because the term "laser" had become common knowledge by 1966.

Also, in the "Enterprise" era, Earth would just have been coming out of the last of the Romulan Wars. Yet, they encountered a Romulan vessel and didn't recognize the ship. I can't remember if they met the Romulans face-to-face, but if they did, this, too, was a continuity error. In the first-season TOS episode, "Balance of Terror", it was established that, despite the brutal war they fought, neither race had ever seen the other until then. There were other errors, too, and it just bugged me. You don't screw with the details, y'know?

I should point out that the idea that lasers are less advanced than phase weapons is your own idea. I never really liked the lasers in The Cage anyway, but I can accept them as a stepping stone between basic beam weaponry (phase pistols) and more advanced ones (phasers). All three techs could be very similar, just with different nomenclature (speaking GalCiv-ish, they'd be Laser I, Laser II, and Laser III).

Also, you are incorrect about the Enterprise era. It took place before the war, in 2151. The UFP was founded 10 years later- the war started in 2156-ish. I heard the series was supposed to end with a Romulan war arc- it might have lived longer if it had been about this from the beginning, some have argued- but that wouldn't have been until Season 6. Also, they never met the Romulans face-to-face, it was entirely audio-only.

I admit, there are a handful of things I don't like about every series, and in some cases many handfuls, so I understand where you are coming from.

on May 12, 2009

The only thing that I didnt understand was why you have to drill a hole to the center of a planet THEN release a black hole in the middle of it.

 

Wouldnt drilling a hole to the center of a planet pretty much destroy it anyhow?  And probably in a particularly more unpleasant way, which would most likely appeal to someone hell-bent on revenge.

 

Or why couldnt you simply release the red matter NEAR the planet.  As long as the planet was inside the event horizon, it would still get consumed, you dont have to put the black hole IN the planet.

 

Of course, its a movie, and what good would a movie be without long, drawn out plots to kill the good guys.  Here's to you ever James Bond film ever made!

on May 12, 2009

The only thing that I didnt understand was why you have to drill a hole to the center of a planet THEN release a black hole in the middle of it.

Gravity & energy "supply"... Why can't divers go below a certain depth in oceans for example.

Core magma is mostly magnetic Iron in our case.

on May 12, 2009

Spooky

Negative
- Engineering Room: I absolutely do not like the new Engineering Room. This is probably the thing that is most different from the "old" Star Trek. Instead of a moderately plausible Warp Core and some plasma conduits etc. we have now numerous tanks and other shabby stuff who have questionable purposes. This might be more plausible for Battlestar fans, but it's definitely not for me.
Also.. that water conduit, in which Soctty has beamed himself (which was a quite funny ) or rather this "water pump" or whatever that comes afterwards has the charakter of the stompers from Galaxy Quest .

- Beaming: Scotty and Kirk beam themselves on the Enterprise over an enormous distance...

- Story: there are also some negative parts about the story of course. (Old) Spock, Kirk and Scotty all meet on that Hoth like Planet? What a coincidence. Why was Spock in that cave anyway? Instead of in the Starfleet base already for example.

 

Now, that i've seen the film for myself - i can only blame a few seconds of inattention on your part Spooky, just like the "young" couple 10 seats to my left who were mostly kissing for the entire movie (Why did they have to hide in a dark place is their business, but if Cinemas took the cell-phones out i think they should resolve such issues because i TOO like sound effects but from dolby speakers.)

 

Engineering? With that much crew aboard, spaceships probably have the molecules to clench a thirst for long period of times.

Beaming? Scotty got some of these tricks from a stranded Ambassador Spock.

Story? See Beaming.

 

on May 12, 2009

Zyxpsilon
Engineering? With that much crew aboard, spaceships probably have the molecules to clench a thirst for long period of times.
Hm, I don't quite understand what you mean by that . All I'm saying is, that I don't like the 'design' of the engineering room. It's dirty and cluttered and nothing seems to make sense yet. It's the complete opposite of what we had before. In TNG etc. it was as neat as the rest of the ship and you could think of a purpose for every visible part.

 

Zyxpsilon
Beaming? Scotty got some of these tricks from a stranded Ambassador Spock.
You are right, in the end it comes down to the tech that Spock brought from the future. However, at first I assumed they only talked about ship to ship transport at warp, where one ship is in pursuit of the other. But apparently the conversation between Spock and Scotty didn't imply that. Anyway, still, don't you think that limitless beaming is such a good idea.

on May 12, 2009

Zyxpsilon

The only thing that I didnt understand was why you have to drill a hole to the center of a planet THEN release a black hole in the middle of it.


Gravity & energy "supply"... Why can't divers go below a certain depth in oceans for example.

Core magma is mostly magnetic Iron in our case.

 

That doesnt explain anything at all...even in Zyx-world.

 

Divers cannot go below a certain depth because the pressure causes all sorts of problems.  Yet if I had the capacity to create a black hole say, 5000 ft above the surface of the planet VS drilling a hole and placing it at the center of the planet, the overall effect would be the same, total destruction of said planet.  And the 1st scenario would be easier done.  Of course, in the movie they were a "simple" mining vessel, so of course they had to have some reason to use the drill bit.  To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail.

on May 12, 2009

Near as I can figure, Nero probably wanted to make a big impression and flaunt his advanced technology. Plus he had a few screws loose. In my opinion, it comes down to "I'll make this thing that will pretty much destroy you before you knew what was happening" versus "you are going to know what I'm trying to do but be powerless to stop it and watch your doom aprroaching for hours or even days before you finally die muahahahaha.... ". I apologise if I have gotten some of the facts wrong, it has been -4 days since I saw the movie.

on May 12, 2009

UPDATE: I think what Zyx is saying is that he thinks the black hole would somehow expend its energy before it reached the ckore, which DOES make a strange sort of sense when you consider Hawking radiation and the fact that electrical charges CAN "strip" a hole. However, it does not stand up to the math, at least not for Earth and probably not for a lot of planets.

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