Case (
case) wrote in
fandomsecrets2014-08-09 03:52 pm
[ SECRET POST #2776 ]
⌈ Secret Post #2776 ⌋
Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.
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Notes:
Secrets Left to Post: 04 pages, 085 secrets from Secret Submission Post #397.
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Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.

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But again, YMMV. :)
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(Anonymous) 2014-08-10 01:46 am (UTC)(link)no subject
(Anonymous) 2014-08-10 01:50 am (UTC)(link)Because I kept thinking, WHY is Spock so emotionally affected? And the answer I came up with was that it's because he's realized he's in love with Kirk at the moment that Kirk is dying.
Which TOTALLY ISN'T what the director/writers were going for, but that's how it comes off to me.
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With added headcanon that the mind meld from Spock!Prime showed Kirk the epic love of Kirk/Spock in the original verse and so colored his perception/expectation for his relationship with Spock in the AU.
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(Anonymous) 2014-08-10 02:01 am (UTC)(link)no subject
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Of course, the biggest throwback to the original series is Kirk’s death scene. I honestly would have paid full price for a two hour loop of that handful of minutes because it hits every single emotional and intellectual kink I have ever had for those two characters. I love that the scene used lines of original dialogue without going overboard with it (although I think I totally could have done without Spock screaming Khan’s name LOL). I love that their roles were inverted. I love Kirk’s admission of fear, their hands pressed together with the glass between them, Spock getting choked up. OMG I AM MAKING MYSELF CRY TYPING THIS BECAUSE IT WAS PRETTY MUCH A PERFECT SCENE! That moment feels like the culmination of the disciplinary hearing scene at the beginning of the first movie—the one where Spock can so nonchalantly lecture Kirk about choosing between terrible options and accepting death and facing fear because he’s never been in that situation himself. It remains an intellectual exercise for him at that point. As Kirk is dying, Spock has to actually grapple with what it means to lose a friend, to be completely impotent, to be filled with righteous indignation and a driving need for justice. Conversely, Kirk is put in the same position as his father; he has to sacrifice himself in order to save his crew (his family, his friends). This is the Kobayashi Maru without a computer hack. This is Kirk’s realization that a captain sometimes only has really shitty options to choose from. Luck runs out; the stars don’t always align. Sometimes somebody has to die, and Kirk would so much rather the sacrifice be his than anyone else’s. SERIOUSLY, I NEED A TISSUE BADLY OMG!
For me, outside of the Khan scream, it did resonate emotionally and not just because of the call-back to TOS. It felt like character growth for both of them.
Also, I like the idea that even though this is an AU, some things still have to happen, like places where the threads of fate still interweave in the same way even though the big picture of the tapestry has changed.
Anyways, not saying you're wrong, Nonny. Most of my friends also really hated this movie LOL and I think there are valid criticisms to be made of the movies.
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(Anonymous) 2014-08-10 01:58 am (UTC)(link)The "a captain cannot cheat death" line would have meant so much more if we didn't know that Kirk was going to do exactly that in ten minutes. Once again, the rules don't apply to him.
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/bitter bitter bitter Jadzia stan rage
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(Anonymous) 2014-08-10 02:07 am (UTC)(link)See, I don't mind that they brought Kirk back (I can't really hold it against them considering the same thing was done with Spock). I just wish they had been more…subtle about it, you know? After Vulcan's destruction, there was a real potential that people would believe Kirk might actually kick the bucket and it would have tremendously increased the emotional resonance of that scene.
I get that they didn't want his revival to come across as an asspull, but I think they overshot and just made it way, way too obvious.
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I think most times when you've got a movie adaptation of an established source material, that it's hard to generate real "OMG hero in peril that might actually result in death!" moments because you know there's more material left to film. LOL
Like in the Iron Man movies. It doesnt' matter how much danger Tony is in, you know he's not going to die.
I think that moment with Kirk suffers for the same reason. You know they're not gonna kill Kirk for reals.
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(Anonymous) 2014-08-10 02:15 am (UTC)(link)One is far better storytelling than the other.
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However, I'd argue that there isn't a way to generate a real sense that Kirk might die in the movie. TOS is the Kirk, Spock, McCoy show and they're not going to kill one of them two movies in. Final movie of the franchise? Sure (*sob sob Data*) but not two movies into something they clearly aren't done with. I don't think they could have done anything that would make me think he was actually going to for reals yo die and stay dead in the movie. so that moment wasn't about whether or not he was going to die but how he and Spock reacting to *thinking* he was going to die/stay dead. Does that make sense?
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(Anonymous) 2014-08-10 02:00 am (UTC)(link)I agree with you. Other than the KHAAAAAAN scream which totally took me out of the scene, I really liked it for all the reasons you've mentioned.
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(Anonymous) 2014-08-10 02:09 am (UTC)(link)To me, the reboot movies just felt so shallow, and personal 'between the lines' readings of characters actions are required to make it less so - and honestly, I can't be bothered.
Of course, you're allowed to like the reboot movies and be a TOS fan. I just think there are very legit reasons why a lot of TOS fans hate them.
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I think the reboot movies are slicker and faster paced and rely on knowledge of the original series and the expectation that your emotions from the original series will carry over into the reboot.
I think that TOS benefits from having several seasons of TV show plus six movies plus cameos in other franchises to develop its characters and that the reboot movie is probably going to look thin and superficial next to those decades of history no matter what it did. However, I completely agree that more character motivation/development would have been a good thing.
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