qertwalk.blogg.se

The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few origin
The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few origin




  1. #THE NEEDS OF THE MANY OUTWEIGH THE NEEDS OF THE FEW ORIGIN MOVIE#
  2. #THE NEEDS OF THE MANY OUTWEIGH THE NEEDS OF THE FEW ORIGIN ARCHIVE#
  3. #THE NEEDS OF THE MANY OUTWEIGH THE NEEDS OF THE FEW ORIGIN FULL#
  4. #THE NEEDS OF THE MANY OUTWEIGH THE NEEDS OF THE FEW ORIGIN SERIES#

But, don’t get it twisted, like Billy Simpson and Liam Hughes, these Spocks are canon! All of these other Spocks played Spock in his various stages of hyper-aging on the Genesis planet.

the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few origin

#THE NEEDS OF THE MANY OUTWEIGH THE NEEDS OF THE FEW ORIGIN MOVIE#

  • In T he Search For Spock, Leonard Nimoy appears in the same movie with four other Spock actors, Carl Steven, Vadia Potenza, Stephen Manley, and Joe W.
  • In the TAS episode “Yesteryear” Spock (Leonard Nimoy) meets himself as a young child (Billy Simpson.).
  • That said, there are oddly several precedents for Trek episodes or films in which multiple Spock actors appear in the same story. This is also the only time Ethan Peck and Leonard Nimoy appear as young and old Spock in the same Star Trek thing.

    #THE NEEDS OF THE MANY OUTWEIGH THE NEEDS OF THE FEW ORIGIN ARCHIVE#

    The flashbacks we see of Michael talking to Spock (Ethan Peck), as well as kid Spock (Liam Hughes), come from the DiscoverySeason 2 finale, “Such Sweet Sorrow Part 2.” Combined with the archive footage of Spock (Leonard Nimoy) from TNG, this is the only episode of Star Trek, ever, in which Spock appears three times, played by three different actors and in none of the scenes is the character “alive” in the present. Then, he eventually died in an alternate version of the year 2263 ( Star Trek Beyond), which, in the parallel Prime Universe is like two years before Kirk and Spock even meet.įinally, it should be noted that all of Sarek’s children end-up as time travelers, except for Sybok, who, in The Final Frontier, touched the face of an evil space god, and got esploded. They have no idea he actually went back in time to 2258, and also slid sideways into the J.J. Starfleet’s records would show that Spock fell into a black hole in 2387, right around the time of the Romulan Supernova. Vance mentions that the reunification of the Vulcans and Romulans “took centuries after death.” To be clear, this is a presumed death.

    #THE NEEDS OF THE MANY OUTWEIGH THE NEEDS OF THE FEW ORIGIN SERIES#

    (Although Lower Decks used the TNG style and has the titles spelled-out in the credits.) That said, “Unification III” is the very first time an episode title in one Trek series directly posits itself as a sequel to an episode title from a totally separate show. The title of this episode is a reference to the two-part episode in The Next Generation, “Unification Part 1” and “Unification Part 2.” However, in the TNG days, some of the multi-part episodes were styled this way meaning the onscreen text read “Unification II” not “Unification Part 2.” This was also true of episodes like “Redemption II.” It was not the case with “The Best of Both Worlds,” “Time’s Arrow,” or “Descent.” It’s also not the case with the title of Discovery’s first episode of Season 3, “That Hope Is You, Part 1,” which very clearly spells-out the “Part 1.” That said, Discovery is the first Trek series to not actually show the episode titles during the opening credits, a tradition that continued with Picard.

    the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few origin

    #THE NEEDS OF THE MANY OUTWEIGH THE NEEDS OF THE FEW ORIGIN FULL#

    When Saru learns the Romulans are sharing the planet formerly known as Vulcan, he says: “The Romulans were considered enemies in our time.” Vance points out that “history forgot this in your time, but Romulans and Vulcans were two tribes of the same race…” All of this is true, but the funny thing is that because DISCO’s point of origin happens in 2258, that’s a full eight years before the events of “Balance of Terror,” in 2266, in which Kirk, Spock and pretty much everybody in Starfleet, learned that Romulans looked a lot like Vulcans. Saru and Burnham have no idea that Romulans have pointed ears

    the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few origin

    In the 1968 fanzine called Spockanalia, fan writer Dorothy Jones came-up with the word “ni var,” which she claimed was a Vulcan word that referred to “two forms.” This is not the first time this word has made it into canon though in the 2002 Enterprise episode “Shadows of P’Jem,” the NX-01 encountered a Vulcan ship named Ni’Var. The new name for the planet Vulcan - Ni’Var - comes from OG Star Trek fan culture. In that film, Spock points out to Kirk that Khan’s strategies indicated “two-dimensional thinking.” Vulcan becomes “Ni’Var”

    the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few origin

    This could be a slight nod to Spock in The Wrath of Khan. Tilly tells Burnham that mapping all the Burn data works fine in two-dimensions, but not in three-dimensional space. Tragically, Yelchin died just before the release of Star Trek Beyond. This feels like a huge tribute to actor Anton Yelchin, who played Chekov in the Star Trek reboot films. One of the “black boxes” Burnham recovered is from an “old” Federation starship called the USS Yelchin.






    The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few origin