tell me all your thoughts on Spock.
Jun. 1st, 2009 12:08 pmThere are a couple things I've seen floating around lots of places that I would like to talk about.
One thing is "AOS Spock is way more emotional than TOS Spock". I disagree -- somewhat. Here's a few things about that:
Firstly, TOS Spock is nearly a decade older than AOS Spock. We know very little about what TOS Spock was like in the 2250s, but he emotes like freakin' hell the one time we see him (The first pilot, The Cage, which became the TOS two-parter The Menagerie). Part of that is because the character wasn't fully developed when the first pilot was filmed, but the bits that were incorporated into TOS canon included that emoting. That Spock might've calmed the heck down in that span of time is hardly a reach; that the Spock we see in The Menagerie might engage in fisticuffs out of anger, or tell the Vulcans to go fuck themselves, is likewise hardly a reach.
Secondly, the way Nimoy plays Spock and the way Quinto plays Spock are both quite emotional, but the emotions in play are not the same. You can see echoes if you look in the right places in the two canons, but in general, Nimoy played Spock in a more understated fashion (which I think has to do with the first point above) and with a lot more humor. Prime canon Spock is very much given to wordplay and teasing and the occasional outright practical joke (he gave the Tribbles to the Klingons, seriously, in collusion with Scott and McCoy, which is the most screamingly funny thing in the entire run of TOS Go to around 47:45 to see what I mean!). Quinto's Spock is a lot more angry in what we see of him, but we're seeing him at points in his life that we never see Nimoy's Spock. (Really, the only times we see flashes of Quinto's Spock's humorous side all relate to Uhura. She is good for him. He needs that.) If we go looking for Nimoy's Spock being angry or simmering with rage in TOS canon, the similarities in portrayal are a lot more obvious -- there aren't that many of them, but they are there. Some of them occur quite late in Spock's life -- we can go to TNG canon and look at Unification (look about 1:45-1:55 of this clip: "I'm afraid I don't know too much about Romulan disruptor settings") -- it's not something that ever changes about him, when he's got something to be angry about (such as gosh-dang Romulan plots. I think he's doomed in all timelines to be involved with gosh-dang Romulan plots).
I enjoy both portrayals, and I do not think they're very different portrayals of the character. I think Quinto is playing a younger Spock, and portraying a lot of the high-stress moments in that Spock's life. Nimoy is playing an older Spock, over a much wider range of moments, but for me it's easy to see the places where they align.
Another thing: Spock's relationship with Sarek. Overall, I think AOS canon portrays a more functional, gentler relationship between father and son, but it's not entirely clear to me how many differences there are. For example, from what we saw on screen, I think it's possible that like TOS canon Spock & Sarek, they were not on speaking terms once Spock went to Starfleet. That, at a maximum, that silence only lasted 11 years instead of 18 is a big change -- engendered by genocide and Amanda's death, which if THAT is not incentive to try to heal a relationship, what the hell is?
I could also see AOS Spock and Sarek never having that serious breach, but we just don't know whether they did (unless we do and I somehow fell asleep for the part of the movie which addressed it?)
And the last thing: Spock's childhood. I've seen lots of people talk about how it was so much rougher than his childhood in TOS canon, and this again is something we just don't know. TOS canon is perfectly clear that Spock's schoolgoing days on Vulcan were miserable, for Spock (and for Amanda). Over at
niqaeli's I said: "I mean, if you take TAS as part of Prime canon, his childhood was rough enough to start with that he almost died trying to prove how damn Vulcan he was."
I'm just not seeing the big difference there, aside from the insults of the Vulcan children being nastier in AOS (which I'm not wholly willing to attribute to in-universe timeline differences: TAS could certainly not've gotten away with calling Amanda a whore, while AOS -- a different time, a different medium -- could).
To sum up: the major difference I see between the Spocks is that Nimoy's Spock has calmed down with age. We don't know how different the relationship between Spock and Sarek is, and we don't know how different Spock's childhood was in general.
One thing is "AOS Spock is way more emotional than TOS Spock". I disagree -- somewhat. Here's a few things about that:
Firstly, TOS Spock is nearly a decade older than AOS Spock. We know very little about what TOS Spock was like in the 2250s, but he emotes like freakin' hell the one time we see him (The first pilot, The Cage, which became the TOS two-parter The Menagerie). Part of that is because the character wasn't fully developed when the first pilot was filmed, but the bits that were incorporated into TOS canon included that emoting. That Spock might've calmed the heck down in that span of time is hardly a reach; that the Spock we see in The Menagerie might engage in fisticuffs out of anger, or tell the Vulcans to go fuck themselves, is likewise hardly a reach.
Secondly, the way Nimoy plays Spock and the way Quinto plays Spock are both quite emotional, but the emotions in play are not the same. You can see echoes if you look in the right places in the two canons, but in general, Nimoy played Spock in a more understated fashion (which I think has to do with the first point above) and with a lot more humor. Prime canon Spock is very much given to wordplay and teasing and the occasional outright practical joke (he gave the Tribbles to the Klingons, seriously, in collusion with Scott and McCoy, which is the most screamingly funny thing in the entire run of TOS Go to around 47:45 to see what I mean!). Quinto's Spock is a lot more angry in what we see of him, but we're seeing him at points in his life that we never see Nimoy's Spock. (Really, the only times we see flashes of Quinto's Spock's humorous side all relate to Uhura. She is good for him. He needs that.) If we go looking for Nimoy's Spock being angry or simmering with rage in TOS canon, the similarities in portrayal are a lot more obvious -- there aren't that many of them, but they are there. Some of them occur quite late in Spock's life -- we can go to TNG canon and look at Unification (look about 1:45-1:55 of this clip: "I'm afraid I don't know too much about Romulan disruptor settings") -- it's not something that ever changes about him, when he's got something to be angry about (such as gosh-dang Romulan plots. I think he's doomed in all timelines to be involved with gosh-dang Romulan plots).
I enjoy both portrayals, and I do not think they're very different portrayals of the character. I think Quinto is playing a younger Spock, and portraying a lot of the high-stress moments in that Spock's life. Nimoy is playing an older Spock, over a much wider range of moments, but for me it's easy to see the places where they align.
Another thing: Spock's relationship with Sarek. Overall, I think AOS canon portrays a more functional, gentler relationship between father and son, but it's not entirely clear to me how many differences there are. For example, from what we saw on screen, I think it's possible that like TOS canon Spock & Sarek, they were not on speaking terms once Spock went to Starfleet. That, at a maximum, that silence only lasted 11 years instead of 18 is a big change -- engendered by genocide and Amanda's death, which if THAT is not incentive to try to heal a relationship, what the hell is?
I could also see AOS Spock and Sarek never having that serious breach, but we just don't know whether they did (unless we do and I somehow fell asleep for the part of the movie which addressed it?)
And the last thing: Spock's childhood. I've seen lots of people talk about how it was so much rougher than his childhood in TOS canon, and this again is something we just don't know. TOS canon is perfectly clear that Spock's schoolgoing days on Vulcan were miserable, for Spock (and for Amanda). Over at
I'm just not seeing the big difference there, aside from the insults of the Vulcan children being nastier in AOS (which I'm not wholly willing to attribute to in-universe timeline differences: TAS could certainly not've gotten away with calling Amanda a whore, while AOS -- a different time, a different medium -- could).
To sum up: the major difference I see between the Spocks is that Nimoy's Spock has calmed down with age. We don't know how different the relationship between Spock and Sarek is, and we don't know how different Spock's childhood was in general.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-06-01 07:26 pm (UTC)1. In TOS, he canonically did not take the Kobayashi Maru. From his death scene in TWOK: "I never took the Kobayashi Maru test, until now. What do you think of my solution?"
2. Once you're talking about Starfleet, you're talking about direct issues related to the Kelvin. In some cases, we don't know what the situation was in Prime canon, so we cannot say that it was different in AOS. But if we are talking about Spock's childhood and background issues, what happens past his joining Starfleet is not relevant.
3. Kirk's age changed (by a few months) in AOS canon; Spock's did not (as near as I can tell -- both Spocks were born in 2232; we don't have exact birth dates for either of them).
4. Chekov is a major difference, because THAT Pavel Chekov cannot be Prime's Pavel Chekov. It's not possible. We're not talking a difference of a few months; we're talking about years. They're clearly different people with the same name. Why that is would be a fun timeline question!
The thing for me is, because of what we know about Prime Spock's upbringing, we can't argue that AOS Spock's upbringing is so all-fired different. What AOS shows us of AOS Spock's childhood, background, and emotional issues are entirely consonant with Prime Spock's. Whether or not AOS Spock and Prime Spock have the same personality, well, no, I don't think they do, exactly. But neither do I think that AOS Spock is so all-fired different from Prime Spock.
The Delta Vega thing is weird for lots of reasons (hi, the ship has a fucking brig, story writers), but not for Spock characterization reasons.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-06-01 08:37 pm (UTC)I don't understand this statement. That *is* a component of Spock's characterization in canon where he chose to throw a crew member onto an ice planet in an escape pod to punish insubordination instead of in the brig. Even if it was for destiny purposes. Which is--well. Insane.
This also brings up the point that no one bothered to say "Spock, that's crazy," or make a vague effort to avert homicide but that's when I started getting a headache and also find it hysterical.
What AOS shows us of AOS Spock's childhood, background, and emotional issues are entirely consonant with Prime Spock's.
I don't think it's different in circumstance so much as degree. Vulcans were implied to be xenophobic in TOS, but I'm really not feeling they were anywhere near the level the Vulcan Science Academy suggested during that interview with Spock. That in itself wouldn't necessarily mean that the experiences in REB were worse, but that the motivation of the children, of the academy, came from a much more dangerous place, and the effect on Spock would be different due to that difference.
And that's also where the Sarek thing came in. I'd have to buy that in TOS, Sarek allowed his wife to be publicly labeled as an inferior being while he is sitting there listening, a woman he admits he loves. And that the head of the Vulcan Science Academy didn't think there was a problem making those kind of statements to her husband and her son. And that following that bit of complete crazy, Sarek was still unable to understand why his son might not be hot to stay around. And that Amanda didn't leave like, the next day.
Chekov is a major difference, because THAT Pavel Chekov cannot be Prime's Pavel Chekov. It's not possible. We're not talking a difference of a few months; we're talking about years. They're clearly different people with the same name. Why that is would be a fun timeline question!
I like frozen ova with a later implantation, myself. Yes, it does make me giggle.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-06-01 09:14 pm (UTC)There are a number of things I had to assume to make that sequence make any sense.
a) that this Enterprise, for some reason, doesn't have a brig. (which is like a WORLD of wtf!)
b) that, in the absence of brigs, shooting dudes out onto planets is in fact protocol.
c) if possible, said planets should have Starfleet outposts, and you should aim the dude you are shooting out in such a direction that he can be picked up.
The entire sequence is so nonsensical, and not just from a Spock characterization viewpoint. From start to finish, it is so completely stupid that my assumptions around it are that the characters are acting like reasonable individuals in the face of f'ed up reality -- not that both characters AND reality are f'ed up. If that makes sense.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-06-01 09:16 pm (UTC)You know, I keep forgetting Scotty was right there.
That just takes it to a whole new level of surreal. I like it.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-06-01 09:46 pm (UTC)I interpreted the iceplanet thing to mean that Spock thought that the brig would not be able to hold Kirk, while Kirk is convinced that he has to change Enterprise's course and will do anything to achieve that. Maybe because the brig could be hacked, or because he would be able to convince others to join his mutiny, after all he already got onto the ship in the first place without permission, because he had support. And maybe Spock is not sure he can really count on the crew to follow him, while a charismatic Kirk agitates that his course of action would be the only thing that can save Earth.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-06-03 03:26 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2009-06-04 05:33 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2009-06-04 06:39 pm (UTC)