Leonard Nimoy Retires From Star Trek
DesScorp writes "Leonard Nimoy is hanging up his Vulcan ears for good and retiring from the role of Spock in the Star Trek franchise, reports the Daily Mail. Nimoy apparently wants to pass the torch: 'Nimoy, one of the most recognizable and best loved characters from the sci-fi series that began in 1966, announced that he wanted to "get off the stage" and give young actor Zachary Quinto a clear run at the role he took over for last year's Star Trek movie.' Nimoy, at age 79, appears to be retiring from acting, period. He has, in recent years, undertaken another career in photography, as well as other pursuits, but seems to be preparing to retire from the public eye altogether."
Mr. Nimoy, live long and prosper.
Damn I hope I look that good at 79...
Anyway who can blame him? Spock was the ultimate typecasting.
Live Long and Prosper.
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I can only hope he has already done the voice acting/narration of technologies for Civ5, as in Civ4. His reading of the little quotes with each technological advance were spot-on almost every time. The deadpan delivery of Space Flight/Sputnik's "Beep. Beep. Beep." is probably the best, but Bureaucracy isn't far behind.
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That man has quite a bit of class, and as one actress (Kim Cattrall?) noted, he is indeed a renaissance man. I wish him well. He has earned both deep respect and a well-deserved retirement.
"What's the use in being grown up if you can't be childish sometimes?" --Fourth Doctor, "Robot"
Or mashed up with a Shatner piece..
OH, I KNOW, Shatner needs to do a spoken word version of Lenard Nimoy's "Ballad of Bilbo Baggins".
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He still got some 'splainin to do on that show!
I don't need a background in something to know what I *like*.
Subjective things are subjective.
Spock must live on!
That seems to be the point of Nimoy retiring, and this is partly his way of saying Spock > Nimoy. He has certainly earned the right to a private retirement. I will miss him on future Futurama episodes, however.
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This last movie broke so many things, they can avoid the 'original' Spock (depending on which timeline you subscribe to) and plow new ground:
- Vulcan is destroyed. They have to fix it, obviously. Time travel to the rescue.
- Kirk knows Spock from the future. He'll be looking for a way to restore Vulcan now.
- Spock (new) obviously will figure out he's in two places at the same time.
They need at least two more movies to fix everything. One to get Kirk and Young Spock in a position where they know both how and why they must restore Vulcan. I don't yet know why, but I'm not the screenwriter either. And one to actually do it. After that, then movies keep coming to let villains and victims try to take revenge, Cmdr. Pike's story, and some excuse to see more slave girls.
Pretty much as pathetique as Star Wars. Why can't we have a Blade Runner sequel, eh? Nobody has any Vaseline for the lenses? Do it in digital, ok? A set of Red cams isn't that damned expensive.
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
I love this guy. So humble. I wish more people were like him.
79 is nothing for a Vulcan! He's still a kid!
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I thought Urban's McCoy was pretty darned good too.
> Kirk is my favorite character.
Kirk is just about the weakest major character in all Star Trek (with the *possible* exception of Uhura, and even that is a near thing). He's flat, static, *and* shallow, which is a pretty rare combination in a protagonist. Several TOS villians are better characters than Kirk.
But the real problem is Shatner's acting, which would be right at home in a lame B-grade horror flick directed by Ed Wood. The only other bridge-officer Star Trek character to even begin to approach his level of incompetence is Nana Visitor, and at least she was cast well enough that you really only notice her bad acting in episodes that require her to act a different part from usual (e.g., mirror universe, that ceremony where she takes on the personality of one of Dax's former hosts, Bashir's holodeck programs, and that one where Sisko is a twentieth-century sci-fi writer). When she's playing Major Kira, you don't notice that the acting is bad, because you just attribute the actor's personality to the character, and it works. With Shatner's Kirk, on the other hand, the acting is so bad it's impossible to ignore. You can actually *see* him struggling to come up with his lines, like it's some kind of junior high play production. The words the writers put in Kirk's mouth would, if you read them on a printed page, convey emotions that the actor doesn't seem to be able to manage to get across when he says them out loud -- an impressive level of badness. He may be the worst actor ever to appear in a major motion picture, although the competition for that dubious honor is pretty steep.
The closest thing to Shatner's acting in the rest of Star Trek is in Time's Arrow (the TNG episode where they find Data's head in a cave on Earth then travel back in time and meet Mark Twain and Guinan) when Mrs. Carmichael (the boarding house lady) is reading off the line from A Midsummer Night's Dream: "What. Jealous. Oberon. Fairies. Skip. Hence. I have... forsworn... his bed... and company." It's like that because they were deliberately portraying Mrs. Carmichael as completely incapable of acting, but she's really not very much worse than Shatner.
Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
Considering his age - and the cause that he will in all our minds be "The Spock" he will have a hard time to drop it completely.
He is also the most important figure that have appeared in Star Trek, which says a lot. Many other persons could have been replaced easily.
But he also need to have quality time and not be Spock all the time. And we will have to accept that even our favorite actors seems to grow old and pass away sooner or later even though some seems to hang around in the fringe for a long time after their heavy acting career has ended - like Kirk Douglas (who have more than 60 years of activities listed at IMDB).
Anyway - Nimoy will probably make guest appearances if it suits him, but maybe not as Spock.
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You can only say that because Doohan was an almost OK actor with crappy lines, while Urban is a crappy actor with almost OK lines.
Well, they may have done so, but, overall, the movie was a step back in science fiction.