See? Even in the Trek universe, the writers can't keep the canon straight.
Those "in-universe" writers and historians would have to be pretty useless to mess up: the when and how of World War 3, when the transporter was first invented and that Remus is a floating lump of dark rock full of vaguely vampiric monsters rather than a lush, green Romulan world. Don't they have Wikipedia in the future?
...I'm not helping my case, am I?
I dunno. Klingons may not have short lifespans as I believe TFR implied or stated, but they sure as hell age to maturity quickly. (See also: Alexander Rozhenko.I don't care that in TFR transporters were scary and new in 2230-something, or that TFR Klingons age quickly or any of that stuff. It still "happened", as far as I'm concerned. YMMV.
See? Even in the Trek universe, the writers can't keep the canon straight.
I may have waivered a bit in my belief that consistency in Star Trek movies, series, and novels doesn't really matter, but I've realized that it's the most important thing to me. I will never waiver. Consistency makes a story believeable, which in turn allows me to enjoy it more![]()
One word: And?
Why should the writers within the Star Trek universe be constrained from taking the occasional dramatic license with their creative works?
Why should the writers within the Star Trek universe be constrained from taking the occasional dramatic license with their creative works?
Why should the writers within the Star Trek universe be constrained from taking the occasional dramatic license with their creative works?
JJ Abrams & Co?![]()
Why should the writers within the Star Trek universe be constrained from taking the occasional dramatic license with their creative works?
I never said they shouldn't. Then again, I'm okay with writers outside the Trek universe doing the very same thing on occasion, particularly if it serves the story being told. I'm not the one looking to burn directors and writers at the stake for veering off the rails of the Holy Trek Canon Express, remember?
Captain Robert April said:There's a little bit of a difference between a story being told within the confines of the Star Trek universe as a creative work of a character within the Star Trek universe, say, a dramatic presentation of "Photons Be Free", and a Star Trek story being presented as an event in the Star Trek universe.
Basically, that Tarantino's latest piece of cinematic history isn't remotely close to historical accuracy, yet it's written in a world where the events of World War II are very well known and quite well documented. For that matter, just about all of Oliver Stone's historical dramas have issues with being true to the historical record of the events that are being portrayed (which he readily acknowledges when pushed on the subject, and he attributes to having to take dramatic license from time to time to keep the story entertaining and interesting.)
Why should the writers within the Star Trek universe be constrained from taking the occasional dramatic license with their creative works?
but JJ's a dick for daring to challenge some assumptions or even just offer a different take on the subject matter for Trek?
If I may say, I personally do not at all object to the fact THAT JJ/et al (or anybody) would have a different take on Trek - I was excited for a reboot and you'd never hear me complain about a nacelle, I just wasn't that in love with the sum total of their particular take. Parts of it I liked, and it was a thrill to see ST in the theaters again, but as a whole it left me a little cold.
Regardless of how much I do enjoy seeing 'everything connect' from the various shows/canon, I'm all for trying new things in the abstract. ST09 was just the first iteration of Trek that left me feeling less than totally enthusiastic (I loved Enterprise), though I did think there was a terrific action movie in there.
Though wouldn't you have to grant that even in those examples you gave, certain things are inviolable? Holmes is a mastermind detective, Robin Hood robs from the rich, Batman wears a costume and fights crime, etc etc - so the real question is WHICH details are open to change without violating the spirit or 'world' of these characters, and which things are open to addition/subtraction - to me a nacelle or an engine room isn't a big deal, but for instance destroying Vulcan, making Kirk a troubled kid, and then become captain so quickly - these weren't the strongest Trek choices to me. But I personally would never say 'don't try it', or call anybody a dick for doing so!
All told, the major faults I found with ST09 had little to do with continuity per se, and much more with what I perceived to be a lack of fidelity to the general spirit that has made Trek great, in favor of a more breezy action/adventure-with-callbacks-to-the-show thing which did work on that level as intended. But I saw no reason why it couldn't have had more sci-fi ideas (beyond simply an outer-space star fleet vs. future bad guy thing) and also been more exciting action-adventure wise. Maybe the sequel!
If you enjoyed the lightshow......blah blah blah
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