![]() |
Star Trek: TNG - Hive already has continuity flaw
Spoilers... I think.
I just finished reading the first issue and it states that the borg of the 29th century have assimilated the entire galaxy. However, there were several stories dealing with the 31st century in Enterprise and Voyager (here). Also, the story seems to copy and paste the same plot from Voyager's Scorpion I & II. I'd say the story is okay, but these 2 issues stood out to me. Anyone else reading this? |
Re: Star Trek: TNG - Hive already has continuity flaw
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: Star Trek: TNG - Hive already has continuity flaw
I'm 20 pages in, and I can see the parallel with Scorpion. Its not exact, but there are similarities.
|
Re: Star Trek: TNG - Hive already has continuity flaw
Quote:
|
Re: Star Trek: TNG - Hive already has continuity flaw
Quote:
|
Re: Star Trek: TNG - Hive already has continuity flaw
There was a tiny bit towards the end of Watching the Clock, where some doubt is cast on whether the 29th and 31st century time cops represent the same future. Amusingly, it seems as if they themselves weren't entirely sure.
And you only have to look at "Shockwave", "Twilight" "Azati Prime", "All Good Things", "The Visitor", "Future's End", "Storm Front" etc. to see how easily the future of Trek shifts and changes. How many Trek stories about the distant future take place between blasts of Annorax's weapon, where entire species that play a pivotal role in one timeline are deleted from existence? |
Re: Star Trek: TNG - Hive already has continuity flaw
Quote:
So it's one of the core assumptions of Trek time travel that the future is absolutely not fixed, that there are many different directions it could take. Not only because it's necessary to avoid restricting future storytellers' choices, but because it's necessary to maintain a sense of danger and high stakes. All these stories about fighting to save the Federation or the galaxy don't carry as much weight if the future is already predestined. So since ST is a fictional franchise and the needs of drama and storytelling dictate its rules, one of those fundamental rules is that the future is always mutable. (Which is further reinforced by "Parallels," which showed that the timeline naturally, spontaneously diverges into many paths even without time travel being involved.) And just because we haven't seen overt contradictions between our glimpses of the far future, that doesn't mean there aren't any. We really haven't seen enough of any distant future to jump to such sweeping conclusions. There may not be any proof that Braxton's Temporal Integrity Commission and Daniels's Temporal Agents aren't in the same timeline, but there's no proof that they are either. They're entirely separate agencies, one Starfleet and one civilian. They could be part of a common history -- I proposed how one could've led to the other in Watching the Clock -- but there's hardly any proof that they are. |
Re: Star Trek: TNG - Hive already has continuity flaw
Quote:
Unless you're saying all of those alternate universes converge into that one distant future we've seen... then that means there are an equally large number of alternate futures. What's more, once Locutus succeeds in altering the past, this future won't even exist anymore. |
Re: Star Trek: TNG - Hive already has continuity flaw
Well, looking at it that way, I see your points. My mind is just stuck on TV trek, so when there's a discrepancy.... you know.
|
Re: Star Trek: TNG - Hive already has continuity flaw
^But it's TV Trek that gives the clearest evidence that the future is far from fixed, that any potential future is tenuous and easily changed.
|
Re: Star Trek: TNG - Hive already has continuity flaw
^No. TV trek NEVER contradicts its future by showing 2 different versions of the same future century. There's only 1 instance of the 29th century. 1 instance of the 31 century. 1 instance of the 26th century and so on. Source: Memory Alpha
So anytime someone comes back from the future, it has to be a time we've never seen or heard of. And if they do come back from one of the as seen futures, it must be the same as depicted before (see Voyager's "Relativity" and "Future's End"). Those futures only change because of the altered events happening in the present. |
Re: Star Trek: TNG - Hive already has continuity flaw
Quote:
|
Re: Star Trek: TNG - Hive already has continuity flaw
Quote:
And like I've said, lack of contradiction is not proof of consistency. Those various far futures may not explicitly conflict with each other, but they don't explicitly reference each other either. So you're jumping to a conclusion that can't be proven, and that doesn't even make sense in the broader context of a universe where the mutability of time has been explicitly demonstrated almost from the beginning. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: Star Trek: TNG - Hive already has continuity flaw
Quote:
BRAXTON [on viewscreen]: Do you know me? CHAKOTAY: Yes, unfortunately. JANEWAY: You tried to destroy our ship in the twenty-fourth century and the next time we saw you, you were an old man, homeless, in 1996. BRAXTON [on viewscreen]: I never experienced that timeline. Two different versions of the 29th century in the same episode :p |
Re: Star Trek: TNG - Hive already has continuity flaw
Quote:
|
| All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:54 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.6
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FireFox 2+ or Internet Explorer 7+ highly recommended.