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#1 |
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Captain
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Of Crossovers and Fictional Universes
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...ers_in_fiction Some of the time I know instinctively that a crossover is ‘true’, (for lack of a better word) if the two series share similar themes. For example, Alien and Predator are both about alien monsters that kill people. A Nightmare on Elm Street and Friday the 13th are both about supernatural serial killers. Batman and Superman have had numerous crossovers with Aliens and Predators, the DC universe has encountered the Mortal Kombat universe, Picard has met the X-Men and Star Wars characters appear in the latest Soulcalibur game. But it's obvious that these crossovers are wrong because the different styles clash enormously. I mean can you imagine Superman fighting Aliens? It’s ridiculous. Other times, it’s not so clear. We all know that the Marvel superheroes belong in the same universe. The DC superheroes also belong together in a different universe. But DC and Marvel have had numerous crossovers and yet the crossovers don't imply a shared universe even though both series have a similar theme of a world overpopulated with superheroes. I've decided that crossovers that happen in a comic book should never be taken seriously because there are so many 'VS' comics that pit characters from widely different realities against each other in very implausible situations. Video game crossovers shouldn't be taken seriously either, considering such series as Marvel vs Capcom, Super Smash Bros and Kingdom Hearts, all of which blend dozens of completely incompatible realities in a huge mess. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intercompany_crossover Besides, not everyone plays video games, especially video games that are limited to one or two consoles. Not everyone collects comics either. A lot more people watch TV and read novels. At least that’s what I think. Am I wrong? So I decided that if a crossover happens in a film it is ‘true’. At least, that’s what I thought until I heard of The X-Files episode Unusual Suspects, which featured Detective John Munch. Munch was a main character on the show Homicide: Life on the Street, later became a main character on Law & Order SVU and appeared occasionally on nearly all the Law & Order shows as well as a number of completely unrelated shows. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Munch This would suggest a universe with at least 12 TV series, many of which have nothing to do with each other, and more episodes than Star Trek. The X-Files series and Law & Order series have radically different styles. One is a sci-fi show, the other is a police procedural. There’s no way all these different series belong in the same universe. Especially because in the Homicide episode ‘Partners’, detective Munch remarks "It's 9 o'clock. They're probably home watching the X-Files." Therefore, there needs to be at least 2 film crossovers (or 2 novel crossovers) between 2 series for them to exist in the same universe. But that means the Nightmare on Elm Street series and Friday 13th series are separate because there was only one crossover movie. It also means that The X-Files and Millennium are separate because there was only one crossover episode and that clearly isn’t right because the X-Files/Millennium crossover was a critical resolution of Millennium’s storyline. I’m aware that the character Jose Chung appears in one episode in both series but does that even count as a crossover? So how does one decide whether or not two or more series take place in the same reality? Any more ideas? P.S. Please don’t mention the Tommy Westphall universe. It’s an extremely ridiculous idea and I’m concerned that it will lead this discussion in the wrong direction. Besides, only the first season of St. Elsewhere has been released on DVD, and if a show doesn’t exist on DVD, it doesn’t exist.
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May swift death come to all enemies of Extrotech! |
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#2 |
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Admiral
Location: Mr. Adventure
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Re: Of Crossovers and Fictional Universes
Of course, someone will mention that they are all fictional universes... |
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#3 |
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Awesome
Location: Wherever life takes me
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Re: Of Crossovers and Fictional Universes
1) The crossover has a substantial effect on both universes, and that effect is taken into account in the writing of future adventures for both universes. Or... 2) Like the X-Files/Homicide/Law&Order crossover, nothing drastic happens to effect either universe and they go their separate ways. The crossover still happened, and therefore they exist in the same universe, but it did not create any fundamental changes to any of the participating series/characters/whatever. My favorite crossover: In the second episode of "Chuck," he flashes and starts talking about where Oceanic Flight 815 went down. So clearly "Chuck" and "Lost" are in the same universe, but it doesn't matter at all because the stories are so unrelated. |
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#4 |
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Rear Admiral
Location: Toronto
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Re: Of Crossovers and Fictional Universes
Of course, that reasoning can be difficult if the crossover has important and lasting repercussions on both shows/films/whatever. I guess you just have to do the best you can. Sure, I don't see why not, especially since he was a memorable guest star in both. Add that to Frank Black's appearance in an X-Files episode, and I think that pretty much states that the two shows are definitely set in the same universe. |
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#5 |
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Rear Admiral
Location: Taipei
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Re: Of Crossovers and Fictional Universes
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#6 |
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Admiral
Location: wamdue
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Re: Of Crossovers and Fictional Universes
CSI/Without a Trace not the best crossover ever but it works, and forever put Without a Trace in the CSI verse (along with Cold Case). So Without a Trace is not set in the CSI verse NY, and what do you know CSI has a spin-off in NY, and the same season as the crossover NY has "the cabbie killer" on CSI NY, bringing the city to a halt and scaring people from taxis, massive amount of news inches/minutes given to the taxi killer, yet he is never mentioned on Without a Trace.
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Im Proud of the BBC |
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#7 |
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Admiral
Location: gone
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Re: Of Crossovers and Fictional Universes
well, you asked for it. the Marvel and DC universe crossover events usually make a point of explaining that they exist in seperate universes though. or at least Marvel VS DC and JLA/Avengers both did. so too did the Judge Dredd/Batman crossovers. character cameos like in Soul Calibur don't count. Darth Maul and Wolverine both appear as unlockable characters in Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3. that doesn't mean they co-exist. and just because the Montecito casino appears in Heroes, nu Knight Rider and so on, doesn't mean the shhow set there is in that reality. it just means that there's a casino called the Montecito. |
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#8 | ||
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Vice Admiral
Location: Broccoli
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Re: Of Crossovers and Fictional Universes
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"That which can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence." -- Christopher Hitchens |
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#9 |
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Captain
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Re: Of Crossovers and Fictional Universes
Seems that TV shows will do whatever seems to fit at time and not care for long-term consequences.
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Move along people, nothing to see here!! Just- Holy Frak, a flaming Cylon Raider!! Gather round everyone, don't be bashful, plenty of room!! |
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#10 |
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Rear Admiral
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Re: Of Crossovers and Fictional Universes
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"Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it." - Mark Twain http://tlbklaus.deviantart.com |
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#11 | |
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Admiral
Location: wamdue
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Re: Of Crossovers and Fictional Universes
apparntly Star Trek crossovers over with Team KnightRider at one point, and some of the Las Vegas cast appear on Passions. TBH I dont mind LasVegas, Passions & Crossing Jordan as characters from Las Vegas actually appeared in the other show, unlike KnightRider & Heroes which was just reusing the set. Actually reuse of the set is forgiveable if they just came up with a new name for the Casiona
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Im Proud of the BBC |
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#12 |
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Fleet Captain
Location: Milwaukee, WI Da Brew City
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Re: Of Crossovers and Fictional Universes
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#13 |
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Admiral
Location: wamdue
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Re: Of Crossovers and Fictional Universes
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Im Proud of the BBC |
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#14 |
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Commodore
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Re: Of Crossovers and Fictional Universes
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Have spacesuit...will travel. |
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#15 | ||
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Rear Admiral
Location: Toronto
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Re: Of Crossovers and Fictional Universes
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