I read an article in the news that Star Trek: Into Darkness is not going to be considered canon in the rebooted universe, with the next film, Star Trek Beyond.


I read the original Faraci article, and I don't see the level of disingenuousness you're claiming.Devin Faraci who hates the reboot and thus reported what Lin said decorating it with his own narrative, wishful thinking and bias.
Politely ignore. As in, they won't be saying in the film, "That never happened", they just won't refer to it at all. Which isn't really news, Trek has been doing that for decades.For instance his sensational title that Lin said they ignored stid
He doesn't state that. He reports what Lin said and then goes on to guess what that answer may mean, giving example possibilities. He could easily be wrong of course, but he doesn't state anything as hard fact. His hopes for the material are clear though, no question.and also him stating that the spock/uhura thing is ignored/they are no longer an item
*(he and the writers wouldn't be in power to decanonize other movies, anyway. Even Roddenberry couldn't do that, and he DID not like all the tos movies)
*(he and the writers wouldn't be in power to decanonize other movies, anyway. Even Roddenberry couldn't do that, and he DID not like all the tos movies)
He sort of can, in that he can write his movie to explicitly ignore Into Darkness, by, say, taking place immediately after Star Trek 2009 or adapting Khan in a different way. This is similar to what the Highlander and Terminator Franchises have done.
But the studio heads at Paramount probably would object if it's too explicit.
There's a big difference between declaring something non-canonical and just not bothering to mention some of the stuff the film introduced. Star Trek Beyond is going the latter route.
*(he and the writers wouldn't be in power to decanonize other movies, anyway. Even Roddenberry couldn't do that, and he DID not like all the tos movies)
He sort of can, in that he can write his movie to explicitly ignore Into Darkness, by, say, taking place immediately after Star Trek 2009 or adapting Khan in a different way. This is similar to what the Highlander and Terminator Franchises have done.
But the studio heads at Paramount probably would object if it's too explicit.
Really shows the sad state that Trek is in when the film makers talk openly about how they're ignoring the immediate entry preceding this.
I read the original Faraci article, and I don't see the level of disingenuousness you're claiming.
He doesn't state that. He reports what Lin said and then goes on to guess what that answer may mean, giving example possibilities. He could easily be wrong of course, but he doesn't state anything as hard fact. His hopes for the material are clear though, no question.
He reported and added his opinions to the mix. ...in my opinion.![]()
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