Finding out how the Romulans of this universe are reacting to one of their ships from the future attacking the Federation and in the process, making it stronger, if vastly more paranoid. And that calamity that they know is going to destroy them in less than 200 years.
New Vulcan itself could be a source of stories, they're an endangered species, that will greatly change their outlook on life, and affect anything they were involved in from 2258 to 2387.
Earth alone suffered an apparent Starfleet coup, with the casualties in London and San Francisco. Do the public in this universe really trust Starfleet now?
Etc
Rahul said:Of course it's about the journey. But frankly, who cares about the journey if we all are already familiar with the destination and how we got there?
Because what happens to the characters, and the tough decisions they make, that's more important than what happens to the larger universe.
Canon dictates that the Klingons and Feds establish a truce. That doesn't change the fact that they were in a state of war (or cold-war) during TOS. A story taking place during TOS is about the specific actors in that time-period. Kirk vs. Kor, for instance. It's not about finding out whether or not the Klingons ever make peace with the Feds. Characters, not politics.
The example of Titanic cited is just the tip of the iceberg. Any historical drama whatsoever would be considered "not worth watching" because we "know how it ends". That is, unless you warp history like in something like Inglorius Basterds. Think of all of the various period dramas out there that have high accolades. Mad Men, Bridge of Spies, Lawrence of Arabia (they even started the movie at the end with his motorcycle crash! ). How about Columbo? They started every episode by showing you whodunnit. Then the entire episode was watching Columbo gradually figure out a puzzle we already solved in the first few minutes.
New viewers wouldn't have to worry about doing much homework except for watching the 2 films. The show goes from there. The writers would be making stuff up without including too much extra baggage.In what way? It's the same galaxy without Vulcan but with one extra Vulcan (less billions). The same writers would be there in either case making up stuff.
New viewers wouldn't have to worry about doing much homework except for watching the 2 films. The show goes from there. The writers would be making stuff up without including too much extra baggage.
Oh, we are playing the race card, are we?Or perhaps you were basing your statement on ethnocentric grounds?To the extent that all language rules are ultimately arbitrary. But if we are talking about the literal meaning of words....
If you're worrying about viewer homework, Prime requires less; we don't need to see the two movies.New viewers wouldn't have to worry about doing much homework except for watching the 2 films. The show goes from there. The writers would be making stuff up without including too much extra baggage.
Paramount and CBS are contractually separating the movie and the series (by six months?) to avoid "confusion." I guess the suits think we get just as confused about it as they do - pffft. What in that supports your thesis? Of "waters," the longer the wait, the greater the thirst.The difference would be one where the new series could take place in a world Star Trek Beyond exists, and the other would be in waters which hasn't been produced for more than a decade.
Conversely, the Romulans of Prime need to deal both with their own cataclysm and the Federation. Writers making up stuff could do just as well with that.Finding out how the Romulans of this universe are reacting to one of their ships from the future attacking the Federation and in the process, making it stronger, if vastly more paranoid. And that calamity that they know is going to destroy them in less than 200 years.
Not worried about it at all. If it's not my liking, I'll cancel my subscription and if my man has, I'll cancel his subscription. I think we are all for a new series here, for me, it's the pay thing I had an issue with but I'm over it. I'm in. Just like talking smack. I'm positive the series will be interesting.If you're worrying about viewer homework, Prime requires less; we don't need to see the two movies.
I think you're picking the wrong points, possibly based on wishful thinking that is overriding critical thought.
I like this idea. It makes sense.I think this is actually one of the rare cases were seperated continuity for television and film would actually beneficial. Much like DC has both the Arrowverse on tv and the Snyderverse in movies. Allows both to be relatively free.
Once the contracts for Pine and Quinto end, they can make TNG-reboot movies in the same universe, without being bound to developments on a tv-show. And the tv-show would be a continuiation to the old series like Force Awakens or the new X-files were, cross-promote with the older series on the same streaming-service, and without having to take orders from the movie-people like Agents of Shield did.
it's definetily possible to make a good, character driven television show set during klingon-Federation harmonisation. It's just way harder.
Why? How many TOS episodes even had Klingons in them? A half-dozen? You can't seem to get beyond the idea that a Trek show can be about something other than the Feds coming into conflict with another galactic power. It's supposed to be about exploring new worlds and new civilizations.
Heck, the Romulans only appeared in two--count them, two--TOS episodes.
Why? How many TOS episodes even had Klingons in them? A half-dozen? You can't seem to get beyond the idea that a Trek show can be about something other than the Feds coming into conflict with another galactic power. It's supposed to be about exploring new worlds and new civilizations.
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