It all starts in Balance of Terror in TOS- the statements which sort of bind up everything that comes after in terms of the Romulans:
1. The notion that the Earth-Romulan war was fought with sublight ships and atomic weapons.
2. The notion that visual communications didn't exist at the time, so neither side ever saw what the other looked like.
3. The establishment of the Romulans as an ancient offshoot of the Vulcan culture.
4. The notion that 23rd Century Romulan ships are powered by 'simple impulse.'
If the Romulans had been a one-episode footnote in Trek history, one of these tidbits would have ended up meaning a hill of beans. Obviously, that's not how it played out.
Fast forward to Enterprise, where almost every notion established in Balance of Terror is shot to pieces.
1. The notion that the Romulan War was fought with sublight vessels doesn't hold up no matter what. Without warp drive, interstellar war is impossible in the Trek-verse unless you possess some other, even more 'magical' means of traversing interstellar distances. So this one can be discarded pretty easily.
2. No visual communications: I think Enterprise discards this notion in the pilot episode, which happens a full decade before the Romulan War. The series develops several plot elements to prevent the good guys from physcially seeing the Roms, but at the same time you have Romulans abducting Andorians and planting agents on Vulcan to subvert Vulcan culture. In the novels, Trip is surgically altered to pass as a Romulan and spy on them- so how then does Earth not know in the 23rd Century exactly who and what the Romulans are?
Points 3 and 4 tie into 1 and 2.
It seems like instead of twisting plot points like pretzels and bending over backwards to preserve the illogical 'canon' as established in TOS, it would have been far easier for writers and so on to simply discard the original episode that introduced the Romulans.
How do you feel the whole Romulan issue SHOULD have been handled, if the collective Trek-verse had it to do all over again? (Pre-supposing there is no change to Balance of Terror)
1. The notion that the Earth-Romulan war was fought with sublight ships and atomic weapons.
2. The notion that visual communications didn't exist at the time, so neither side ever saw what the other looked like.
3. The establishment of the Romulans as an ancient offshoot of the Vulcan culture.
4. The notion that 23rd Century Romulan ships are powered by 'simple impulse.'
If the Romulans had been a one-episode footnote in Trek history, one of these tidbits would have ended up meaning a hill of beans. Obviously, that's not how it played out.
Fast forward to Enterprise, where almost every notion established in Balance of Terror is shot to pieces.
1. The notion that the Romulan War was fought with sublight vessels doesn't hold up no matter what. Without warp drive, interstellar war is impossible in the Trek-verse unless you possess some other, even more 'magical' means of traversing interstellar distances. So this one can be discarded pretty easily.
2. No visual communications: I think Enterprise discards this notion in the pilot episode, which happens a full decade before the Romulan War. The series develops several plot elements to prevent the good guys from physcially seeing the Roms, but at the same time you have Romulans abducting Andorians and planting agents on Vulcan to subvert Vulcan culture. In the novels, Trip is surgically altered to pass as a Romulan and spy on them- so how then does Earth not know in the 23rd Century exactly who and what the Romulans are?
Points 3 and 4 tie into 1 and 2.
It seems like instead of twisting plot points like pretzels and bending over backwards to preserve the illogical 'canon' as established in TOS, it would have been far easier for writers and so on to simply discard the original episode that introduced the Romulans.
How do you feel the whole Romulan issue SHOULD have been handled, if the collective Trek-verse had it to do all over again? (Pre-supposing there is no change to Balance of Terror)