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I don't think it was about "justifying" anything to anyone. The only obligation the creators have is to tell the story in the way that feels right to them. The fact of the matter is, since these are all just stories, the filmmakers have always been free to reinvent things however they wanted. Continuity is not an absolute mandate, it's a storytelling device. It exists to serve the narrative, not the other way around. Any handwave to the fans to explain the changes is just bonus content to supplement the stories. Only a small percentage of us really care about the reason for the changes anyway.
However, the point of a series is that the different elements build on each other, usually with the intent that they can be seen together as one mega-story. Making internal contradictions undermines that. (Case in point, compare the MCU with the
X-Men film series. The former holds up while the other doesn't as a series since
X-Men movies ignore different elements on a case by case basis. For example,
First Class pretends that
The Last Stand didn't happen, but it's direct sequel,
Days of Future Past uses
The Last Stand as part of it's backstory. It's a mess and it makes trying to piece together how everything lines up -- which is part of the fun of these long-running series -- an impossible task. Conversely, the MCU has far fewer internal problems and the few it does have -- when S.H.I.E.L.D. adopted it's acronym name, fitting the Hulk movie in with later events, and the occasional recast, do not affect the series overall, since everything is still treated as having happened. And you know what? It's considered the gold standard today on how to make a movie franchise.)
I get the who "creators should be free to change their minds" thing to an extent (esp. really early on when stuff is still being developed, like how I think the first few TOS episodes deserve a pass on some of the oddities, like Spock being emotional). However, there reaches a point where if changes keep piling up, I have no reason to trust you, the authors, about anything you write for the series in the future, or to get invested in the story, since I don't know how much of it will be ignored later down the line.
Also, since Pegg is trying to explain how the two pieces of the franchise fit together, this's just my two cents on how well his explanation works. Your mileage will vary.
And it's just a fact of life that different people approaching the same problem will see it a bit differently. Kurtzman & Orci had one idea for how to explain the timeline changes, while Pegg and maybe Jung and Lin had a slightly different way of approaching the matter.
Fair enough. But, when its part of the same series, shouldn't the backstory details like that be hammered out beforehand? Even if its okay to retcon stuff, internal consistency makes the suspension of disbelief easer to take on and for the reader to get into the story (which is another reason I don't like retcons that pretend previous material never happened so much, since they destroy this).
I mean, heck, some fans have spent the past seven years complaining "But that doesn't explain this change and that change and the other change!" Can you really blame the filmmakers for trying to offer a bit more of a sop to the fans who weren't satisfied with the existing explanation?
Fair enough. But, as the viewer, I feel that I should be able to say: "You know, I don't think that that idea works because of such and such reasons."
Every new incarnation of Star Trek has made changes that have been more or less awkwardly handwaved away. The TMP Klingons and totally redesigned Starfleet tech.
The TMP Klingons were addressed in ENT in a way that preserved both versions (and before that "Trials and Tribble-lations" [DS9] partially addressed it by a non-answer that Klingons refuse to discuss it). The TOS movie tech was also partially explained by the passage of time and the
Enterprise's refit. On top of that, we'd never been to 23rd century Earth before at that point in the franchise, so there's no reason to not believe that stuff like "Centroplex" and Earth Spacedock looked just like that during TOS.
Chekov retconned into "Space Seed" and Khan's followers changed from multiethnic to uniformly Nordic.
It was never said when Chekov joined the crew (except that it was after "Mudd's Women" [TOS]), so there's no conflict with Khan recalling him, if Chekov was not a bridge member at the time and they met offscreen. We never saw all of Khan's followers in one room at the same time, so why is this a problem that the TV and movie follower characters couldn't have been on the same crew?
Klingons suddenly becoming honorable and Romulans treacherous when we always thought it was the other way around.
A.) we've seen honorable Romulans after the fact ("The Defector" [TNG], for example) and plenty of Klingons closer to the TOS mode (like TNG/DS9's Gowron). Heck, ENT even addressed the Klingon question in "Judgement" and the Augment trilogy, once again not by replacing or removing information, but by adding more information that left everything intact.
Data routinely using contractions until suddenly he retroactively didn't.
Early installment weirdness that deserves grace? Or a script error? (I think some mistakes can be dismissed as simple filming errors, and I'd put this as one of them. Also, I believe that somewhere it was stated that Data has "difficulty" using contractions. Wasn't the idea that he didn't arise from the rest of the crew, since he so rarely tried to use them that it was out of character?)
TNG spending its first two years showing us a peacetime Starfleet to which militarism was largely alien, then suddenly telling us the Federation had been at war with the Cardassians that whole time.
Good one, never noticed it. I enjoy reading your posts partially because of the information about the stories that you're able to bring to the conversation; I find that kind of stuff really fun.
(It's been awhile since I've seen "The Wounded" [TNG]. Was it specifically said if the war had just ended, or was it left open that the fighting had stopped before season one, but the treaty was only now just signed?)
The wormhole aliens having no idea who or what Sisko was in "Emissary," yet later turning out to have arranged his birth.
Given how hard it is to make sense of the aliens' thoughts and comments sometimes, I'd personally let this slide as something we misunderstood, but I'm not going to be dogmatic about it. (We're also assuming that they weren't faking not knowing him as a test of sorts, given that they frequently give him other tests or visions to guide him along on his path.)
Star Trek is full of huge, absurd, totally unexplained retcons and massive changes of intention that the fans just gloss over and don't even pay attention to -- and yet whenever the producers make the effort to actually explain something, all the fans can do is condemn them for the effort.
I'm "condemning" them because I'm not sure that the explanation is a good one. Most of the other retcons are either presented in more logical methods and/or preserve both versions rather than eliminating them (I'm sure there are some really bad ones, but I can't recall any right now). And yes, I may be giving some of the prime universe stuff some slack, but since nine times out of ten, that material holds together and is designed to do so. The '09 movie set the ground rules for its universe and, even under the original administration, ignored them, so I think it's perfectly fair to call them out on that.
Of course it's contrived. The real explanation is that this is a fictional franchise that's been rebooted and that they're free to change anything and everything they want. Any attempt to rationalize that in in-story terms is going to be a contrivance. But it's just a means to an end. They didn't need to do it. Most franchises don't bother to explain such changes.
That's why, in this case, I think a clean reboot was what they should've done, since obviously they wanted the freedom that that would give. However, since they're the ones invoking in-universe, why can't we the viewers examine and discuss the merits of it, esp. when we're using actual canon to discuss the theory.
When I wrote my DTI novels and researched all the Trek time-travel episodes in depth, I found multiple cases where the "rules" didn't work the way they worked in any other episode. In those cases, I had to concoct explanations for why those incidents were exceptional. This seems no different to me.
Sure, I have no problem with some being special cases that adjust the rules -- although I don't think there's sufficient evidence that the red matter black hole worked the way that Pegg wants it it (like you had Spock say in your second DTI novel, that fantastic claims require fantastic proof, or something like that).
It's been awhile since I read any of those novels. Was "Past Tense, Parts I and II" (DS9) (the Bell Riots episode) addressed? (If I recall correctly, after Sisko, Bashir, and Dax were time-warped, the original timeline in the show's present remained intact until the part of the show were Bell was killed, as if the two timeframes were happening at the same time, while most other shows suggest that once a time traveler changes the past, the present is instantly morphed to the new status quo.)
Ah, ah, ah -- no fair citing canon and then perpetuating a totally non-canonical fan myth. It was never actually stated anywhere official that Spock was the first Vulcan in Starfleet. Indeed, the existence of the Intrepid and its all-Vulcan crew argue strongly against that idea. I don't even know where that bit of fan lore came from, unless it's a misreading of The Making of Star Trek's statement that Spock was the only Vulcan on the Enterprise and that Sarek thought joining Starfleet defied Vulcan tradition.
Okay. I'd seen the "Spock was the first Vulcan in Starfleet" "fact" cited in numerous licensed tie-in materials and reference books (specifically the first edition of the
Star Trek Encyclopedia) and was pretty sure that Roddenberry had been the advocate for that idea. I certainly didn't realize that it was a fan theory that had no basis in any official decree or idea. (I never bought the idea myself, even before T'Pol's commission, because of the
Intrepid, too.)
Then what do you think would be a fair example?
He wrote the damn movie. I don't think you have any business elevating your right to judge above his.
Movies are a collaborative process, with a wide range of people contributing. For example, a movie's director (who in this case is not Pegg) is often cited as the person directing the vision of what the movie is supposed to be (with the approval of the producers and executives). The actors need to come up with the delivery of the lines. The script gets revised a number of times by people other than the original author. Scenes from it get edited down and/or cut entirely, by select people. So, I'm not sure that we can assign one person as being the be-all-end-all authority for how the movie is supposed to be interpreted, since there's no one person who's has 100% complete creative control (the way a novelist writing an original piece of work does, like JK Rowling and Harry Potter, baring publishers). And even if there was, I'd argue that Justin Lin, not Pegg, is that person for
Star Trek Beyond, since Lin is the director.
Even if that view is not accurate, Pegg did not create
Star Trek. He didn't even create this branch of it. The guy is working in a pre-existing sandbox.
Now, George Lucas could be an exception to the argument I'm making about no one person being the authority on a franchise. However, unlike Pegg, he did created
Star Wars, was involved with the storytelling process for each version, and managed it for years after (with the Special Editions, his work on
Star Wars: The Clone Wars, tie-in writers consulting him for permission on specific elements they wanted to include, etc.). There is no doubt that the franchise is his baby. Even though Lucas is no longer that, with LucasFilm's "Story Group" committee now being responsible for directing the future of the franchise in his stead, as direct successors.
Does Pegg really have the "authority" to make such broad statements about how this franchise works, esp. when it runs counter to a lot of on-screen evidence? Isn't he essentially a freelancer in this franchise, not a member of the "Supreme Court" that were ostensibly directing this show? Even if so, we have a long history of statements like his being treated as suggestions, at best; the original explanation for the Kelvin timeline has been rejected. It’s been my understanding that Nicholas Meyer went on record that Spock died for good in
Wrath of Khan. None of them are binding, and often ignored. Also, regardless of whether Pegg wrote the movie or not, his views on the franchise are not canonical, unless they make it onscreen.
And like I said, I've had to make plenty of special-case exceptions for that "model." There's no real way to make every Trek time-travel story mutually consistent, and I should know. I had to tack on a lot of extra provisions to make sense of some of the crazier episodes. This is actually easier to justify than something like "Shattered," say, or "All Good Things...".
If you wouldn't mind extrapolating on that thought (why Pegg's model is easer to work with than those other examples) I'd enjoy hearing it. Personally, I think that "All Good Things..." worked fine and makes more sense. I might agree with "Shattered," but I did appreciate that the mechanics of the incident were addressed, whereas with the Kelvin timeline, we need someone on the production team to tell us this stuff.
Sure, obvious first impression. But a first impression does not rule out alternative possibilities. Your first hypothesis is just the beginning of the process, not the end. You test that hypothesis against the evidence, and if new evidence comes to light that the hypothesis doesn't explain, you change your hypothesis.
After all, in physical terms, what we call "ships" are just ensembles of subatomic particles and energy fields. The space in which the wormhole opened was loaded with particles and energy from the supernova, immensely outweighing the mass and energy contained in the ships. Logically, we should've considered that from the start. The fact that we didn't just means there was an oversight in our thinking. This is how science works. You form an idea, you test it, you find the holes, you change your idea, you test that, etc. You don't just close your mind completely after your first idea and summarily reject any new information that doesn't fit it.
Okay, fair points. The thing is though, that real life science observes stuff that happens in the real world, which puts boundaries on what can and can't be used. Theories need to be tested against the natural world. Wouldn't make sense then, that any theories about the movies' time travel need to stack up with the evidence we see in the films? Once we start adding unseen stuff behind-the-scenes that was never hinted at in the movie, we're moving into theory and speculation that can't be proven.
Also, we haven't been given any new information within the movies itself. We've only been given a writer's "this's how I think it happened," and that's far less reliable (since this explanation itself is ostensibly overturning the original explanation, which was also provided by the original writers of the '09 movie).
But we're talking about time travel. "First" and "second" do not have to come in sequence. "Before" and "after" are arbitrary matters of perspective. I'm actually kicking myself that I didn't see that before, that I just blindly assumed any timeline changes would have to propagate forward in time only. I should've known better. In retrospect, the limitation in that way of thinking seems obvious to me.
I will concede that time travel can shuffle the order of cause and effect around, depending on the circumstances. However, if we were to assume that the original
Narada incident also affected the past up till the Bing Bang and on beyond past Daniels' time cop home in the future, how do you think that could have happened exactly? Like, what would've the black hole needed to do to cause that?
Space is immense. How the hell did they know where to look? Besides, deleted material (and the comic based on it) established that Nero and crew were held in Rura Penthe for 25 years and broke out once they found out where and when the wormhole would reopen.
I don't think deleted scenes are canon and I know for a fact that
Star Trek Countdown is not. It's been awhile since I've seen the movie, but I thought that Spock Prime came through the exact same spot that the
Narada had decades earlier and that Nero guessed that's what would happen.
Now, your theory that the wormhole was opening and closing often on in the meantime is an interesting theory, but, it does raise the question how that would help the Romulans know which one was
the one that Spock was in (esp. if we do indeed assume that they were in prison at the time). I mean, how would the calculations work?
I think that, storywise, they're doing the same thing they've always done, which is to depict and change the universe however they choose. This is just a slight tweak in how they rationalize it. Orci and Kurtzman were content to chalk a lot of the changes up to poetic license, while Pegg has found a way to justify them in-universe.
If Pegg is trying to explain it "in-universe," wouldn't it be fair to expect it to make sense in-universe
and jibe with the rest of the in-universe information we have? Also, if the original explanation that Orci and Kurtzman provided was just scrapped, how does that mean we should handle Pegg's, since it would follow that his explanation has the same authoritative weight behind it (namely, not a frakking lot of it).
I actually prefer Pegg's model. It makes more sense of the larger Kelvin, the more built-up San Francisco, the decade-older PIke, and other things that just had to be shrugged away under the old model. I think it makes things less convoluted. I mean, sure, the specific technobabble Pegg offered to justify it was nonsense, but that's beside the point. What matters is that, whatever the reason, we've been given permission to believe that the timeline differences predate 2233, and that makes things so much simpler.
I've kinda-sorta gotten to like the idea on paper (although I question how it would work). If they had given us this explanation from the get go (and added the proviso that the prime universe was protected from the changes somehow) I would probably be a little more welcoming to the idea.
However, if we assume that all traces of the original continuity have been wiped, then a lot of the meaning of the old movies is lost. Namely, none of the characters can be the same ones from the original franchise, just new characters with different names. Nothing we know can be taken for granted. The original backstory has been lost, meaning that the new universe is a lot smaller than it could've been. It may also mean that the series now has to stand on its own two feet, and I honestly don't think it has the substance to stand the test of time the way most of its predecessors do.)
Also, how is Pegg's time travel model simpler? It depends on information that can't be gotten from the movies, that have little to no precedence in any preexisting materials, and is a little headache-inducing to try and work out the process that it happened.