Malachi Throne wasn't even 40 when the episode was filmed!Or, to a guy as old as Mendez, everybody from their twenties to their forties was "about the same age."
Kor

Malachi Throne wasn't even 40 when the episode was filmed!Or, to a guy as old as Mendez, everybody from their twenties to their forties was "about the same age."
Kor
That doesn't quite fit in with "Records of that period are fragmentary" though, does it? But apparently Spock or the Enterprise computers were able to find a photo of Khan Noonien Singh without too much trouble. Marla must have had some photo reference for that painting, too. But I suppose it's possible that she was copying some other painting of Khan. Working from other paintings is not unheard of, especially if you're trying to learn from the masters.And remember, Marla isn't relying on old, unreliable paintings and statues. There's presumably no shortage of photos and film footage of Khan, despite the war. The same way we have actual photos of Civil War generals and politicians.
Malachi Throne was born on December 1, 1928, so he was still shy of 40 when "The Menagerie" was shot. He's barely two years older than Shatner (Born March 22, 1931).Or, to a guy as old as Mendez, everybody from their twenties to their forties was "about the same age."![]()
To be fair, the guys had skimpy gold outfits too. And Khan didn't bring out the jumpsuits until he revived his crew.But Marla didn't spot Khan randomly in the street, in 23rd century garb. She found him in suspended animation aboard a centuries-old sleeper ship from roughly the same era as the Eugenics Wars. Possibly his attire provided clues to his origins as well.
"Red jumpsuits for the men? Skimpy gold outfits for the women? Looks like the 1990s, circa the Eugenics Wars, to me."
That doesn't quite fit in with "Records of that period are fragmentary" though, does it?
My theory was that they didn't have that much information on that time until Kirk started the trend of traveling to the late 20th century. At least Voyager could have got some information from Future's End.Has anything ever fit with that line, though? I can't think of any time that anyone in Trek has ever had actual difficulty at finding information on something from the late 20th or early 21st century.
I loathe reboots.
Victor Fleming, Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson, and Edgar Allan Woolf's 1939 vision of The Wizard of Oz was, in essence, a reboot of Baum's perfectly good 1900 novel, one that took the story in directions utterly incompatible with the thirteen sequels Baum wrote.
If you're going to do something completely different, then call it something completely different.
ADF's Humanx Commonwealth milieu, with its optimistic view of the future, with Humanity's closest allies being a logical alien species, in a universe where FTL travel is a given, is close enough to Star Trek that it could almost be considered a Star Trek reboot, but it's not, because it doesn't claim to be Star Trek. It's entirely different, it's presented as something entirely different, and it can be enjoyed as something entirely different.
I have precisely zero interest in the post-reboot Bond films. I have precisely zero interest in the upcoming Ghostbusters reboot. The fact that Abrams used a branch timeline to justify an almost-reboot of Star Trek dampened my enthusiasm for the Abramsverse.
Ever seen this meme featuring Kirk's crew time-traveling to this decade and the locals laughing at their "outdated cellphones"?
http://bizarro.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/172/2014/07/Bizarro-07-06-14-WEB.jpg
The fact that you, and so many people, believe this assertion about a movie (especially one that is quite frankly a hatchet job on the story) is PRECISELY MY OBJECTION TO THE MGM MOVIE!The simple fact of the matter is that while the MGM version is not the original version of the story, it is the definitive version of the story.
I think by definitive, he means what most people think of when you say "Wizard of Oz". And I don't think he's wrong. Ruby slippers will win almost every time.The fact that you, and so many people, believe this assertion about a movie (especially one that is quite frankly a hatchet job on the story) is PRECISELY MY OBJECTION TO THE MGM MOVIE!
Seriously, more people know Bond from the movies these days than from the original Fleming fans. And I'm sure the world is full of SHERLOCK fans who have never read the Conan Doyle stories.
The fact that you, and so many people, believe this assertion about a movie (especially one that is quite frankly a hatchet job on the story) is PRECISELY MY OBJECTION TO THE MGM MOVIE!
I cannot for one second believe that without that movie, Baum's OZ books would languish in any worse obscurity than they already languish in because of that movie (which never would have been made, were not the books already perennially popular).
Think about something that's a bit closer to our time: Tolkien's LotR.
Or think of Harry Potter. People were lining up at the bookstores for the latest installment long before the first movie was made.
I think by definitive, he means what most people think of when you say "Wizard of Oz". And I don't think he's wrong. Ruby slippers will win almost every time.
James, have you ever read The Tragical Tale of Romeus and Juliet? I mean, you must have a good froth about how some hack playwright rebooted that one too, right?
And not enough people read Homer in the original Greek anymore!
Seriously, more people know Bond from the movies these days than from the original Fleming novels. And I'm sure the world is full of SHERLOCK fans who have never read the Conan Doyle stories. And JAWS the movie is arguably more of a classic than the Peter Benchley novel.
Such is the way of things. I confess it bugs me that Robert Bloch tends to get overlooked where Norman Bates is concerned, but I'll concede that the Hitchcock movie long ago eclipsed the novel in the popular imagination. It happens.
Indeed. I mean, how many people that watched the adaptations even know Forrest Gump was originally a book? Or M*A*S*H? Or Shrek?
On the other hand, I confess to being slightly annoyed when the movie FORREST GUMP swept the Oscars a few years back and none of the winners thought to thank the guy who wrote the book . ...
On the other hand, I confess to being slightly annoyed when the movie FORREST GUMP swept the Oscars a few years back and none of the winners thought to thank the guy who wrote the book . ...
"A few years back?"
The 67th Annual Academy Awards ceremony took place on 27 March 1995. A child born on that day is old enough to drink legally.![]()
Pretty sure Sacheen Littlefeather is a real Indian.I'm old enough to remember when Marlon Brando sent a faux Indian to refuse his Oscar. 1995 feels recent to me.
And I'm still bitter about the fact that "The Morning After" beat "Ben" for Best Song back in '72 . . . .
Pretty sure Sacheen Littlefeather is a real Indian.
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