I see. So it's the same intellectual property, even when it comes from a different source.
Of course, since that other source is also licensing it from the owners of the original work.
I see. So it's the same intellectual property, even when it comes from a different source.
Even if you try to say that you are using Online as your references point, I doubt it would work since Online still got it from the '09 movie. Even if you've got something in the middle there, it still came from the Kelvin timeline.I see. So it's the same intellectual property, even when it comes from a different source.
As for the "canon" and what was shown on screen and all the rest of it, I know this is going to come as a shock to some people... but it's come up in conversation a few times between authors and editors, dating back to...oh...May 2009.![]()
As far as the issues with the DS9 time jump I'm not worrying that something like that is going to be repeated. It's my understanding a big factor in that was the economic collapse and the publisher deciding to save money by firing all the senior editors which disrupted a lot of things.
But the destruction of Romulus would be a huge event, even fifteen years later it would still be talked about in everyday conversation, just as we still talk about 9/11 in everyday conversation fifteen years later. Can you imagine writing military fiction today without making a single reference to 9/11? That'd be pretty damn hard given how much of the modern world was shaped by that one day, especially for the militaries of the world, even outside the US. Likewise, I just can't see how a Trek story set in 2400 is going to avoid mentioning something like the loss of Romulus. That would be a huge event, which would define the state of the Alpha Quadrant, even fifteen years later.Not so. Memory Alpha lists 59 episodes and films that feature Romulans, and a search of the transcripts reveals that fewer than half of those mention the name Romulus, and many of those are just passing references that are more about the political entity than the actual planet. There are too many to go through the whole list, but just limiting it to the 23rd century, out of three TOS episodes, three TAS episodes, and two TOS-Prime movies featuring Romulan characters, the only one that ever mentions the planet Romulus is "Balance of Terror."
So the fact of the matter is that the majority of canonical stories about the Romulans have not referred to the planet Romulus at all. Just as there are many episodes that don't mention Earth despite heavily featuring humans. Just as there are many episodes about Klingons that never mention Qo'noS. And so on.
But the destruction of Romulus would be a huge event, even fifteen years later it would still be talked about in everyday conversation, just as we still talk about 9/11 in everyday conversation fifteen years later.
Likewise, I just can't see how a Trek story set in 2400 is going to avoid mentioning something like the loss of Romulus. That would be a huge event, which would define the state of the Alpha Quadrant, even fifteen years later.
That's 8% of the whole, and that's including things like "The Time Trap" or The Final Frontier where there's a Romulan character in a story that isn't actually about the Romulans.
You mean Final Frontier wasn't about the epic, tragic romance between Caithlin Dar and St. John Talbot during the Paradise hostage crisis?!
TC
The Romulans now come from a different sector, and reside on two planets they call New Romulus and New Remus. Problem solved.
(There's one Godzilla movie set in a timeline where the Japanese government relocated to Osaka after Godzilla destroyed Tokyo in 1954.)
I find it incredible in the first place that the Romulans have their own "Star Empire" which competes with the Federation on more or less equal footing, but the Vulcans are merely one member species of the entire Federation. The Romulans must have bred like rabbits after settling on Romulus.
I find it incredible in the first place that the Romulans have their own "Star Empire" which competes with the Federation on more or less equal footing, but the Vulcans are merely one member species of the entire Federation. The Romulans must have bred like rabbits after settling on Romulus.
Also how did John Ford deal with different Klingons or subject species in The Final Reflection? I can't remember, but I remember it being interesting.
I wonder if one of the reasons the writers did not understand empire was indeed the epoch they were writing in. Although empire-like structures arguably existed in the mid-century (say the Soviet Union), the multi-national, intercultural and transcultural reality of state-empire was in its dying days by the 1960s. The model you depict probably can be said to end with first the Austrian Empire and Ottoman Empire at the end of WW1, and then the end of the Third Reich and the Japanese Empire in 1945, and then the British and French imperial decline or fragmentation from the 1940s to the 1960s.
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