Summed up in my second paragraph, that why is one more sacred than the other, and if everything else is changing why not change the ship too?About as many versions as the starship Enterprise we've seen. What's your point?
Summed up in my second paragraph, that why is one more sacred than the other, and if everything else is changing why not change the ship too?About as many versions as the starship Enterprise we've seen. What's your point?
Summed up in my second paragraph, that why is one more sacred than the other, and if everything else is changing why not change the ship too?
Because if it's okay to refer to a Kirk, Spock, Cochrane, Ziyal, Saavik or whoever and it sometimes be a different actor, why should the design of the ships be any less fluid? Their role in the story - as the vehicle for Captain Pike's adventures - remains constant.
Because a ship design doesn't get fat and grow wrinkles. A ship design is not a real person. The 2009 movie was about a young Kirk and Spock, Shatner and Nimoy did not fit that role. DSC is not about the Connie or even comparable to the situation of Kirk and Spock in '09.There are fans who believed the same thing about Shatner and Nimoy prior to 2009 (and some still think so today), what makes your opinion on the ship design any more valid?
How many versions of the Batmobile have we seen? Should Ben Affleck still be in the same version Adam West drove, even though, like Discovery's uniforms versus "The Cage", his costume is different?
Because if it's okay to refer to a Kirk, Spock, Cochrane, Ziyal, Saavik or whoever and it sometimes be a different actor, why should the design of the ships be any less fluid? Their role in the story - as the vehicle for Captain Pike's adventures - remains constant.
Still doesn't apply here. Cochrane was recast because he had only ever been in one TOS episode before at a different age from his First Contact self and, more importantly, the original actor, Glen Corbett, was dead.Then why then is Star Trek: First Contact still Prime universe when Zefram Cochrane is completely different to the version in "Metamorphosis"? Why is Star Trek: Enterprise, when it's characters, ship and events are never seen or referred to in any of the subsequent Treks even in situations (like those ship displays in the conference lounge) they should?
I guess it comes down to how literally you choose to interpret what we see. IMO it's a television show telling a story, not historical documents showing found footage of real events exactly as they happened.
Enterprise was supposed to be a prequel to TOS and set in the same continuity, but received some flak for ignoring a few bits of TOS lore (for example, cloaking devices are an amazing theoretical technology in TOS, but in Enterprise they encountered at least 3 races that used them) and as a result some fans refused to accept it as part of the same universe. Hence my referencing it here - because it was a fan outcry over retcons.
The Batmobile or the Daily Planet are better analogies than real world cars, tanks because they like the Connie are fictional objects. Their looks have been updated as style and technology have changed. A Connie in the new show should reflect a "modern" aesthetic.
How many versions of the Batmobile have we seen? Should Ben Affleck still be in the same version Adam West drove, even though, like Discovery's uniforms versus "The Cage", his costume is different?
I think the actors analogy is confusing. I would use a Car Company analogy instead. I mean, if Chevrolet can have seven generations of the Corvette out, I can't see why Starfleet can't release seven generations of the Constitution. I can even see the ads now: "The new Starfleet Constitution! Does Warp 0 to 9 in 3 seconds! Come to your local Starfleet Dealership for a test flight now"!
Not everyone will have the same approach. It's not one size fits all. There maybe future films in the Star Wars Canon that will opt for a redesign.Yeah, and in Star Wars: Rogue One I'm sure they will redesign the old Death Star, the Imperial Star Destroyers and the X-wings. I mean, they have to reflect a "modern" aesthetic and not a '70s aesthetic! Right?
http://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cpsprodpb/E6B6/production/_89126095_cruiser.jpg
Wrong. ILM went to great lengths to make them look exactly how they looked in 1977.
Ben Affleck would look totally pimp as fuck driving Adam West's Batmobile. And yes, "pimp as fuck" is meant to be a compliment.Should Ben Affleck still be in the same version Adam West drove
Same continuity, same design. It's ok if they spruce it up a bit (the Star Destroyers in the original Star Wars didn't have internal lighting, believe it or not), but if the Constitution shows up, they can't change the design without a darned good explanation.
J.J. Abrams would never even think about redesigning an iconic ship like the Millennium Falcon in TFA!
Different stories require different approaches. It is not a one to one comparison.Exactly! Even those 'unlighted' Star Destroyers have an in-universe explanation in SW as they belong to the Imperial I-class Star Destroyers. The later 'lighted' models used in ESB and RotJ are of the Imperial II-class.
In Star Wars they always had a respect and even reverence to their fictional universe designs. J.J. Abrams would never even think about redesigning an iconic ship like the Millennium Falcon in TFA!
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