Vulcans were assholes in "Amok Time", which our first visit to planet Vulcan and informed their depiction in ENT and the recent movies.Nothing has changed my affection for the original either. But does anyone feel like the way Enterprise changed things about the Vulcans makes the canon for the original not exactly canon anymore? Or do you view Enterprise and the reboot movies as alternate realities?
Check out The Motion Picture's Klingons!That's just it. Going back can change or attempt to change the roots of a good thing. I mean check out the leaked photo of Discovery's Klingons..
and that is what Star Trek is all aboutThat was very enlightening not just about Klingons but about us..![]()
Check out The Motion Picture's Klingons!
Here's an opinion piece from 1980:
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But does anyone feel like the way Enterprise changed things about the Vulcans makes the canon for the original not exactly canon anymore?
Vulcans were assholes in "Amok Time", which our first visit to planet Vulcan and informed their depiction in ENT and the recent movies.
To me, the Enterprise Vulcans lined up pretty well with how they were portrayed in TOS. Vulcans were dicks.
But with all due respect, it still feels wrong to me.
and the human adventure continues.and that is what Star Trek is all about![]()
Indeed. Vulcans were not very well explored, and Spock and Sarek were really the only benchmarks by which that species could be measured, and they certainly were not "average." So, there really wasn't a good representation of Vulcan culture.Which is the beauty of it. It's fiction and means different things to different people.
I'm okay with what they did with the melders and Syrannite movements, even though the stories themselves could have used more polish. Pretty much anything they did was going to feel "wrong" to some folks. There was just so little on Vulcans that fanon had pretty much taken over.
An old Best of Trek paperbackStarlog?
I think the (original) creation of a character or species is the foundation of it. Albeit sketchy, whatever was referenced in the Original (regards Vulcans in this case) should be left WITHOUT the nonsense of reinventing anything in a post production, even if that post production calls itself a pre-quel. That being said if the first writer the one who envisioned the character or species has always had an origins concept, he/she has a right to develop it. Others coming along and reinventing the wheel is annoying though. They can rewrite history if they want or put their spin to something that undermines the integrity of what has been established.I'm not talking about whether they were ass-holes or not. They were. I'm talking about the back-story that Enterprise established for the Vulcan's. The mind melders being outcasts, the Syrannite movement. When I've brought this up before in some threads in other sections, a few people said these things were never established in any of the other series. OK, fine, they weren't. But with all due respect, it still feels wrong to me.
They can rewrite history if they want or put their spin to something that undermines the integrity of what has been established.
They didn't rewrite anything, there was nothing there to begin with. The Vulcans had two appearances outside of Spock. One was "Amok Time", where they looked at humans with open disdain. The other was "Journey to Babel", where Spock's father refused to talk to his son for 18 years over a career choice.
All the best candidates were Vulcan. It was only logicalThere was also the crew of 'U.S.S Intrepid' in The Immunity Syndrome.
Where the Vulcans displayed their lack of prejudice by...apparently only recruiting Vulcans. From the incredibly diverse Starfleet. On a type of ship that usually required hundreds of crewmembers to operate.
Hmmm...
Even with fiction there is an expectation that the rules aren't going to change later in the game or perversely earlier. I can understand people feeling the nobility they may have felt for Vulcans because of Spock and Tuvok should be reflected. Not having much to go on gave later writers a chance to really screw the Vulcans over.Which is the beauty of it. It's fiction and means different things to different people.
I'm okay with what they did with the melders and Syrannite movements, even though the stories themselves could have used more polish. Pretty much anything they did was going to feel "wrong" to some folks. There was just so little on Vulcans that fanon had pretty much taken over.
Even with fiction there is an expectation that the rules aren't going to change later in the game or perversely earlier. I can understand people feeling the nobility they may have felt for Vulcans because of Spock and Tuvok should be reflected. Not having much to go on gave later writers a chance to really screw the Vulcans over.
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