There's even thematic continuity issues.
Do we like Roddenberry Trek, Meyer Trek, Moore Trek, or Shatnerverse.
Do we like Roddenberry Trek, Meyer Trek, Moore Trek, or Shatnerverse.
But... he never mentioned his half-brother, either. So there is precedent for this (not counting the precedent of every single television drama ever made where the characters' siblings are only mentioned when they appear onscreen).BOTHERED BY
* Spock getting a sister he never mentioned
* Klingons suddenly caring about the bodies of the dead.
But... he never mentioned his half-brother, either. So there is precedent for this (not counting the precedent of every single television drama ever made where the characters' siblings are only mentioned when they appear onscreen).
I agree this is a bit of a nitpick. It rests on two assumptions:
1. That Klingons are a monoculture who do everything identically across the entire culture. What's more likely is that Klingons, like humans, are made of hundreds of different cultures, each with their own funerary practices.
2. That the actions of Captain Georgiou did not fundamentally alter Klingon culture into abandoning their bodies in the battlefield, because the risk of Federation body-mining was probably a risk too high for a war-based culture to take.
This is a false dichotomy. Adherence to a continuity, and good storytelling are not mutually exclusive. They even compliment each other.
Except when the continuity is stupid.
Except when the continuity is stupid.
Yeah, like JJ trek,
If this was a Kelvin thing, I think any writing adhering to that continuity would be hobbled out the gate.
But... he never mentioned his half-brother, either. So there is precedent for this (not counting the precedent of every single television drama ever made where the characters' siblings are only mentioned when they appear onscreen).
I agree this is a bit of a nitpick. It rests on two assumptions:
1. That Klingons are a monoculture who do everything identically across the entire culture. What's more likely is that Klingons, like humans, are made of hundreds of different cultures, each with their own funerary practices.
2. That the actions of Captain Georgiou did not fundamentally alter Klingon culture into abandoning their bodies in the battlefield, because the risk of Federation body-mining was probably a risk too high for a war-based culture to take.
Agree to disagree. It isn't the "best writing ever" but it certainly is on par with most of Star Trek.i think the caliber of writing in JJ trek is so horrible, and the plot holes so large... adhering to it would be setting yourself up to continue to wrote bad stories in a bad way.
I honestly believe that if Ron Moore knew the impact putting that joke into Trials & Tribbleations would have, he'd have left it on the cutting room floor. It was a JOKE. A joke about how the Klingons look different in TOS. Want to know why they look different in TOS? It was the sixties and they had less money. Want to know why they look different in DISCO? It's 2017 and it's got a feature film budget. The DS9 writers decided to make a joke about the discontinuity, but 'Enterprise', in what I believe was the best of intentions, took that joke and ran with it and now fans get their heads wrapped up in why there is visual discontinuity between two shows made 50 years apart. But when TMP came out nobody lost their minds over the new look. They just rolled with it. Which is what you need to do now. You need to roll with this.
That's cute. Precious, really.No offense.... but, there is no discontinuity in Star Trek, just limited brains who watch it. Why everyone need predigested facts, think your own, get your own explanation... Doug Drexler uses the word apebrain on trekyards to explain how the most scifi fans think about canon etc.
Bingo. I mean, ultimately, if it absolutely HAD to be a choice, then I'd choose good storytelling, but: 1. I would suggest that a sincere attempt to adhere to continuity is PART of good storytelling, and 2. I refuse to believe that *somewhere* in 50 years+ of Star Trek there doesn't already exist a proper context in which to tell any given story - and even if there somehow isn't, use any appropriate point in space or time to create it. Don't shoehorn things where they don't fit or belong. Try harder.Problem I'm finding is that the answer to the thread topic seems to suggest that the sacrifice of continuity (and canon for that matter), was going to free the writers up for good story telling. It's possible to have both continuity and good story telling.. and sadly, it's possible to have dodgy continuity and disappointing story telling.
That's just it. In order to have a coherent narrative, you must have continuity. If a character puts a pistol in a desk drawer, it had better not be in the chandelier two scenes later.Problem I'm finding is that the answer to the thread topic seems to suggest that the sacrifice of continuity (and canon for that matter), was going to free the writers up for good story telling. It's possible to have both continuity and good story telling.. and sadly, it's possible to have dodgy continuity and disappointing story telling.
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