The book isn't canon.You don't have to know details from novel if you wouldn't seek imaginary reasons to negative attitude against DSC. Important thing is that your statement was false and Dayton Ward proved it in his novel.
The book isn't canon.You don't have to know details from novel if you wouldn't seek imaginary reasons to negative attitude against DSC. Important thing is that your statement was false and Dayton Ward proved it in his novel.
Prime Kahn ethnic origin never reflected his nameTrue. There are many things that aren't explained by the new timeline, like Kahn's ethnic origin for example.
The book isn't canon.
Maybe they give the first war a pass, but the second time got on their last nerveAyelbourne: "What the fuck is wrong with you people? Seriously? Didn't you just fight a fucking war a decade ago? Did you really learn nothing?"
His name it's self is a bit of an ethnic jumble.Prime Kahn ethnic origin never reflected his name
Uh...have you met humanity?Ayelbourne: "What the fuck is wrong with you people? Seriously? Didn't you just fight a fucking war a decade ago? Did you really learn nothing?"
The sad thing is, this very nearly is a literal statement of what producers have been saying and what a disturbingly large percentage of fandom have been arguing the past year.Discovery: A legally distinct entity from the rest of Star Trek, but it's still Prime Universe. Honest.
How is it disturbing?The sad thing is, this very nearly is a literal statement of what producers have been saying and what a disturbingly large percentage of fandom have been arguing the past year.
People can view them as a loss, a bereavement even. The BSG full reboot was a big success, but many original fans hated the very idea of it. Reboots are a risk because you can't rely on the fanbase in the same way. That'll be why they came up with the 'alternate timeline' stuff for ST09 that made only so much sense in explaining the differences. Too frightened to just be different.
Now you're sounding like that other guy.It's self-delusion.
Trek should be about the characters and individual stories. Unless you've got a compelling story to tell, continuing one made-up history just for the sake of it seems pointless to me.Rebooting a property is often a good idea. Rebooting a franchise is a guarantueed clusterfuck of a nightmare.
I loved the BSG reboot. As I do love the new Lost in Space reboot. Or Christopher Nolans take on Batman. But those were single stories, that had been told at the time. And were (somewhat) finished.Rebooting them is basically just returning to the basic idea of something, and trying a different take on it.
If they reboot an entire franchise - people are going to HATE it! Because at that point, the attraction of the IP isn't the original property alone anymore, but the franchise as a whole! Not just the original story. But also every OTHER take on it that has already been taken on it as part of a spin-off, movie, or else. The new, rebooted "take" simply stands no chance in comparison to all other takes combined. And is thus so much less than a simply "new addition" to the franchise would have been.
If they are going to reboot the MARVEL cinematic universe, I'm not going to bother with the reboot. If they reboot the entire Stargate franchise, it's going to be critical. If they reboot Star Trek - I'm definitely not coming back. Star Trek isn't just one series for me, or one set of characters, or one starship. It's the entire universe. And they can NEVER recapture that entire universe. Hell, I hardly see the Kelvin timeline movies as part of the Trek universe, since they are completely seperated storywise from the rest of the franchise. They can continue on, they can stop - I couldn't care less at this point. If they return to the prime universe in the movies, I'll do care again, though.
Trek should be about the characters and individual stories. Unless you've got a compelling story to tell, continuing one made-up history just for the sake of it seems pointless to me.
I'm not sure that's a thing, to be honest, which is probably where we disagree on this whole topicI think Discovery is a stealth reboot, honestly. They slowly chip away at any real connection to the point they can do what they want and hopefully people will be enamored enough with the show to not mind that it doesn't match up with the rest.
If that's the case I've seen bulls in china shops with more stealth.I think Discovery is a stealth reboot, honestly.
The new Jumanji is a sequel, not a reboot. A "stealth sequel," you might say.I'm not sure that's a thing, to be honest, which is probably where we disagree on this whole topic
To me, a reboot can't be stealthy, because they are in-your-face obvious. BSG, LiS, Jumanji - the new movie, House of Cards. Starting from scratch with a brand new take on an existing property, with the basic premise but doing something different with it, a brand new direction which is categorically unconnected to what went before. I can't see a show as a reboot because it has a mutiny and a cloaking device in it and stuff is more blue. It's still so connected to what came before (in fact, arguably too connected) I just can't see it as anything but the same universe.
TMP actually. And yes a few people needed new pants.What did folks do when STWOK came along, when the Klingons changed, the uniforms changed and Kirk went back to being an Admiral behind a desk? Shit their knickers?
That was a risky choice because I've only seen the trailerThe new Jumanji is a sequel, not a reboot. A "stealth sequel," you might say.
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