Came to say this. I'll never understand the need to split hairs over continuity or "real Star Trek." Star Trek is alive and well and being demonstrated in new ways.It makes me feel good that Star Trek is alive and well.
Came to say this. I'll never understand the need to split hairs over continuity or "real Star Trek." Star Trek is alive and well and being demonstrated in new ways.It makes me feel good that Star Trek is alive and well.
Came to say this. I'll never understand the need to split hairs over continuity or "real Star Trek." Star Trek is alive and well and being demonstrated in new ways.
The Prime universe hasn't been seen since Voyager finished (not convinced over a lot of Enterprise). I'll hold out judgement of the new Picard series until they release more on it, after the huge letdown that the other show is.
I'm just hoping with a new show comes whole new design aesthetics and teams to reimagine it all - esp. the sets and the uniforms and the aliens and the objective POV be the story and universe itself which I hope is back to basics. I also hope it is much a more complex formulaic consistency than what we got in TNG which was a he said/she said convoluted mind twist.
Since the announcement of the upcoming Picard show, we can now rest assured that the prime timeline is alive and well! I remember when Star Trek 09 came out, I was afraid that that the prime universe was dead and that for then on it was only Kelvin-timeline stuff. "No one is interested in the prime-timeline anymore! It's played out and wouldn't work in the modern day because that's no longer considered 'cool'" is what a lot of people said back when ST 09 came out. (Btw, the prime-timeline novels that came out after ST 09 and Star Trek Online don't count for me since those aren't canon.)
Who are you going to believe, common sense that STD is NOT Prime due to multiple examples or your lying eyes because a greedy corporation run by the likes of Les Moonves says it's Prime? Anyone involved with STD that says it's Prime, is merely paying lip service to fansNow, I know that Star Trek: Discovery is considered to take place in the prime timeline (because the producers said so) but I'm honestly still not 100% convinced yet!
Memo: Alex KurtzmanIt makes me feel good that Star Trek is alive and well.
This would be relevant only is there were a flashback and Kirk's hair looks significantly different than the way it previously did.By this logic, the TOS films exist in universes separate from one another and from the TV series because Shatner wore new hairpieces in each one.
I'm curious how they'll depict 2499 as more advanced than their version of 2257.Hell yes!
1. It's not a prequel. No more canon landmines to avoid or laughable visual and technological differences to what we saw in TOS, TNG, DS9 and Voyager which are supposed to be set after. No more trying to fit a square peg into a round hole basically. If the technology looks more advanced then that's because the timeline has moved forward and such advancements are to be expected.
Is it really a return to the prime universe, though? It could just as easily turn out to be a Logan-style futurefic where some events from previous instalments explicitly didn't happen.2. Picard is back. The most iconic Star Trek character of the 90s played by the greatest actor in the franchise. If all else fails its going to be a tour de force of acting.
3. It's undeniably, unequivocally a return to the Prime timeline without the need to pussyfoot around canon. Anything can happen going forward. There are too many limitations with prequels.
I suspect they're all going to look different, like Discocvery and the Kelvin movies have changed established Trek races.4. Can't wait to see Cardassians, Borg, Ferengi and the other species who haven't gotten much attention for the past 20 years.
The era may be back, but I'll be surprised if the storytelling style still exists outlive of the Orville universe.5. The Next Generation is finally acknowledged as a big deal. I got so tried of so called fans trying to diminish its popularity and impact and telling others the TNG era is dead and never coming back. Welcome to the 25th Century, bitches![]()
The Star Trek universe is more fun when it's unified than if every new franchise was a total reset.
Your what hurts?
Memo: Alex Kurtzman
I really don't think so. It restricts the creative team to have to follow what was established 50 or 30 or 15 years ago. I just want the best sci-fi stories possible.
There's a balance to be struck. The fact that canon is constantly used as a baseball bat to beat about newer productions (Not just DSC, but ENT, and even TWOK if one is willing to dig) is what discourages me from embracing a "canon or nothing" approach.I really don't think so. It restricts the creative team to have to follow what was established 50 or 30 or 15 years ago. I just want the best sci-fi stories possible.
There's a balance to be struck. The fact that canon is constantly used as a baseball bat to beat about newer productions (Not just DSC, but ENT, and even TWOK if one is willing to dig) is what discourages me from embracing a "canon or nothing" approach.
Alive? Debatable, but maybe.
Well? Not even close.
4. Can't wait to see Cardassians, Borg, Ferengi and the other species who haven't gotten much attention for the past 20 years.
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