• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Spoilers Discovery and the Novelverse - TV show discussion thread

Regarding in-universe explanations vs. real-world explanations, I like to think that both are reasonable topics for discussion and that neither should be considered out of bounds or inappropriate. Heck, Trekkies have been interested in the behind-the-scenes stuff for easily as long as they've had been having fun making up "in-universe" theories about the imaginary world of Star Trek, as proven by the mountains of non-fiction books and articles about the making of STAR TREK.

And, for the record, Christopher is not the only individual who is occasionally frustrated by the way some posters seem so resistant to real-world explanations when it comes to discussing any given artistic choices or seeming discrepancies. Heck, I remember I once casually offered a real-world explanation for some plot device ("Oh, they built the shuttlecraft set because they got money from a toy manufacturer to do so") and, to my surprise, this one poster went off on me as though I had just barged into a children's Christmas party to announce there was no Santa Claus.

"Yes, yes, we know it's not real! Why do you have to spoil everything by reminding us!" (Or words to the effect.)

I admit to being taken aback by their reaction. We're Trekkies. I thought we loved behind-the-scenes trivia?
 
He said "damn." Damn is not a swear word, and no one needs to apologize for using it. Even if it were a swear word, an apology is still unnecessary as this forum has no rules against profanity.

Heh. This reminds of the time another Trek author casually used the f-word in a post and another poster took offense. I had to point out that a lot of us are past or present New Yorkers so that's just the fucking way we talk. No offense should be intended or inferred.

Trust me, get a bunch of Trekkies sitting around a bar at a convention and we're not going to talk like choirboys. We're going to sound more like Spock doubling down on colorful metaphors. :)
 
Heh. This reminds of the time another Trek author casually used the f-word in a post and another poster took offense. I had to point out that a lot of us are past or present New Yorkers so that's just the fucking way we talk. No offense should be intended or inferred.

Trust me, get a bunch of Trekkies sitting around a bar at a convention and we're not going to talk like choirboys. We're going to sound more like Spock doubling down on colorful metaphors. :)
Excuse me, a proper new yorker prounouces it fuckin'
 
Hang out with John Billingsley or Tim Russ for 5 minutes and you’ll hear stuff that would make Deadpool blush.

True fucking story.

Heck, look at the writers on TOS. Roddenberry was an ex-cop who wrote a kinky sex farce after STAR TREK, Richard Matheson fought in the Battle of the Bulge and, among other things, wrote an erotic horror novel for Playboy Press, Theodore Sturgeon wrote an entire novel about a guy who drinks menstrual blood (great book, btw), Robert Bloch wrote Psycho, Norman Spinrad wrote Bug Jack Barron for Pete's sake, not to mention The Void Captain's Tale . . . . I don't think these guys would get the vapors over a swear word or two.

Heck, Spinrad is one of my old writing teachers. Trust me, he's been known to use profanity on occasion. :)
 
Heh. This reminds of the time another Trek author casually used the f-word in a post and another poster took offense. I had to point out that a lot of us are past or present New Yorkers so that's just the fucking way we talk. No offense should be intended or inferred.
You mean that incident with the open usage of "New York Times Bestselling Kirsten Motherfucking Beyer"?
 
The difference is that TMP was trying to be an SF film in the pre-Star Wars idiom, thoughtful and sophisticated, while TWOK embraced the post-Star Wars idiom and set the precedent for later Trek movies to do the same. Which may have made the movie series successful, but I always felt it lost something in the process.

Yes, that's true. In a way Star Trek was a victim of its own success. TWOK ended up being very popular among the Star Trek films itself, and so a number of future Star Trek filmmakers felt the best way to sell tickets was to redux TWOK. On the one hand TMP was smart sci-fi, but it wasn't very popular. TWOK was less sci-fi but ended up being a blockbuster. Paramount saw that and wanted to capitalized on it. And I guess I can't blame them. Though TVH proved you could still do sci-fi to an extent and be a blockbuster--but then not every film should be like TVH either. They tried capitalizing on that and you ended up with TFF.

I frequently complained that we had 3 films in a row that borrowed from TWOK to various extents---Nemesis, Star Trek (2009) and STID. Now I liked all those films, but it did bother me a bit that it seemed the writers kept going to TWOK well. One thing I really liked about Beyond is that it broke that cycle for the most part. Oh, I'm sure you could find little bits that reminded you of TWOK, but overall it felt like a different film.

-- 2001, Planet of the Apes, Soylent Green, Fahrenheit 451, Silent Running, Rollerball, The Andromeda Strain, etc. It was Star Wars that transformed SF cinema and shifted the balance toward lighter, more lowbrow, crowd-pleasing fare driven by action and spectacle. There were still films in the more serious vein -- Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Alien, Blade Runner, even The Black Hole to an extent

All great films as well. And you're right, everyone wanted to cash in on the success of Star Wars. Now I like Star Wars (though just the films for me, I never really got into it beyond that). But Star Wars was a space opera, fantasy. It was never meant to be serious sci-fi. Hell, I believe George Lucas has said as much in the past. It's a shame so much sci-fi has gone in that direction. Now I will say even TWOK is at least somewhat more intelligent that Star Wars from a science fiction perspective. It's weak in a lot of areas, but they made an attempt to provide some reasoning behind the story. I think you see some of the same parallels between Alien and Aliens. They were both great films, but I always loved Alien more. Partly because it was a bit more horror--being chased around a spaceship by a hostile alien (at least in that case it takes away the whole 'why don't they just leave' answer like you do in haunted houses). But it also was more serious. Aliens is a great action film certainly. But it's more popcorn fare. It's fun to watch, it keeps your attention and you never get bored, but it's not as high brow as its predecessor.
 
He said "damn." Damn is not a swear word, and no one needs to apologize for using it. Even if it were a swear word, an apology is still unnecessary as this forum has no rules against profanity.


Ha-ha. So True. I'll admit I avoid using the f-word on forums and in print (partly because some forums I go on do cite you for it--and partly because I feel odd using it). Though I have used damn and Hell (though not always a 'curse' word).

And I'll even admit it bothers me just a bit when it was used on Discovery. It always seemed in the future they left 'more colorful metaphors' in the past, at least the F- word and the S- word and so forth.

But I don't get all bent out of shape when others use it. I was kind of shocked when they were upset about damn.

I admit to being taken aback by their reaction. We're Trekkies. I thought we loved behind-the-scenes trivia?

Yeah, another bit of an overreaction. I love discussing in-universe stuff. I'm not as into the behind the scenes stuff. But it's just personal preference so I sort of gravitate to that automatically, sometimes without realizing it. I don't get bent out of shape when someone wants to discuss the behind the scenes stuff.
 
And I'll even admit it bothers me just a bit when it was used on Discovery. It always seemed in the future they left 'more colorful metaphors' in the past, at least the F- word and the S- word and so forth.

I'm glad they didn't use some sort of made-up pseudo-profanity instead. Made the scene more honest. Plus, I thought it was fucking hilarious the first time I saw it.
 
On the one hand TMP was smart sci-fi, but it wasn't very popular.

It was actually the most financially successful Star Trek film prior to 2009, corrected for inflation. People had issues with its story, but it wasn't a commercial failure. The main reason it wasn't as profitable as Paramount wanted is because it was so expensive to make (especially since Paramount's creative bookkeepers lumped in the cost for all the previous, failed movie and TV revival projects in with the costs for TMP itself).

And it would've been possible to give a sequel more of a heart than TMP without needing to sacrifice the brain. To refine what they had rather than starting over from scratch.


But Star Wars was a space opera, fantasy. It was never meant to be serious sci-fi. Hell, I believe George Lucas has said as much in the past. It's a shame so much sci-fi has gone in that direction.

Preaching to the choir, man. It's annoyed me for decades that popular culture came to see Star Wars as the embodiment of what science fiction was when Lucas himself explicitly did not consider it to be science fiction.

And what annoyed me even more was when people took that definition to heart and defensively said "It's not science fiction, it's plausible speculation" about things that really were science fiction by the proper definition. Like season 1 of SeaQuest DSV, which tried to be a scientifically plausible, well-researched extrapolation of the future, essentially hard science fiction, but whose executive producer insisted that it wasn't science fiction, because the public perception was that "science fiction" meant something brainless and fanciful, ignoring what the first 50% of the phrase is. And then the new producers brought in to retool it for season 2 said "Okay, now we're going to embrace doing science fiction" and what they did instead was mindless, incoherent fantasy that made Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea's later seasons look smart. As a science fiction fan and then-aspiring writer, I was deeply insulted that that was what they thought science fiction meant -- and really, that it was what most people in the general public thought it meant.

Fortunately, the reputation of SF has improved since then. It's no longer mistaken for mindless fantasy, and it's no longer a stigmatized label that people who want to do smart shows have to distance themselves from.


Now I will say even TWOK is at least somewhat more intelligent that Star Wars from a science fiction perspective. It's weak in a lot of areas, but they made an attempt to provide some reasoning behind the story.

I don't even bother to make the comparison, because Star Wars has never tried to be science fiction or science anything. It's sword-and-sorcery fantasy and Eastern mysticism dressed up with the semantics of space opera, along with a generous helping of WWII movies, samurai movies, Westerns, and a frisson of American Grafitti.


I think you see some of the same parallels between Alien and Aliens. They were both great films, but I always loved Alien more. Partly because it was a bit more horror--being chased around a spaceship by a hostile alien (at least in that case it takes away the whole 'why don't they just leave' answer like you do in haunted houses). But it also was more serious. Aliens is a great action film certainly. But it's more popcorn fare. It's fun to watch, it keeps your attention and you never get bored, but it's not as high brow as its predecessor.

I don't make a comparison there either, because they weren't even the same genre. Alien was a claustrophobic haunted-house horror movie in space, while Aliens was a military action movie. They weren't trying to do the same thing with different degrees of quality or intelligence; rather, they weren't even trying to do the same thing at all. They took the same core ingredient but made totally different recipes out of it, like the competitors in an Iron Chef episode. That's what makes Aliens such a good sequel -- the fact that it didn't just try to copy the original but followed it up in a totally fresh and expansive way.
 
It's not about the medium, and I'm not saying it's bad. I'm saying that the makers of the sequel conceived of what they were doing, both concept and technique, in a fundamentally different way than the makers of the original did, so they don't fit together conceptually or artistically all that well. I'm not saying Legacy is a bad movie, I'm just saying it's a reinterpretation from the ground up.

Okay?

Although I am saying it's a routine movie. That's the problem. It's a perfectly adequate CGI action movie, but there's nothing particularly special about it because CGI is so commonplace now. The original TRON was not a great movie storywise, no, but it was unique in a way its sequel couldn't even begin to approach. It was a fascinating and ambitious experiment in terms of concept and technique, and it's interesting to think about it in the context of the time it was made and the very different perception of computers that existed in the culture then. I think that glossing over the differences between the two films' underlying intentions and philosophies is losing that historical perspective.

I see. However, when I brought up the movies in the first place, I wasn't really thinking about the stuff as pieces of art of their times, but as two interlinked stories, so we've been kinda having two different conversations.


Again, I'm not talking about whether you can handwave a way to reconcile the two movies, because it's always possible to do that. I'm talking about the underlying intentions of the storytellers and the very different ways they conceived of the computer world. I'm just saying it's important not to make the mistake of assuming that the original TRON was intended to represent a programmed virtual world and avatars the way we might assume it was today. If you look at it closely, it's actually more of a fanciful allegory for what goes on inside a computer, in much the same way that Pixar's Inside Out is an allegory for the workings of the human brain.

I don't think any of us where.

So I don't want to erase that distinction, and I'm not saying there's anything wrong with that distinction. I'm acknowledging the difference between the two films' intentions because it's interesting to recognize and to think about, and because it's a difference that I think most people don't realize is there, which makes it worth calling attention to. I don't want to pretend it doesn't exist. As I keep saying, in-universe continuity is not the only level for discussing fiction. I'm talking about the different creative philosophies of the two sets of filmmakers, because that is a noteworthy thing to recognize about the creative process.

I'm not only a fan of behind-the-scenes filmmaking, I'm a student of history. So I think it's worth recognizing the different historical contexts and creative perspectives of different works of fiction, rather than ignoring that side of them just because they pretend to fit together. When I write Star Trek fiction, I try to treat the stuff from the 1960s and the stuff from today as a single consistent reality, but when I talk about Star Trek as fiction, then I'm going to acknowledge the differences in conception, philosophy, and technique as well as the similarities in-story, because those differences are worth knowing about and understanding.

Right.

Maybe, if it had been made. But it wasn't. The animated series was meant to be consistent with Legacy, and as far as I know, it was.

Okay then.

You don't need permission from a higher authority to see two works of fiction as mutually consistent. You just have to use your own perception of whether there actually are inconsistencies or not.

Makes sense, although you could say that the same for a lot of Trek novels, too.

That's not even close to the same. Mitchell, Dehner, and Decker were dead; there was nothing to be gained by revealing unflattering truths about them, as all it would've done was to bring more sadness to their loved ones. Khan and his people were still alive, in need of observation and safeguarding, as well as an amazingly important find for historians (and Kirk was a history buff himself, remember), and they had no surviving loved ones (aside from Marla) to protect from anything.

I kinda see the point, but that also assumes that the Federation would've been okay with the decision in the first place, which seems really dicey, at best -- esp. considering everything we've learned about Khan and the Eguenics Wars since. I mean, we now know that a century prior, rogue Augments nearly started a war with the Klingons when left to their own devices.

*sigh* Yes, obviously prequel works written after TNG have retroactively used its stricter interpretation in stories set in or before the TOS era. I'm saying that's an error, or at least a retcon.

If the latter, wouldn't we need to take it into account when examining the series in the larger context of the franchise?

Again, I'm not talking about these stories as if they were "real" in a consistent universe -- I'm talking about the different assumptions and intentions made by their creators in different eras, and warning against the fallacy of assuming that the modern interpretation of the work is the same interpretation that its original creators had.

I think you're the only one doing that, as far as the interpretation part, I see what you mean, but would counter point that the original work has been added onto by other creators, so the vacuum that the show existed in during the '60s no longer exists.

Again, the point is that the common modern meme that "Kirk often violated the Prime Directive" is erroneous because it mistakenly assumes TOS's writers were working from TNG's assumptions. If you actually look at the text of TOS, it portrayed Kirk as upholding the Prime Directive by having a zero-tolerance policy toward others' interference. So this is just one of the many, many things that modern culture gets frustratingly wrong about James T. Kirk.

Fair point, but it's TOS and everything else now. :shrug:

Even so, he'd never have earned command of a capital ship if he behaved as unprofessionally and with as much contempt for authority and discipline as modern audiences have somehow come to believe.

Huh?

I think someone like Napoleon would be a better analogy than Hitler. No massacres under his rule, remember? Not to mention the two centuries of distance, which would tend to make historical acts of conquest seem more academic and morally neutral, of great interest to historians.

I would have to disagree:
"Yes, Professor, I know. What if one of those lives I save down there is a child who grows up to be the next Adolf Hitler or Khan Singh? Every first year philosophy student has been asked that question since the earliest wormholes were discovered..." - Picard, "A Matter of Time" (TNG) (my emphasis)
Khan: "Mister Spock, give me my crew."
Spock: "And what will you do when you get them?"
Khan: "Continue the work we were doing before we were banished."
Spock: "Which, as I understand it, involves the mass genocide of any being you find to be less than superior." - Star Trek Into Darkness (my emphasis)

Even in "Space Seed" itself, the "best of tyrants" scene has Spock pointing out that the "Nobel Demon" legend that has been built around Khan has very little basis in fact.

And why in the world would they not leave the colony there? An uninhabited planet is the ideal prison, since there's no way off it. We already know the Federation has plenty of penal colonies; this is just an informal version of the exact same thing. All they'd have to do was set up a permanent monitoring presence.

And again, the explicit analogy was to the settlement of Australia, using prisoners to settle a new land both to reduce prison overcrowding and to facilitate colonial expansion at the same time. Since the 23rd-century Federation was heavily into territorial expansion and colonization, I see no reason they would've objected to using the Augments as prisoner labor to develop Ceti Alpha V as a way to atone for their crimes.

That doesn't sound right, but I can't really explain why.

Because The Wrath of Khan was a stupid movie whose premise made no damn sense, that's the reason. That's my whole point -- that the premise that the colony remained unknown 15 years later is absurd.

We don't actually know that it wasn't unknown. All we know for sure is that Captain Terell didn't know a thing about it and that no support ever came, but it's never clarified if that was because Kirk kept it off the books or just something that fell between the cracks. Either scenario would work with the film as is, just depending on what you think is more plausible all things considered.

(For clarification's sake, do you not like the movie in and of itself, or just how it fits in with the rest of the franchise; I'm having trouble telling the difference here.)

See, this is why you need to consider the creative process and not just the in-universe continuity. The writers chose that name because of the resonance with the historical practice they intended the episode to parallel. They expected their viewers to be historically literate enough to understand what the name Botany Bay meant, and thus to understand the thinking behind Kirk's decision at the end. Writers often name things because of the resonances they want to evoke in the audience's mind, regardless of whether the same reason for the name exists in-story.

Yeah?

The comics' Xavier has regained and re-lost the use of his legs several times over the decades, so that's actually one of the easier things to reconcile in the movie continuity.

Comics and the movies are two different things and what happens in the former is irrelevant to what happens in the latter. The only possibility to explain the problem is the idea in Days of Future Past that Xavier had that medicine to walk at the suppression of his powers, but that doesn't work because the two movies with him walking post-crippling (Origins: Wolverine and X-Men: The Last Stand) also show him using his powers at the same time.

Yes, Picard is hearing about them for the first time, but no, there's no proof that Guinan is the only source of info -- only that she's the only one we see them consulting onscreen. There is no line of dialogue saying "There's nothing in our computers about these Borg." But if you had a choice between reading computer files about stories passed along by the El-Aurian refugees decades ago vs. actually talking to the El-Aurian refugee who was right there on your ship and was a good friend and trusted advisor, which would you pick?

Okay?
 
Last edited:
I kinda see the point, but that also assumes that the Federation would've been okay with the decision in the first place, which seems really dicey, at best -- esp. considering everything we've learned about Khan and the Eguenics Wars since. I mean, we now know that a century prior, rogue Augments nearly started a war with the Klingons when left to their own devices.

Again, why wouldn't they be? I've explained why using an uninhabited planet as a penal colony is something that 23rd-century Starfleet would probably have found reasonable under the circumstances, using the underlying logic intended by TOS's creators. I mean, a wilderness planet is pretty obviously escape-proof, barring outside visitors. It's not like they can just flap their arms and fly back to civilization.

Exile has been used as a standard form of punishment for criminals for thousands of years. It doesn't seem as viable to us today because the world has become so fully explored and interconnected, but it makes sense that it would be revived as a practice in the interstellar age, at least as portrayed on TOS where interstellar travel was not a quick or casual commute.


If the latter, wouldn't we need to take it into account when examining the series in the larger context of the franchise?

It's not an either/or question. Naturally it has been taken into account in an in-series context many times before. I'm just saying that it is also worth talking about it in backstage terms as well as onstage terms. One does not invalidate or drive out the other. On the contrary, you understand a work of fiction better if you consider it from both perspectives.


I think you're the only one doing that, as far as the interpretation part, I see what you mean, but would counter point that the original work has been added onto by other creators, so the vacuum that the show existed in during the '60s no longer exists.

We've gotten so far into the weeds that we've lost track of where this started. My original point was to respond to the statement "Kirk often violated the Prime Directive" by explaining that that's a myth, an error that arises when people mistakenly assume that the Prime Directive in TOS was defined the same way it was in TNG. That argument applies both in-universe and in real life, because it can be taken either as a cultural change in how Starfleet interprets the Directive and a creative change in how writers approached it. They're actually parallel questions, because they both reflect the tendency to see only the letter of the non-interference rule and miss the underlying intention of it.

But it helps to understand the point if you consider it in both the in-story context and the real-world context, because the writers of Star Trek have always used the show as a commentary on the real world, an allegory for world situations and the writers' values. So understanding the difference between the activist, Peace Corps mentality of '60s America and the post-colonialist skepticism of cultural intervention in '80s and '90s America can help contextualize the difference in the in-story portrayals of the Directive. It doesn't benefit us to ignore the real-world context that shapes works of fiction, because works of fiction are meant to reflect and comment on reality, not to be utterly isolated from it. The whole reason they're valuable is because they address real-life concerns.


Comics and the movies are two different things and what happens in the former is irrelevant to what happens in the latter.

You're being too literal again. Obviously they're not the same continuity, but the point is proof of concept. It's not utterly impossible to believe that the movies' Xavier could've regained his mobility temporarily and then lost it again. Heck, it's far from the most inexplicable continuity glitch between X-Men movies.
 
I'm glad they didn't use some sort of made-up pseudo-profanity instead. Made the scene more honest. Plus, I thought it was fucking hilarious the first time I saw it.

Yeah, true. It was always eye rolling when someone made up some corny face swear terms--you knew what it was referring to but it was something made up.

It wasn't a huge deal--it's just that it seemed in Star Trek they purposely seemed to leave that behind. Even the films, at least up to Generations, kept it PG-13 level, and in TVH Spock and Kirk seemed unfamiliar with R-rated swearing.

One of those things, just because you can doesn't necessarily translate to you should. Though I'm glad they're not overdoing it. It would probably become a bigger deal if they were dropping F-bombs in every episode.
 
It was actually the most financially successful Star Trek film prior to 2009, corrected for inflation. People had issues with its story, but it wasn't a commercial failure. The main reason it wasn't as profitable as Paramount wanted is because it was so expensive to make

Yeah, that's true enough. Paramount and the public in general seemed to feel TWOK was the better film, so it ended up being the film a number of the future films used as a benchmark for success.
 
Yeah, true. It was always eye rolling when someone made up some corny face swear terms--you knew what it was referring to but it was something made up.

Really, though, it makes sense that people in the future would use different profanities than we use today. The perception of profanities changes over time, as words that are initially shocking become commonplace and even quaint. Believe it or not, "golly" was a shockingly offensive profanity in Shakespeare's day, because it was derived from "God's body" and referring to God as having physical form was considered highly blasphemous. Yet by the 20th century it had become a silly euphemism associated with children and innocent characters. Similarly, "rats" was probably a far more hard-hitting oath in the days of the Black Plague than it's become today.

You can see the same change happening with profanity today, as terms that used to be utterly verboten in polite conversation are now tossed around freely and casually and even spoken on TV. George Carlin's list of the seven words you can't say on TV has been increasingly whittled down in the decades since. So I don't think those words are going to have the same shock value to future generations that they've had in the past, so they may lose their role as expletives and be replaced by something different, much like "golly" or "rats."
 
  • Like
Reactions: Sci
Really, though, it makes sense that people in the future would use different profanities than we use today. The perception of profanities changes over time, as words that are initially shocking become commonplace and even quaint. Believe it or not, "golly" was a shockingly offensive profanity in Shakespeare's day, because it was derived from "God's body" and referring to God as having physical form was considered highly blasphemous. Yet by the 20th century it had become a silly euphemism associated with children and innocent characters. Similarly, "rats" was probably a far more hard-hitting oath in the days of the Black Plague than it's become today.

You can see the same change happening with profanity today, as terms that used to be utterly verboten in polite conversation are now tossed around freely and casually and even spoken on TV. George Carlin's list of the seven words you can't say on TV has been increasingly whittled down in the decades since. So I don't think those words are going to have the same shock value to future generations that they've had in the past, so they may lose their role as expletives and be replaced by something different, much like "golly" or "rats."

Ok, maybe. It just sounds hokey sometimes. Voyager seemed to do things like that a lot (not so much to substitute for swear words necessarily but switching common phrases and it just sounded goofy a lot).
 
Heh. This reminds of the time another Trek author casually used the f-word in a post and another poster took offense. I had to point out that a lot of us are past or present New Yorkers so that's just the fucking way we talk. No offense should be intended or inferred.

Trust me, get a bunch of Trekkies sitting around a bar at a convention and we're not going to talk like choirboys. We're going to sound more like Spock doubling down on colorful metaphors. :)
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
Again, why wouldn't they be? I've explained why using an uninhabited planet as a penal colony is something that 23rd-century Starfleet would probably have found reasonable under the circumstances, using the underlying logic intended by TOS's creators. I mean, a wilderness planet is pretty obviously escape-proof, barring outside visitors. It's not like they can just flap their arms and fly back to civilization.

Exile has been used as a standard form of punishment for criminals for thousands of years. It doesn't seem as viable to us today because the world has become so fully explored and interconnected, but it makes sense that it would be revived as a practice in the interstellar age, at least as portrayed on TOS where interstellar travel was not a quick or casual commute.

Maybe I'm looking at it wrong, but it doesn't seem to fit somehow. IMHO, it feels as much a punishment as demoting Kirk from admiral to captain was in Voyage Home. Even without the hindsight of Wrath of Khan showing how it all blew up in their collective faces, I'm very unconvinced that Kirk leaving the Augments on Ceti Alpha V was the right decision (granted, that might make it a good companion piece to it's theatrical sequel, which does deal in part with the how the decisions and mistakes of Kirk's past have come back in his present).

It's not an either/or question. Naturally it has been taken into account in an in-series context many times before. I'm just saying that it is also worth talking about it in backstage terms as well as onstage terms. One does not invalidate or drive out the other. On the contrary, you understand a work of fiction better if you consider it from both perspectives.

Okay?

We've gotten so far into the weeds that we've lost track of where this started. My original point was to respond to the statement "Kirk often violated the Prime Directive" by explaining that that's a myth, an error that arises when people mistakenly assume that the Prime Directive in TOS was defined the same way it was in TNG. That argument applies both in-universe and in real life, because it can be taken either as a cultural change in how Starfleet interprets the Directive and a creative change in how writers approached it. They're actually parallel questions, because they both reflect the tendency to see only the letter of the non-interference rule and miss the underlying intention of it.

But it helps to understand the point if you consider it in both the in-story context and the real-world context, because the writers of Star Trek have always used the show as a commentary on the real world, an allegory for world situations and the writers' values. So understanding the difference between the activist, Peace Corps mentality of '60s America and the post-colonialist skepticism of cultural intervention in '80s and '90s America can help contextualize the difference in the in-story portrayals of the Directive. It doesn't benefit us to ignore the real-world context that shapes works of fiction, because works of fiction are meant to reflect and comment on reality, not to be utterly isolated from it. The whole reason they're valuable is because they address real-life concerns.

Huh.

You're being too literal again. Obviously they're not the same continuity, but the point is proof of concept.

The comics are the source material, but they're not very useful for explaining things in the movies, because the movies change things, meaning that it's impossible to know what "counts" and what doesn't. In the comics Havok is younger then Cyclops, where the movies reverse that. Comics Wolverine was put into Weapon X thanks to Romulus, while movie Wolverine was put in there because of an incident in Vietnam. Comics Rev. Stryker was a heretical televangelist who used his platform and followers to fight the X-Men, while. movie Maj. Stryker was a military scientist who headed up the Weapon X project. Comics Angel was a founding X-Men member, while movie Angel was never a member. Comics Laura Kinney/X-23 is a white American clone of Wolverine who lives in the present day and was the singular subject of the Facility's experiments, while the movies Laura/X23-23 is a biracial Mexican test tube baby who was one of many test subjects in Transign's experiments. Need I go on?

It's not utterly impossible to believe that the movies' Xavier could've regained his mobility temporarily and then lost it again. Heck, it's far from the most inexplicable continuity glitch between X-Men movies.

That may be, but with no reason to believe that there was one (except for the discrepancy itself), it's just fan theories all the way down.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top