I think it would be comparable to trying to follow some obscure Franz Joseph blueprints most people are not even aware of to the tiniest detail.As it is pointless to get every detail of the Enterprise right?
I think it would be comparable to trying to follow some obscure Franz Joseph blueprints most people are not even aware of to the tiniest detail.As it is pointless to get every detail of the Enterprise right?
The exact opposite actually. TOS is some kind of super-canon.
No matter which iteration of Star Trek - the TNG/DS9/VOY-era, the TOS-movies, TAS, ENT, the Kelvin-timeline, the DISCO-variant - the one thing they all have in common is they all are in continuity with the original series.
Our first image of STO's model
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Do you have a link to the original article or site?
"Whether or not we use the language as spelled out in Marc's dictionary is up to the individual writer. I personally find the dictionary cumbersome and usually find it easier to make it up phonetically." - Ronald D. Moore
departures from Okrand's version included the following:
- The writers made up their own Klingon words: e.g kuva'magh or pfiots, against Okrand's pronunciation rules of standard tlhIngan Hol
- They used established Klingon words but in such a way that they were strung together without following Okrand's grammar rules, for example SoH batlh jI' for "you honor me", even though this sentence means something like "I am a honor you are". The correct translation of "you honor me" would be choquvmoH or tuquvmoH, depending on whether you referred to one person or multiple people.
- They gave new or extended meaning based on the English translation of a word, for example pu'DaH(pronounced poo-dakh) – phasers and cha (pronounced chah) – torpedoes, becomes pu'Dah dak cha(pronounced puh-dar dack chah) meaning photon torpedoes, when Okrand had already devised ' otlh cha.
- Okrand specified that Klingons do not have any rituals for ending conversations, since courtesy was not part of their culture. A conversation simply ends when either participant leaves. However, Qapla' ("success") is often used in dialogue where English-speaking Humans would say, "good-bye".
The continuity and world building is rather pointless as well. The only reason to object to the Klingons has nothing to due with getting them "right" but because the actors are limited in their emoting. This is the logic that I see in this argument. I do not agree with it.It is pointless for the producers to waste their time getting the fictional language 'right' as it makes absolutely no difference to 99.99% of the viewers.
And yet TOS contradicted itself all the time, evolving as it went along. I took your post as making a parallel between the two, even considering my post to be rather redundant, and here you disagree.
But as far as aknowledging goes - TOS is really the one thing connecting the Trek 'verse.
The Kelvin timeline and the DISCO-timeline have some fundamental discrepancies (contact with the Klingons, Spock serving under Pike, Vulcan getting blow'ed up) - but even these two, most incompatible iterations of the Trek verse - share one common element: In both their continuities, TOS has taken place.
Is it not backstory for Spock Prime?I'm sorry, what? TOS has _not_ taken place in the Kelvin timeline since the change occurs several decades prior to it, and the latest movie, Beyond, is still a few years prior to it. Hell, even The Cage doesn't occur, given that the Enterprise is christened in 2258, four years after the events of the pilot in the Prime timeline.
Is it not backstory for Spock Prime?
I thought @Rahul was pointing out that TOS is the thing both Disco and Kelvin built primarily upon.Who comes from a different timeline, yes. But then so's the rest of the Prime series, including Discovery.
Enterprise technically exists in all the series.
It's the true glue holding the universe(s) together.
FTFYArcher has all the rights to gloat after all that UPN and PART OF the fanbase put his series through.![]()
I found the show to be fine myself, the first season was slow and the Xindi storyline put me to sleep but it did improve eventually, the Romulan/Vulcan and Temporal Cold War storylines were great.FTFY
(I liked ENTERPRISE from the get go, not including TATV)
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The one aspect I could not stand was the theme song, it put me off from the moment it first played, it's not that it's a bad song or sung badly it's just that it had no business being played during any sci-fi series never mind Star Trek and when I heard it for the first time I thought it was a joke or I was on the wrong channel.
Can you imagine if that was played at the start of Star Wars or Babylon 5.
It didn't help first impressions at all, I do wonder who exactly decided it would be a good idea to use it, would be nice to find out and hear what other songs were considered as well.
The one aspect I could not stand was the theme song, it put me off from the moment it first played, it's not that it's a bad song or sung badly it's just that it had no business being played during any sci-fi series never mind Star Trek and when I heard it for the first time I thought it was a joke or I was on the wrong channel.
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