-Enterprise does not violate canon in any way whatsoever
Because they didn't go home?
Personally, I prefer to think that Reg Barclay was having a grand ol' time in his Voyager "Warp Ten" holodeck simulation.
- If you ignore the whole salamander thing, you've still got the bizarre development that they just casually develop a technology to do the impossible based on an offhand comment by Neelix. We're not talking about a technical difficulty that just needed another perspective, we're talking about something that the laws of (24th-C) physics didn't allow in the first place.
- If you ignore that, you've still got the problem that Voyager now has a way home and doesn't take it. That technology still exists at the end of the episode. Yeah, it turns you into a salamander, but the Doctor is clearly able to turn you back. No lasting consequences are shown to using Warp Ten.
- If you ignore that by saying "but the process can't be controlled!" or whatever, then it'd be good to know why they can't keep working with the process to bring it under control. It should have revolutionized warp drive, with all sorts of implications and possibilities — including multiple variations on getting home. As such, logically it should have been the entire focus of the show after this. Instead, they somehow forgot they had it. The only plausible reason for that is if all the characters suddenly suffered brain damage. Or the writers did.
It violated long-entranced fanon
Do you mean entrenched? I didn't find it that magical, nor did it appeal to my sense of wonder overmuch.
i i agree. I still rewatch it from time to time.SGU is the best Stargate series.
After reading the Snyder cut announcement I was actually coming on here to post the exact same thing!
Unfortunately, no. It pained me, and the episode ended strangely. Just not enjoyable, not fun, leaving me questioning what the writers were thinking.Didn't anyone find it enjoyable? Even in a Fast & Furious kind of way?
Adding in a few minutes of deleted scenes for a "Director's Cut" does not create an all new movie
I completely share this opinion and it has colored me against The Clone Wars and the Mandalorian.Boba Fett is overrated.
In the movie he's just a generic bounty hunter with a cool looking mask. People only know his name cause they said it once during the scene he died. He has no character development until Attack of the Clones, and then it's empty and contrived.
He serves his role in the story just fine but he's no more interesting than any other mask rando in the universe. The only thing that made him even a little cool is all the stuff the fans imagined into him after the fact.
I completely share this opinion and it has colored me against The Clone Wars and the Mandalorian.
It didn't set well with me even trying to watch it with my wife who enjoyed something SW more than me (Ugh, that hasn't happened before!)The Mandalorian is different cause he has character development beyond just having a cool looking mask.
I think it depends on the scenes that are added, even just a few extra minutes can add a lot of character development, or help to clarify plot points that were confusing in the theatrical cut.Adding in a few minutes of deleted scenes for a "Director's Cut" does not create an all new movie
Don't forget the action figure. Both the unicorn like rocket firing version, and the more conventional non-rocket firing version initially only available through a mail in of a certain number of proofs of purchase. That fed a LOT of the mystique of Boba Fett, at least among my friends.Boba Fett is overrated.
In the movie he's just a generic bounty hunter with a cool looking mask. People only knew his name (In the 80s) cause they said it once during the scene he died. He has no character development until Attack of the Clones, and then it's empty and contrived.
He serves his role in the story just fine but he's no more interesting than any other mask rando in the universe. The only thing that made him even a little cool is all the stuff the fans imagined into him after the fact.
Definitely. Boba Fett was a name that never crossed my mind and lips growing up and nobody was talking about him. It was always about Han, Luke, Vader. Then when I got onto the internet I read some people talking about Boba Fett as if he were one of the main cast and i'm like "who the heck is that?". To me he was just a bounty hunter guy who took Han to Jabba and went out like a punk. His name was mentioned like once in the original trilogy during a noisy action scene which I misheard as "bounty hunter" when I rewatched it on VHS.Boba Fett is overrated.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.