Chekov was never the same after the earwig.
Was that really worse than later when he fell on his head?
Chekov was never the same after the earwig.
To use the WORD "CANON" during the time of Gene Roddenberry and Richard Arnold when they were outlining the "rules". We now have these canon nazis that can't see the forest for the trees, and find detail to be more important than themes. This was to the great detriment to Trek and fandom.
RAMA
Hell, it was constantly changing during TOS!
It's okay I love prequels enough for the both of us. They challenge our preconceptions and I love that.Prequels. They serve no purpose
It's okay I love prequels enough for the both of us. They challenge our preconceptions and I love that.
It's okay I love prequels enough for the both of us. They challenge our preconceptions and I love that.
I guess it depends how important continuity is to you. A prequel that adds nothing we don't already know about is pointless. A prequel that makes us re-examine the originals in a new light can be amazing.The problem with prequels is that they never work. The writers can't just do what they are supposed to and show us how things we know of, started; They keep adding things that we've never heard of and so after a time the prequel becomes a jumble of anachronisms and inexplicable crap and defeats its purpose.
Indeed, yes. The point of a prequel is to go "Oh, I didn't realize that!" rather than "Oh, ok, that makes sense."I guess it depends how important continuity is to you. A prequel that adds nothing we don't already know about is pointless. A prequel that makes us re-examine the originals in a new light can be amazing.
Because what he know of probably didn't have that much thought put in to it in the first place. It started out as Character A is Awesome and he had a bit of a backstory but that's not important to the story being told. The audience gets hints at it and then fills in the gaps. So, the prequel forces a relooking at it and that's not always fun.The problem with prequels is that they never work. The writers can't just do what they are supposed to and show us how things we know of, started; They keep adding things that we've never heard of and so after a time the prequel becomes a jumble of anachronisms and inexplicable crap and defeats its purpose.
I never could get behind Sisko's role being partly due to a human/alien joining. It ruined the whole thing for me. I like humans to stay human in that I think that it took away from his destiny rather than add to it. I rather him just be seen as the right person for the job based on his personality and abilities. Fated and war just doesn't... uh well its a personal feeling. I think he was cooler without that. Plus I liked his moments with his father and I think it alters the humanity of the series a bit. I like humans in amazing situations better when it comes to Trek.
No, prequel is not required to so that. I'd rather see new stuff that happens before what we've seen than explaining how things we've seen got to be.The problem with prequels is that they never work. The writers can't just do what they are supposed to and show us how things we know of, started; They keep adding things that we've never heard of and so after a time the prequel becomes a jumble of anachronisms and inexplicable crap and defeats its purpose.
Everyone knows the Klingons were simply a bunch of space Mongols with shoecream in their faces in TOS. To canonise that is to canonise low-budget production.
Another bad canon decision, to imply women could not be Starfleet captains Thanks to Turnabout intruder and The Enterprise incident the Romulans were less sexist than the Federationistas (humans)
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