Gotcha! Wonder if he'll be part of the upcoming shoots? Almost 30 days out, right?He was on the Axanar panel at Vegas last month, yeah.
Gotcha! Wonder if he'll be part of the upcoming shoots? Almost 30 days out, right?He was on the Axanar panel at Vegas last month, yeah.
Always 30 days out.Gotcha! Wonder if he'll be part of the upcoming shoots? Almost 30 days out, right?
I don't think his calendar is full of any other engagements.......He was on the Axanar panel at Vegas last month, yeah.
I don't think his calendar is full of any other engagements.......
Personally I think the concept of Axanar is brilliant- we get to finally see an epic battle which turned the tide of a war with the Federation's greatest enemy at that time. There are only a couple unseen yet mentioned events in TOS like that, the great Romulan war is another.
This drew me in the first place and I was really excited someone was attempting to show this on screen after so many years. I was not driven to it by disappointment with the Trek franchise, I would have been just as happy to see this if it was featured in any of the other series as well.
Sadly this was not to be. Instead of creating the promised fan film, events took a darker turn and fan films, some of which were exceeding well done, got crippled by the collateral damage.
COMPUTER: James T. Kirk, serial number SC937-0176CEC. Service rank, Captain. Position, Starship command. Current assignment, USS Enterprise. Commendations, Palm Leaf Of Axanar Peace Mission, Grankite Order of Tactics, Class of Excellence, Prantares Ribbon of Commendation, Classes first and second. (from Court-Martial)
KIRK: I agree there was a time when war was necessary, and you were our greatest warrior. I studied your victory at Axanar when I was a cadet. In fact it's still required reading at the Academy.
GARTH: As well it should be.
KIRK: Very well. But my first visit to Axanar was as a new fledged cadet on a peace mission. (from Whom Gods Destroy)
Indeed, the whole Four Years War concept comes from either the Spaceflight Chronology book, which FASA used for their timeline, (early 2200s for the TOS five year mission, or just FASA themselves.There are no references to Klingons in Whom Gods Destroy. Other than a non-canon role playing game supplement that the vast majority of Star Trek fans have never seen a copy of, what's the basis for assuming that Garth was the hero of a pivotal battle in a war against the Klingons?
Here is every canon reference to Axanar from the original series:
There are no references to Klingons in Whom Gods Destroy. Other than a non-canon role playing game supplement that the vast majority of Star Trek fans have never seen a copy of, what's the basis for assuming that Garth was the hero of a pivotal battle in a war against the Klingons?
It MIGHT be, it's been a long time since I've read it too.It's in the Chronology, too? Boy, it's been a long time since I took that one off the shelf. Might be fun to see how completely its history sections have been overwritten by canon.
It was also somebody else's idea, which seems to be a recurring theme with LFIM.Why not the Klingons? It's a fictional war story and the longest running fictional bad guys in Star Trek are lethal, compelling and familiar. Just because LFIM is using them in his theoretical fan film doesn't make it a bad idea to have Garth fighting Klingons. Hell, he's gotta fight somebody, and since, as you pointed out, none of it's canon, until the IP holders name the enemy whoever's writing the story can choose whatever enemy he or she pleases.
So it's only an assumption, sure, but it's a perfectly understandable one.
KIRK: I agree there was a time when war was necessary, and you were our greatest warrior. I studied your victory at Axanar when I was a cadet. In fact it's still required reading at the Academy.
GARTH: As well it should be.
KIRK: Very well. But my first visit to Axanar was as a new fledged cadet on a peace mission.
GARTH: Peace mission! Politicians and weaklings!
KIRK: They were humanitarians and statesmen, and they had a dream. A dream that became a reality and spread throughout the stars, a dream that made Mister Spock and me brothers.
Why not the Klingons? It's a fictional war story and the longest running fictional bad guys in Star Trek . . .
Actually the Romulans were the longest running fictional bad guys in Star Trek, just saying.
True on both counts. I stand corrected.This is true. For that matter, the Gorns have been around longer than Klingons.
And I ask again, who would you pick? I put that question to everybody here. For my own reasons I still think the Klingons are a good enough adversary for any fan narrative depicting the battle.Canonically, Federation first contact with the Axanar occurred in ENT "Fight or Flight."
The triglobulin harvesters who had attacked the Axanar were unknown aliens [https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wik...rant_starships_(22nd_century)#Triglobulin_001]. There's plenty of potential for conflict between the Federation, other unknown powers in the area, and/or possibly including the Axanar themselves.
Powers who had never been named before. I think I implied that clearly enough.And I ask again, who would you pick?
Actually, no you didn't. Saying "There's plenty of potential unknown bad guys" is different from flat out saying "I would pick an unknown bad guy."Powers who had never been named before. I think I implied that clearly enough.
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