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Spoilers Strange New Worlds General Discussion Thread

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One of the dumbest things I've ever made :D
Burnham: Meanwhile I had a relationship every season.
 
Which implies that Kirk knew he had a grown son and the only surprise was that he was working with his mother on Regula 1. Nothing about David was a shock to Kirk.
This is completely beside the point. When your son's mother tells you to get lost (all but issuing a restraining order probably too) that seriously messes with a guy. You are not eagerly jumping into the arms of the next woman without seriously reflecting again and again and again just what went wrong.

I certainly would not be as loose and free spirited with the ladies in TOS like Kirk was with that kind of trauma.
 
I have a hard time separating the character from her actress and particularly what the actress says. It's her right to say such stuff I suppose but I don't agree with it.
Awww. I wish you had never prompted me to Google that. It's been a hard enough few years after already losing all respect for Mathangi "M.I.A." Arulpragasam.

I also just read she was in a London actors bible group. That is so so far from the type of group activities my London actor friends were engaged in.
 
This is completely beside the point. When your son's mother tells you to get lost (all but issuing a restraining order probably too) that seriously messes with a guy. You are not eagerly jumping into the arms of the next woman without seriously reflecting again and again and again just what went wrong.

I certainly would not be as loose and free spirited with the ladies in TOS like Kirk was with that kind of trauma.
Um...depends on the person.
 
Actually yes. To me at least. While it's clear WOK is financially successful and well received, I personally didn't like that aspect at all.

Strangely it seems when I'm asked these questions I often have to give a https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/BluntYes . I wonder if the questioners expect that...
Huh, so not only can't they change anything in the continuity, characters can't change in-continuity either.
 
You certainly could change his background, but at a certain point when is he no longer James Bond, but a new character with the same name?

At the point where the fundamentals of the characters are changed. His skin colour and precise upbringing are not fundamental.
 
Huh, so not only can't they change anything in the continuity, characters can't change in-continuity either.
Oh they can. I just might not feel it's very good. Like in Star Wars (spoilers for Boba Fett)
Yes Boba hiding in the desert for 5 years doesn't contradict Disney's new canon per se. But is it at all like what we know about him?
 
Oh they can. I just might not feel it's very good. Like in Star Wars (spoilers for Boba Fett)
Yes Boba hiding in the desert for 5 years doesn't contradict Disney's new canon per se. But is it at all like what we know about him?
Yes it is. The point of change in characters is the simple fact that they are responding to new stressors. It's going to impact how they respond.
 
At the point where the fundamentals of the characters are changed. His skin colour and precise upbringing are not fundamental.

How precise are we talking? For example, Eggsy's lower class background from Kingsman is completely inappropriate for James Bond, and they are both British white secret service agents. Eggsy's upbringing is precisely what distinguishes him as a different character, and not a James Bond Rip-off.
 
Oh they can. I just might not feel it's very good. Like in Star Wars (spoilers for Boba Fett)
Yes Boba hiding in the desert for 5 years doesn't contradict Disney's new canon per se. But is it at all like what we know about him?
The Book of Boba Fett is outstanding. They took a non-character, a cipher, a nobody without any attributes of personhood except only the most superficial (at least as far as the saga films are concerned) and made him a character who developed substantially as a person over the course of the series.
 
The Book of Boba Fett is outstanding. They took a non-character, a cipher, a nobody without any attributes of personhood except only the most superficial (at least as far as the saga films are concerned) and made him a character who developed substantially as a person over the course of the series.
Boba spoilers
Except he actually had a lot of character that the show didn't touch on, even after Disney's reboot. He blames the clones/Empire for helping the Jedi kill his dad. He hates Jedi for killing his dad. Neither is addressed in the show, and in fact Grogu shows up within fighting range of him and nothing comes of it. Fennec Shand outright killed his parental figure Taun We. It's never brought up in the show. Of all the history that Boba had, they literally took a bounty hunter who only interacted with Boba in one episode of the Clone Wars to be his final showdown.
 
Huh, so not only can't they change anything in the continuity, characters can't change in-continuity either.
Oh they can. I just might not feel it's very good. Like in Star Wars (spoilers for Boba Fett)
Yes Boba hiding in the desert for 5 years doesn't contradict Disney's new canon per se. But is it at all like what we know about him?
If a character cannot change or grow over the course of a story, there is no point in telling stories at all. By your definition, all literature should be little more than Wikipedia articles.
 
If a character cannot change or grow over the course of a story, there is no point in telling stories at all. By your definition, all literature should be little more than Wikipedia articles.
There's a difference in growing a character and artificially knocking them down and "regrowing" them back to where they were to begin with to create the illusion of development. See decent man Poe Dameron in Star Wars 7, magically became a jerk in 8, then "grows" back to being a decent character in that movie and 9--back to where he started.

Regressing Kirk to have custody issues that never were mentioned before is part of this retroactive knocking down, rather than growing him with new relationships.
 
There's a difference in growing a character and artificially knocking them down and "regrowing" them back to where they were to begin with to create the illusion of development. See decent man Poe Dameron in Star Wars 7, magically became a jerk in 8, then "grows" back to being a decent character in that movie and 9--back to where he started.

Regressing Kirk to have custody issues that never were mentioned is part of this retroactive knocking down, rather than growing him with new relationships.
That's not "artificially regressing" a character, that's you missing the point. In Episode 8, Poe's ego got the best of him and he became dangerously reckless, to the point of it costing lives for him to get a victory. That's not artificial. It happens. Look up "hubris". And rightly so, the higher-ups lost confidence in his ability to make sound tactical decisions. He had to correct his thinking and regain their trust. Again, nothing artificial. It's called a redemption arc. Look that up, too.

Kirk didn't "regress" with regard to David. He was disappointed Carol didn't tell David about him. You're reading WAY too much into the situation.
 
That's not "artificially regressing" a character, that's you missing the point. In Episode 8, Poe's ego got the best of him and he became dangerously reckless, to the point of it costing lives for him to get a victory. That's not artificial. It happens. Look up "hubris". And rightly so, the higher-ups lost confidence in his ability to make sound tactical decisions. He had to correct his thinking and regain their trust. Again, nothing artificial. It's called a redemption arc. Look that up, too.

Kirk didn't "regress" with regard to David. He was disappointed Carol didn't tell David about him. You're reading WAY too much into the situation.
I agree. Poe was fine. Same with Kirk. Well. TMP and TWOK did repeat the "Kirk feels moribund in his current position. " idea.
 
You certainly could change his background, but at a certain point when is he no longer James Bond, but a new character with the same name? He's not the blank slate April is. I don't know where that line is. I do know that making a new character and putting a legacy name on them to ensure box office performance is intellectually dishonest.



Wouldn't that mean Black Panther is not a diverse movie, as the vast majority of the cast are the same race?
So you expecting the next Bond to forget he died and that he has a daughter? How would that affect the character?
Each new incarnation of Bond changed the character and the audience accepted those changes, why, because the performers were all white?
No, Black Panther is not a diverse movie, the fact it was a cultural phenomena reveals something about the society that produced it.
 
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