Star Trek has been in a real dark mood lately. It's looking at "Balance of Terror" and going, "Yep, that was a good day."
And this time it was Tomlinson who lost Martine. They just can't win.
Star Trek has been in a real dark mood lately. It's looking at "Balance of Terror" and going, "Yep, that was a good day."
In the Kelvinverse, they BOTH die!And this time it was Tomlinson who lost Martine. They just can't win.
Off topic, but I did like the line in Myriad Universes A Less Perfect Union where the Commander says to Kirk "I am glad that in this reality I can call you friend."There's a bitter, bitter irony in echoing the Commander's line about how "In another reality, [Kirk/Pike] and I might have been friends" in this episode. No, you wouldn't have. In no reality is that possible, we've just checked.
There's a bitter, bitter irony in echoing the Commander's line about how "In another reality, [Kirk/Pike] and I might have been friends" in this episode. No, you wouldn't have. In no reality is that possible, we've just checked.
Star Trek has been in a real dark mood lately. It's looking at "Balance of Terror" and going, "Yep, that was a good day."
Was just about to post something along these exact same lines myself, here. Also, absolutely loved that we finally got the return of the future "Monster Maroon" TOS movie-era uniforms onscreen in this episode.I won't see it for weeks, but a certain visual in SNW S01E10 bears a striking resemblance to a certain time-travelling double issue of the Early Voyages comics.
I wonder if the decision to make the Peregrine a Connie lookalike made them want to make Farragut a different class, so we didn't keep seeing Enterprise clones over and over again on the screen?
Plus, in the battle scenes, having the Farragut look substantially different to Enterprise gives the viewer an immediate situational awareness of what they are seeing that would otherwise be ambiguous, if both Federation ships were the same.
Debt of Honor left the saucer intact. sauté in a pan with some eggs and two new nacelles... last night's leftover starship is pasta mama.. continuity intact.. the new canonical visual-design of the NCC-1647 sorta blows up several offscreen stories (including the novels The Ashes of Eden, Vulcan's Forge, and the My Brother's Keeper-trilogy, DC TOS Vol. 1, Annual #1; DC TOS Vol. 2, #64; the DC Comics graphic novel Debt of Honor, and several FASA RPG sourcebooks). Guess we'll just have to mentally retcon the Farragut's appearance...
Vanguard and the Seven Deadly Sins novella "The First Peer" promoted ENT season 4 character Vrax to become the unnamed Praetor mentioned in TOS. Now, SNW has shown that Praetor to be an unnamed younger woman.
It is technically possible the office-holder is a different person during "Balance of Terror" of the prime timeline, but I feel that arrangement would undermine the aesop of "A Quality of Mercy".
Vanguard and the Seven Deadly Sins novella "The First Peer" promoted ENT season 4 character Vrax to become the unnamed Praetor mentioned in TOS. Now, SNW has shown that Praetor to be an unnamed younger woman.
It is technically possible the office-holder is a different person during "Balance of Terror" of the prime timeline, but I feel that arrangement would undermine the aesop of "A Quality of Mercy".
It is technically possible the office-holder is a different person during "Balance of Terror" of the prime timeline, but I feel that arrangement would undermine the aesop of "A Quality of Mercy".
This is Romulus, not Earth. And if that were true, then the entire premise of Nemesis would be meaningless.Nothing requires there to be only one Praetor. In Ancient Rome, the title referred to a chief magistrate or army commander, and there could be more than one at a time. Diane Duane's My Enemy, My Ally gave the Romulans a 12-member Praetorate, like the Roman Empire under Augustus. (Under Emperor Tiberius, there were 16 praetors.)
This is Romulus, not Earth.
And if that were true, then the entire premise of Nemesis would be meaningless.
The idea of there being multiple Praetors actually works to explain what would otherwise be an oddity with this episode, in that why would the Praetor be showing up to a battlefield. This individual being one of many Praetors certainly makes much more sense than the Head of State personally leading the charge in response to what was a response to a reinforcement request.
I don't necessarily know that the writers of VOY, DS9, and NEM even meant for it all to fit together that way, but it did fit nicely and it worked. But, as Christopher rightly points out, there is literally nothing canonical requiring the Romulan constitutional system of the 2370s to work the same way in the 2260s.
the entire premise of Nemesis would be meaningless.
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