i used to like alien, rewatching it a couple months ago I found it REALLY dated.
Alien dated? No, not at all. Still one of the best horror movies I've seen.
It’s another continuity. There is literally no effect on TOS. Come on, you can grasp this!
I can live with it as long as it doesn't affect future moves, series or books where the stories are set in the 24th century. But I still think it was stupid.
what would that episode be?
An episode in season six of VOY where a main character which was dumped for dubious reasons in season 4 was brought back only to be humiliated and destroyed.
how is finally making peace and even ending up sharing a planet “totally ruining” them? May I remind you that the concept of a future reunification is something that had been pondered about way back since TOS season 3? By the 32nd century it seems only natural a development to
I consider it ruining when two important species in the Star Trek history is squashed together in some half-a**ed, light-beer version of the previous species, especially the way it was done. If they had omitted the destruction of Romulus, I would have had at least some understanding for it.
To quote William Shatner: change is life. If you can’t accept change you are not living.
I can accept changes. But not bad changes. If I just sat down and accepted bad changes, I would be a coward and couldn't even look in a mirror. That's not me. I fight!
And should I happen to lose, then I would at least sleep well every night knowing that I at least tried.
Discovery’s romulans are exactly like TOS’s/TNG’s.
Are they. I hot the impression from commente here that they and the Vulcans have become something in-between what they used to be
actually Germans still have a lot of collective guilt about that.
I have friends in Germany so I know that. And I can understand that they feel guilt.
But they shouldn't be attacked and accused for what happened in a time when they weren't even born.
Holmes is a fictional character, he "lives" where ever the author places him. He's more than the 19th Century, a pipe and a funny hat. The funny hat didn't even originate in the stories. And Bond is not a detective. I have to wonder how much you actually know about Holmes or Bond, for that matter.
And this makes me wonder how much you know about Star Trek. It was created in part to comment on the "dystopian 1960's politics and squabble" that was part of the "crap" we who lived through those years endured.
OK, Bond is an agent. I have to correct myself there.
And I've seen all James Bond movies, have most of them on DVD, read many books and watched series about the 19th century Sherlock Holmes as well. Unfortunately, there is nothing in neither the books nor the series which inclined that Holmes can time -travel.
As for Star Trek and it's comments on the politics of the 60's, at least it was well done. Not to mention that the 60's was a much more funny and optimistic time period than the dystopian 2020's.
Yes, it is hard. And James Bond continues on currently in the current year.
There is nothing that mandates keeping a character in a certain time period. Nothing. Not a damn thing. There have been modern adaptations of Shakespeare, of Holmes, of Jules Verne and others. Nothing is damaged or altered.
I know that. But sometimes it comes out as very silly.
Has the movies and series makers of today lost the ability to come up with new, interesting charactesr?
Yes. And the movie is still good. Both are true at the same time.
I agree that
Con Air is a good movie despite the over-done scenes at the end.
Not the point. The point is that multiple timelines can exist at once and have since TOS. The Kelvin universe is just another timeline, and that's it.
I still find it a bit unnecessary to create that scenario.
Nothing about this is real. They are not real. They are allowed to be reinterpreted, and have since TMP forward reinterpret them, and again in TSFS and again in TNG. Which one is the real Klingon?
I guess that the fans of TOS will claim that the TOS Klingons are the "real Klingons" and fans of TNG, DS9 and VOY would vote for the Klingons in those series. Anyway, there have been a lot of debates about that and many suggestions how to explain the "in-universe change" other than the fact that new posibilties for better make up in the TV studios in the Gray Universe made the change possible.
But all of a sudden we have a third version of Klingons, very bad ones too. And that in the 23th century.
So what happened to the "Mutant Ninja Turtles Klingons"? were they exterminated by the "real Klingons". Or have they gone back to their home planet Turtelia to plan a revenge?
They don't. Those shows stand apart. They cannot be impacted because their stories are already told. If I watch TOS I don't sit there and go "Oh, no, in the future Spock will be killed." I watch the episode. DS9 same way. These shows all exist as self-contained units within the Trek universe. Nothing is ruined here. It's just another interpretation of a fictional world. One can disagree with it, but that doesn't change it.
This is why SNW and TOS are both fine in my mind. They are not usurping the other's place. They are merely adaptations of events in universe, not strict literal historical truth.
Yes, but the problem is how all this will affect future Trek series and books where the stores are set in the 24th century?
Will the Romulans and Vulcans in such series or books be Romulcans, just as if characters like Vreenak, Tomalak, Tuvok, Vorik and other Romulans or Vulcans never existed or show up as totally different in looks and ways thanthey were in TNG, DS9 and VOY?
Sorry to say but that's why Roddenberry came up with Trek was to comment on contemporary politics.
I know that. But it was better done than it is today.
My God.
Technically this is a spoiler for Picard Season 3, but I'll chance it. I'll be the one to fall on that grenade. Worf looks like Worf in Picard Season 3. They didn't change his makeup. They just made him look older.
Most likely the Discovery Klingon makeup, in general, has been abandoned. A Klingon hasn't been seen in Discovery since Season 2. I think they're trying to make us forget about them. The change to their makeup is one change that isn't going to stick.
Well, in that case it looks like that they realized that the "Turtles" look was a mistake.
So why did they come up with it in the first place?
As far as Vulcans and Romulans reunifying, that was Spock's goal in "Unification": That they reunite and become one people again. That episode was from TNG and made in 1991. Discovery, now in the 32nd Century, took that to its logical conclusion. The only reason you don't like Vulcans and Romulans being reunited is because it happened in DSC. If it had been done on TNG or DS9, you'd have no problem with it. And don't even try to say you would've had a problem with it, if it had been done over there.
So all of a sudden, DSC is set in the 32nd century? Oh dear!
maybe they should have the Deep Purple song "You keep On Moving" as constant background sound in each episode.
When it comes to the Romulan-Vulcan reunification, what I don't like is the destruction of Romulus and that it was set in the 23th century (correct me if I'm wrong) plus the fact that the forced unification will result in two great species done and the merger will result in some weak combination of both species.
If it had been a peaceful reunification, like the one Spock was working for in TNG, I may have accepted it.
But it would still be a pity to ruin what we had when it comes to Romulans and Vulcans.
However, my greatest concern is how it affects possible future series and books with stories set in the 24th century. If, let's say Vreenak or Tomalak shows up in a future book in the 24th century, will they be different from what they were in DS9.
My dear friend, you should really work on your debating skills.