Nor do I expect them to be.Right. I never say nobody else can play him. (RECAST LEIA!) But nobody else will ever quite be that character. Such is the way of things.
Nor do I expect them to be.Right. I never say nobody else can play him. (RECAST LEIA!) But nobody else will ever quite be that character. Such is the way of things.
Star Trek needs to absolutely stop putting real-life dates on its events.
Just use Stardates - that's the whole reason they were invented for - or be very, very vague ("in the 23rd century", "200 years ago"...)
That reminds me. The 100th anniversary of Star Trek is only three years after First Contact Day. I can't believe that I'm going to be around to see Star Trek turn 100.Then again, being able to celebrate First Contact Day on april 5th (and to tell ourselves that it's only 40 years away now) is also kind of fun.
Controversial Opinion:
Star Trek doesn't need to be "special" or "groundbreaking." It just needs to be good and entertaining.
Thank you.
Some fans want it to be The Godfather but with starships. Stop wanting prestige entertainment and just try to be entertained by what it actually is.
I agree in principle.
Then again, being able to celebrate First Contact Day on april 5th (and to tell ourselves that it's only 40 years away now) is also kind of fun.
PICARD: A missile complex? ...The date? Mister Data, I need to know the exact date.
DATA: Stardate minus zero zero zero 1
PICARD: minus 1?
RIKER: The day before First Contact.
Could have worked too, I suppose. (though it probably conflicts with other sources on when stardate 0 is supposed to be) .
whaaa? I didn’t post that…
My apologies. Something must have gone wrong with using the quote function and cutting and pasting. I'll correct it.
It was a Good Thing that ENT never attempted the Romulan War, because that would’ve killed the series sooner – regular viewers aren’t interested in the Romulans, and nerdy superfans would’ve been constantly raging with all the continuity violations required to make the conflict viable as a televisual spectacle.
ENT would’ve done better had a memorable, interesting villain / antagonist alien race been introduced in the pilot. Except we got the Klingons again and little green men in red leotards.
I want that. Or Lawrence of Arabia with spaceships?Some fans want it to be The Godfather but with starships.
Yes. Give me characters to care about, engaging stories and a little optimism. Entertainment first and foremost.Thank you.
Some fans want it to be The Godfather but with starships. Stop wanting prestige entertainment and just try to be entertained by what it actually is.
I wish they'd kept the cloven hands as well. Five fingered Tellarites don't look right to me.I thought Star Trek continues Did the proper thing with Tellarites, by keeping the pig snouts.
Controversial Opinion:
Star Trek doesn't need to be "special" or "groundbreaking." It just needs to be good and entertaining.
Trek producers just love an excuse to use cheap sets and props just hanging around on the Paramount back lot.
If anything, the people in charge of making it need to understand that too. They should accept it for what it is as well, and add to the narrative of it instead of continuing to feel the need to re-align, correct, re-interpret, and constantly update what's come before.Thank you.
Some fans want it to be The Godfather but with starships. Stop wanting prestige entertainment and just try to be entertained by what it actually is.
If anything, the people in charge of making it need to understand that too. They should accept it for what it is as well, and add to the narrative of it instead of continuing to feel the need to re-align, correct, re-interpret, and constantly update what's come before.
I'll add my own controversial opinion: The most successful franchise in the history of media features a super-soldier from World War II dressed in the American flag, a giant green rage monster, and a Norse alien with a magic hammer. Marvel largely didn't alter the fundamental aspects of their characters or feel they need to make them more "believable" for modern audiences with messy and convoluted justifications. They said here's a talking raccoon and tree. Live with it.
If modern audiences are willing to accept all of that, they'll accept a story whose foundation is a TV show with cardboard sets, blinking lights, and 1960s goofiness if it's a good story.
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