Except that things during TVH would have gone much more smoothly if they'd had a top-of-the-line starship to work with instead of a Klingon BOP.I miss Waldenbooks, KB Toys, etc.
The Voyage Home really needed to be TMP era—the shuttlebay gives the whales enough room at least.
TMP—the first season on TNG… all very heady.
A previous discussion
The Motion Picture era in literature
Hi there, I've just watched the 4k director's edition of The Motion Picture and was wondering if there are many novels that explore the era from around this time up until the Wrath of Khan?www.trekbbs.com
One that I do remember fondly from the pre-TNG era is Strangers from the Sky. While the story no longer fits into canon events, it was very entertaining and thought-provoking and based much of it's background on the old Star Trek Chronology from 1980. I still have a hard-cover edition of it, which I may just fit into my reading pile for the coming year, just for nostalgia.
I loved the Chronology, and still have my original copy of it (and in decent shape for nearly 45 year old book!)
It's sort of a shame that all that background material is no longer valid, due to everything that came along after its publication. There was a lot of well thought out ideas in there, along with a wealth of truly wonderful drawings and images of pre-TOS ships.
It's mainly only the dates. A lot of elements would still work with existing canon.
You are correct. In the second episode of Season 2, we learned (from T'Pol's family history) that a team of Vulcans, which included her great-grandmother, crashed on Earth shortly after the launch of Sputnik 1 in 1957 - basically retconning the events of Star Trek: First Contact.I haven't watched much ENT but they have also stated that there were Vulcans on Earth earlier than 2063 as well, haven't they?
And your memory is far better than mine - I didn't remember that she had referenced GR's novelization of TMP that much. I'm definitely going to give it a re-read later on this year.
These are fantastic instincts all round. Go with it.Now I'm getting the urge to go watch 'WNMHGB' again on P+ as well as TMP.
I haven't watched much ENT but they have also stated that there were Vulcans on Earth earlier than 2063 as well, haven't they?
That history books don't always have the real story.
I really like the Chronology as well. My only issue with it is that a majority of the ships don't really seem "Star Trek" enough, so there isn't really any cohesiveness to how starships developed. I sometimes wonder if Sternbach was brought in last minute to illustrate it so he had to fill things in with a bunch of generic-looking scifi rockets combined with the ring ship Enterprise and a couple of new designs with saucers and warp engines.I loved the Chronology, and still have my original copy of it (and in decent shape for nearly 45 year old book!)
It's sort of a shame that all that background material is no longer valid, due to everything that came along after its publication. There was a lot of well thought out ideas in there, along with a wealth of truly wonderful drawings and images of pre-TOS ships.
Yeah, it holds together a lot better than it probably should given the 850+ episodes made since it was written.It's mainly only the dates. A lot of elements would still work with existing canon.
Oh, TWOK is absolutely a soft reboot of Star Trek for the movie era. There's no reference to anything that happened in TMP outside of the sets being largely the same, and even there they did things like rearrange the wedges of the bridge set to make it look closer to TOS. You can honestly just go from watching TOS straight into TWOK and not feel like you missed anything.But TWOK wasn’t what I had been really hoping for. Make no mistake, TWOK was a roller coaster action/adventure with good lines and decent character moments. It is arguably Star Trek’s most popular film throughout the franchise. But it also feels like something of a reboot.
I agree that the 2001 Director's Cut is a much better film than what came out in 1979. But even after the subsequent revision in 2022 (which I only watched once a year or two back), it's still majorly flawed in terms of story, pacing, and character development. TWOK is much closer to the mark in terms of what I wanted to see for Kirk, Spock, and McCoy.Flash forward forty years and we finally got the completed version of TMP—the version we should have gotten back in ‘79. No, it’s not perfect, but it is so much better than what was originally released.
I honestly don't think it would've made much of a difference. All of the "Star Trek: The Motionless Picture" criticisms still apply to the revised versions of the film. It still really slows down after the first hour and features endless scenes of the crew just reacting to special effects. And Stephen Collins' blandness as Decker and Persis Khambatta's extremely wooden acting don't exactly help.There is no way to know how much better TMP would have been received if it had been properly completed in 1979. And there is no way to know if what we had gotten afterward would have indeed been better than what we got.
Not really. They missed the mark in the first film, and they course corrected in the second. So I don't have a high degree of curiosity about seeing more of an underwhelming version of Trek.Anyway, does anyone else wonder about what we might have had if they had continued in the TMP era?
I second this recommendation. That mini (by Glenn Greenberg and Mike Collins) was a lot of fun.I recommend giving them a go, or at least the Marvel 5-issue series. Despite having all the obvious cheeky nods of 'Oh that's going to happen in TWOK and the sequels' through some dialogue and developments, I think it works things out in a nice way that gives a good sampling of how it must've been at that time during that second 5 year mission. Also it's some reasonably good art of them and when it comes to TMP uniforms that's all I ever ask for.
And Xon's intended character arc of trying to emulate human emotions was more or less moved over to Data on TNG, just as Decker & Troi's romantic backstory was recycled for Riker & Troi. Most abandoned ideas tend to find their way into writers' subsequent projects one way or another. Roddenberry's recycling is just more obvious than most.And yet Lieutenant Xon essentially morphed into the male Dr Savik, who morphed into the female Lieutenant Saavik, who morphed into Lieutenant Valeris.
There were already age jokes about the TOS in the early 1980s, as they were all in their 50s and 60s. Meyer and Bennett decided they should stop pretending the cast hadn't aged since 1969 and turn a potential handicap into a strength.Instead, we did indeed get a soft reboot. Kirk is obsessed with his age, even though he's only fifty. It seems to me that this shouldn't be the big issue it was made into in a 23rd century setting, but I get why Meyer went that way.
Yeah, I was very disappointed that Gary Mitchell was sidelined by an injury in Enterprise: The First Adventure. I enjoyed seeing Gary in Mike W. Barr and David Ross' version of Kirk's first mission aboard the Enterprise. It seems silly to write in an earlier era of Trek and not lean into what made that era different from TOS. I wasn't terribly nuts about Kirk's first mission being the 23rd Century equivalent of a USO tour, either.The thing about Strangers? It was actually a little better than I remembered it. It had a lot more Gary Mitchell than I remembered. (He was kind of written out of Enterprise: The First Adventure a year previously so I might have been more sensitive to any time he was not "on screen".) But he might be in it more than Spock! He does constantly call Kirk "kid". I wonder if MWB thought Gary was older (Kirk being the wunderkind) or if this was part of him just being SO Gary, even though Gary (both Mitchell and Lockwood) is younger.
Yeah, true. Which is a shame, as I liked a lot of the Trek history established in the 1980s comics and novels.Of course I'm more nostalgic for this version of Star Trek "history" than I was at the time. At the time there was some competition from various sources and the Spaceflight Chronology wasn't my favorite. But now all of the 1980's versions of Star Trek have all been overwritten and to a certain extent overwritten again.
Oh, it SO is. But the joke only works if you know Jim is older. But I do, so it does.Calling Kirk "kid" even though he's younger than Kirk seems like a very Gary Mitchell thing to do.![]()
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.