Only if you assume it's a Gregorian calendar date. Before TNG: "The Neutral Zone" locked down its calendar year as 2364, requiring TOS to be around a century earlier, many fans and a few professional novelists followed the Spaceflight Chronology dating scheme which put TOS in the first decade of the 23rd century (to reconcile with the "200 years" references in "Tomorrow is Yesterday" and "Space Seed"), so that TWOK would've been maybe 2222 or thereabouts. When TWOK came along with the 2283 date, many fans speculated that it was a Romulan calendar date or a stardate.
No, Kirk's log entry says "We are in the third month of our Vulcan exile," which means there are only 2-3 months between movies.
However long a Vulcan month is, I suppose.
One wonders what a Vulcan month is based on, as Vulcan has no moon. (Just *extremely* close sister-planets whenever the first film in a new series wants it to...)
So it is! There's my nerd card revoked for the month... :-)
What a shame they didn't make the Greg Cox novels canon — I loved reading those.
I mean, the IDW comics didn't adhere to the Greg Cox novel either, so why should this have?What a shame they didn't make the Greg Cox novels canon
And it's not as if Star Trek canon has ever been this hugely consistent thing anyway, going all the way back to the very first episodes.You can love reading a story whether it's canon or not, since canon is just another set of stories anyway. Heck, the cool thing about make-believe is that you can have more than one version of how something happened and enjoy all of them, rather than having to limit yourself to a single version.
I'd love to have heard that story professionally dramatized, it would have been cool to hear a story I love adapted into another format like that.'
Got back from vacation, so I haven't heard the next two yet.Indeed. And while this is seen as sexist to.modern viewers, it does strike me as very quintessential to Gene Roddenberry's conception of the future pre-TNG. It's the same 'rough and rugged qualities have been bred out of enlightened humanity, but maybe there are still some uses for them' mentality that we got in the TMP novelization. It was an idea that seemed to fascinate Roddenberry- in a way, he seemed to share Marla's views on the value of qualities of previous generations that were perhaps lost as a side-effect of 'progress'.
Now, the way that idea actually manifested with Marla, and the extent to which it was taken, may have been problematic. But it wasn't some one-off idea for a guest-star characterization for a single episode. It was an outgrowth and (perhaps inept) exploration of an idea baked into the very DNA of 60s & 70s Star Trek.
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