It does when you're in a TNG forum and I said "sort of compiling a list to the 'Are you mad?' moments of the TNG writers."Star Trek has always abandoned story ideas, doesn't matter which Star Trek.
It does when you're in a TNG forum and I said "sort of compiling a list to the 'Are you mad?' moments of the TNG writers."Star Trek has always abandoned story ideas, doesn't matter which Star Trek.
The real problem, imho, is that Chekov is the bad guy in the story, and that feels like something that you really shouldn't do in a piece of tie-in fiction. I think Koenig probably would have relished the opportunity to portray the tragic downfall of a long-ago hero on screen, though, and it's a pity that it never came to be.
God it'd have been so good, if you really focus, you can actually see it in your mind's eye as if it's a real season one episode.One of the many spec scripts which were submitted to the series concerned a planet where everything about it, even its spaceships, was made of Velcro.
This is on the Memory Alpha page for unmade TNG episodes:
God it'd have been so good, if you really focus, you can actually see it in your mind's eye as if it's a real season one episode.
Well, first of all, any Star Trek is an exercise in mental agility...It does when you're in a TNG forum and I said "sort of compiling a list to the 'Are you mad?' moments of the TNG writers."
None of which deals with the actual topic of the thread, which once again is Star Trek: The Next Generation.Well, first of all, any Star Trek is an exercise in mental agility...
In other words,we are pre trained to deal with the mentally ill. Especially Science Fiction buffs...
Don't believe me?
The motion picture 'Alien'. The Alien in particular.
Okay, I am really trying here, but... what?Well, first of all, any Star Trek is an exercise in mental agility...
In other words,we are pre trained to deal with the mentally ill. Especially Science Fiction buffs...
Don't believe me?
The motion picture 'Alien'. The Alien in particular.
Okay, I am really trying here, but... what?
It refers to futility and corruption.(You know, that’s always been a great-sounding line, but it doesn’t make sense. Nothing that happens in the film is Chinatown’s fault.)
Gotta disagree with you there.(You know, that’s always been a great-sounding line, but it doesn’t make sense. Nothing that happens in the film is Chinatown’s fault.)
Gotta disagree with you there.
- The dialogue throughout the film makes clear that Chinatown is a place where the normal rules don't apply, and if you work there as an outsider, you do as little as possible because you don't understand how things work, so it's a metaphor as well as the place where the climactic action plays out.
- Jake tells Evelyn Mulwray about working for the D.A. there: "You can't always tell what's going on there,“ which is exactly what he later learns about her situation with her father, and adds "I was trying to keep someone from being hurt. I ended up making sure she was hurt,” which is exactly what happens to her.
Excuse me? I said "any Star Trek", are you saying that TNG isn't Star Trek?None of which deals with the actual topic of the thread, which once again is Star Trek: The Next Generation.
So do you want to answer the thread question and put us back on track?Excuse me? I said "any Star Trek", are you saying that TNG isn't Star Trek?
The thread is specifically about ideas the TNG writers proposed but didn’t do. So far, you have not talked about anything to that specific prompt.Excuse me? I said "any Star Trek", are you saying that TNG isn't Star Trek?
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