I hope we see the Romulans and to *really* tick off all of the rabid continuity-canon freaks.
Rumour is... they're bald!
[highlight]ARE THEY ALSO SHOUTING?!?[/highlight]
I hope we see the Romulans and to *really* tick off all of the rabid continuity-canon freaks.
Rumour is... they're bald!
I hope we see the Romulans and to *really* tick off all of the rabid continuity-canon freaks.
Rumour is... they're bald![highlight]ARE THEY ALSO SHOUTING?!?[/highlight]
I disagree, Trek's backlog is far more of an asset than a hindrance.
Besides, I'm ambivalent enough about this new movie. If they ignore the established history it won't be worth my time, and I've seen every Trek movie in the theaters in their opening week.
I disagree, Trek's backlog is far more of an asset than a hindrance.
Besides, I'm ambivalent enough about this new movie. If they ignore the established history it won't be worth my time, and I've seen every Trek movie in the theaters in their opening week.
Exactly. If they want to introduce some new elements into Trek lore that either shouldn't be there or should be there, then I'm for it as long as the movie is good. But if they discredit everything of Trek and make it their own movie, then it wouldn't be worth it.
You know, the one element I'm not looking forward to in the new movie is the Romulans.
I thought they were fantastic in Balance of Terror, but I never really saw too much in them after that. All that shoulder pad stuff in TNG put the nail in really and I couldn't give a monkeys in Nemesis - although I did quite like the Remans.
Am I the only one?
If I had any idea where to look (or how to post it here), I would. The episode is still on the StarTrek.com website.James Tony Kirk (Omega Glory)
?! I either never heard or don't remember this one. If someone doesn't mind, can they quote the dialogue?
Sounds like you're either getting old or lazyAll you need is to remember the line where it's mentioned that Kirk's middle name is Tony, then type it.
Hmmm.
10 years ago, even 4 or 5, I might've gone back to check but nowadays I don't think it's worth it to potentially sit through 51 minutes just for the sake of answering a question I posed in a thread. Nah. We'll just move on, it's besides the point.
"James Tiberious Kirk" or simply "James T. Kirk" will do just fine and the latter is very likely. I can't see anyone besides strawmen being up in arms if the name isn't "James R. Kirk" for instance.
Thanks, Therin. I always wondered when they started calling him Tiberius instead of James T. Heck, until it came up in this thread I never noticed the James R. Kirk on the headstone either.James Tiberius Kirk (most episodes)
No, most of the time he was "T".
The "Tiberius" wasn't used onscreen until "Bem" (TAS) and ST VI.
If we were to start all over, I think it would make it more interesting.
At some point, we have to draw a line under the continuity. Frankly, I think we have reached saturation point already. At some point, this will happen IMO. But, probably not for a while now.
I mean, how much continuity can we carry round? 50 years? 60? 70? Wouldn't it be more interesting to turn on a new episode of Star Trek and not know whether Kirk & Spock are going to die?
People forget that ST did die
People forget that ST did die
"Star Trek Lives!"
People forget that ST did die and some of the reasons would have to be related to the burden too much continuity places upon writing good exciting, novel episodes where we don't know what to expect.
Maybe it might have even had to do with NEM seeming old-fashioned. Maybe it had nothing to do with continuity, maybe it was just that movies in general changed during the four years between INS and NEM and Star Trek hadn't kept up. Those four years made a difference: The Matrix (1999), The Phantom Menace (1999), and The X-Men (2000) all came in and changed things. That's not even mentioning fantasy with Lord of the Rings (2001) and Harry Potter (2001). Big difference between 1998 and 2002.
"But most people didn't see NEM!" Okay, if you want to try that, how about this? INS was a very pedestrian movie and I remember it not being the type of movie that they were hoping would come after FC.
I doubt anyone expected ENT to make movies anymore than they thought DS9 or VOY would.
There was talk that Scott Bakula negotiated a Paramount film deal that would kick in after seven years of ENT. (Not necessarily a ST film deal, though; it wasn't that specific.) If ENT had been wildly successful, I think we'd have probably seen Bakula leading a film series on the Romulan Wars. They chose a certain point in the timeline to start ENT for a reason - it was only about a decade before the Romulan/Earth Wars, so the TV series was only going to get close to that point, leaving it open for potential movies.
Meaning that 7 years standard length, would end Enterprise smack dab in the middle of the Earth-Romulan War.
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