But why would Starfleet keep doing these "refits" where every element of the ship is swapped for a different one?
They also said it was practically a completely new Enterprise right in the dialog, and they didn't try to pass it off as how the ship looked all along.
In other words, Nero failed to change his own history, Kirk still kicks the Romulans' asses, and Nero winds up getting lost in another timeline.
This enormous spaceship -- which would surely have been close to the size of the Enterprise -- would have lifted off from the desert under its own power; a vision that would surely have gotten any anti-nuke activist breathing heavy!
At the very least, those living within, say, the same hemisphere as the shipyards might be more than a little concerned about the presence of large quantities of antimatter on the ground...![]()
From the front, the nacelle pylons on the refit look similar to the original. From just about any other angle, they look far more different than the new. They're attached further forward than the TOS-E, so from a practicality standpoint, the new Enterpirse is closer to the original than the refit in that regard.Sorry to say but the TMP ship is far more alike then the Rebootprise, the nacelle pylons follow a similar V shape and not the stupid O leg version of the Rebootprise, also the nacelles are proportonally placed out about as wide, they kept the indent on the underside of the saucer, the ships looks to be as tall as the TOS ship and is not like a squated toad like the Rebootprise also the shape of the neck is far more similar and the deflector array isn't looking like its an erect dog penis, also and foremost, the TMP refit is gorgeous while the Rebootprise isn't IMSVFNSHO
They also said it was practically a completely new Enterprise right in the dialog, and they didn't try to pass it off as how the ship looked all along.
Different quantum reality. Doesn't matter. The "Trek XI" reality is clearly seperate from the "Trek Prime" reality, as per the recent Orci interview. Thus, this doesn't replace the TOS Enterprise. The TOS Enterprise has looked the way it has all along, but so has the Trek XI Enterprise.
I don't really get this argument. The TMP ship was supposed to be the same as the TOS one, but it changed all of the overall proportions. Everything was changed, with absolutely no respect to any of the original sizes and shapes. After the fact, some sort of a halfhearted rationalization was attempted that this was an "almost" totally new ship that was the result of a Thesean refit.In this case, we have a ship that is far more different from the TOS ship than the TMP ship was, yet is supposed to be "the SAME ship." It doesn't just change "fine details," it changes overall proportions.
So how is the STXI ship supposed to be a different case? Again, it changes every design feature, for the very same reason: because it looks cool to the contemporary designers, and supposedly to the contemporary audiences as well. So far, we don't know if an attempt will be made to reconcile this with the TOS or TMP designs, but such an attempt could hardly be less successful than in the TMP case.
Timo Saloniemi
Sorry to say but the TMP ship is far more alike then the Rebootprise, the nacelle pylons follow a similar V shape and not the stupid O leg version of the Rebootprise, also the nacelles are proportonally placed out about as wide, they kept the indent on the underside of the saucer, the ships looks to be as tall as the TOS ship and is not like a squated toad like the Rebootprise also the shape of the neck is far more similar and the deflector array isn't looking like its an erect dog penis, also and foremost, the TMP refit is gorgeous while the Rebootprise isn't IMSVFNSHO
Also, I am not the biggest fan of the under-saucer indent, just because of all of the wasted volume, for no apparent decent reason. Good riddance. And 'squashed toad'?![]()
That approach to writing only works with Bugs Bunny cartoons.
It worked for Batman (twice)
It worked for Battlestar Galatica
It worked for The Incredible Hulk
It worked for Spider Man
It worked for Nick Fury
It worked for X-men
It worked for Lost in Space
It worked for The Bionic Woman
It worked for Terminator
It worked for Superman
It worked for 2001: A Space Odyssey
It worked for the Jack Ryan movies
It worked for James Bond (repeatedly)
It worked for War of the Worlds
It worked (basically) for Mission Impossible
It worked for The Day the Earth Stood Still
Now tell me what Spielberg's "War of the Worlds" would have been if he'd tried to keep the continuity with the 1953 film and the 1988 TV series based on it?
What would the Bond movies look like if the writers kept in mind the fact that--given the continuity of the series--agent 007 should be in his mid 80s by now?
The obsession with continuity is something fairly unique to trek fans which, unfortunately, is something trek writers (and to a greater extent, trek producers) have pandered to just a little too long and too clumsily to keep the show alive.
And the attempt to be consistent changes what, exactly?They're older, but they don't have as long a stretch of consistant (or even an attempt to be constant) continuity.
Right, because the last couple of Trek productions have all been Emmy-winning, blockbuster material thanks to their thorough adherence to canon.As to your second question, one word: quality.
So is there any reason to do a reboot that doesn't involve eleborate excuses or unthinking gushers whining about how "uncool" Star Trek is?
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