Wow, is there anyone who's not whining in your book? And no, you don't count. 

Yes, and that's the problem here. That's why I wanted a prequel, not a reboot. I wanted to see unchronicled history of characters we know and love -- not alternate versions of those characters. This isn't Star Trek, so much as it's something new and different with a Star Trek label hung on it.I preferred a reboot to begin with. A reboot starts everything over from scratch while a prequel is supposed to lead into what we already know.
Well, no, the real problem with ROTS is that it's crap, because George Lucas couldn't write his way out of a paper box. (That, and the way it actually undermines rather than validates what it leads into—when the whole overarching theme becomes about generating sympathy for Darth Vader and his eventual redemption, the original Star Wars just doesn't work in that context.)The major drawback of a prequel is the end feels like a reset button. Revenge of the Sith is a perfect example because by the end of the movie, everything is back to the 1977 SW status quo.
But in a reboot they're not actually familiar characters, you see? They're just people with different life histories who happen to have the same names.An alternate timeline seems like a good compromise. Previous movies and series still "exist" but we can still go to familiar characters and have it not feel like a history lesson.
Wow, is there anyone who's not whining in your book? And no, you don't count.![]()
I know this interpretation has been floating around for years (long before TNG existed, even, just to rationalize inconsistencies in the original series), but in narrative terms it's just not satisfying.Anyone who's paid close attention to the past 700 episodes and 10 movies of "Star Trek" will recognize two basic facts:
1. Every instance of time travel uses a different method and scientific rationale...
2. Through all the "Star Trek" series, there have been at least two dozen distinct and mutually exclusive timelines...
...
There is no "official" "Star Trek" timeline. The series has taken place through dozens of mutually exclusive timelines, so creating just one more timeline in this new movie will not invalidate all 750 past episodes; it will just add one more timeline to the dozens that have already been created and incorporated into the series.
I'd sure love to stipulate that. Who wants to place their bets now?Let's stipulate for the sake of this post that Abrams Star Trek turns out to be an excellent film that is highly regarded among movie-goers and critics alike (similar to the status of Iron Man).
...what's the point of putting "real" Trek on the back burner in favor of this version?
I actually do prefer the "Cochrane always had that history" approach. If nothing else, it has the virtue of narrative simplicity, by avoiding needless multiplication of timelines.Unless you think that during a commercial break in the episode "Metamorphosis" Zefram Cochrane was telling Captain Kirk about the time the Borg attacked him, everything after "Star Trek: First Contact," including "ST: Insurrection," all of "Enterprise" and the last few years of "Voyager," took place in a different timeline than the original series. However, by the end of "Star Trek: First Contact," they had cleaned up the timeline enough so that the future they returned to was almost the same as the one they remembered, except in that future, Cochrane had survived the Borg attack, flew his first warp flight with Riker and LaForge, and knew the name of the starship Enterprise, and Borg wreckage would be found on Earth a century later.
I think I can safely say that most viewers think of the timelines where Bad Stuff Happens (major wars, exploding suns, etc.) as the "alternate" ones, and interpret the story events as working to restore the "correct" timeline, not create new alternates. I'd venture that that is also how the writers have typically intended the stories to be understood.Creating new timelines does not "erase" other timelines -- it just introduces new historical facts into the alternate timeline that contradict facts from the other timeline...
When you saw the sun explode in "Star Trek Generations" and the whole Enterprise-D crew died, were you outraged that Picard and Kirk created an alternate timeline where that didn't happen?
Umm.What Nero and Spock are doing in "Star Trek XI" is no different from what Janeway did in "Endgame."
And if "Star Trek: Nemesis" could continue from that alternate past created in "Endgame," then how is that different if the next Trek movie takes place in the new alternate past created in "Star Trek XI"?
Yes, you only saw the original future for less than an hour in "Endgame," and you saw the original future for three years in TOS; so maybe people are willing to accept the fact that they may never see the universe they were watching for the past hour in "Endgame," but after "Star Trek XI," they may never see the TOS universe again.
But that's just a difference of time invested in watching characters in a particular timeline...
Logical? Perhaps. Emotionally satisfying? Not so much. Who would choose to watch it, knowing that it came at the expense of seeing the originals ever again?...even if "Star Trek" decides to take place solely in the Mirror Universe from now on, it is still a logical continuation of the established "Star Trek" continuity, just from a different point of view.
Logical? Perhaps. Emotionally satisfying? Not so much. Who would choose to watch it, knowing that it came at the expense of seeing the originals ever again?...even if "Star Trek" decides to take place solely in the Mirror Universe from now on, it is still a logical continuation of the established "Star Trek" continuity, just from a different point of view.
I'm ordinarily a very rational, analytical sort of person. People have even called me Spock-like. But in this case, I have to argue the other side. You just seem to be missing the point of why people love Trek (or most fiction, period!) in the first place.
Who would choose to watch it, knowing that it came at the expense of seeing the originals ever again?
^I'm with that guy...![]()
If there are 100,000 universes with various versions of me in it, who cares if one is pushed off course?
If there are 100,000 universes with various versions of me in it, who cares if one is pushed off course?
*Shoves BillJ off cliff* Perhaps you would?![]()
I pretty much agree with Lawman. If it is a new universe from the point that Nero arrives in the 23rd century, why do I care if it's set straight? Why does it need to be set straight?
From a drama point of view, I think calling it another universe is a bad move. If there are 100,000 universes with various versions of me in it, who cares if one is pushed off course?
No, that's a faulty analogy.why should you care if Kirk survived his fight with Gary mitchell... I mean it was a new show, a new universe no one knew about.... Until they watched the damn story..
Oh wait that's logic...
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