As in Chuck Cunningham, that is. In early episodes of Happy Days, Richie had an older brother named Chuck. As the show went on, the character disappeared, his elder brother duties taken over by an increasingly cuddly Fonz. By the time the show ended, it was as if he never was, with Howard Cunningham referring to the two wonderful children he and Marian had raised.
In Star Trek V, Kirk says "I lost a brother once" and elicits quizzical looks from McCoy and Spock--looks I took to mean "What brother?"--and follows it up with, "I was lucky to get him back." Some fans have tried to justify this a s a feint on Kirk's part, that he meant them to think he was talking about Sam when he really meant Spock. If so, that's a chilling thing for Kirk to say, as it implies that his biological brother, the man who saw him off on his five-year mission, meant nothing to him. More likely, Sam had slipped the minds of the film-makers.
Now, in the new Star Trek movie, we get what is supposedly a new reality that branches off from the Trek we knew at the precise moment when--sigh--
Apparently, in this time-line, Kirk is an only child. This would work, of course, with no need for further question if it weren't for the fact that Sam, as "played" by William Shatner with a moustache and greying temples, seems to be older than Kirk by a few years. In other words, he never existed even before the branching off point.
So, has he been Chucked?
In Star Trek V, Kirk says "I lost a brother once" and elicits quizzical looks from McCoy and Spock--looks I took to mean "What brother?"--and follows it up with, "I was lucky to get him back." Some fans have tried to justify this a s a feint on Kirk's part, that he meant them to think he was talking about Sam when he really meant Spock. If so, that's a chilling thing for Kirk to say, as it implies that his biological brother, the man who saw him off on his five-year mission, meant nothing to him. More likely, Sam had slipped the minds of the film-makers.
Now, in the new Star Trek movie, we get what is supposedly a new reality that branches off from the Trek we knew at the precise moment when--sigh--
Nero and the Narada come through the black hole and "kills" Kirk's father.
Apparently, in this time-line, Kirk is an only child. This would work, of course, with no need for further question if it weren't for the fact that Sam, as "played" by William Shatner with a moustache and greying temples, seems to be older than Kirk by a few years. In other words, he never existed even before the branching off point.
So, has he been Chucked?