Thinking otherwise is just denial.
Yeah, well we've been hip deep in denial round these parts. It's going to take a little time. And some excellent nuTrek novels wouldn't hurt.
Thinking otherwise is just denial.
Thinking otherwise is just denial.
Yeah, well we've been hip deep in denial round these parts. It's going to take a little time. And some excellent nuTrek novels wouldn't hurt.
I mean, the same physic that applied on screen before.I have no idea what you're asking here. Bottom line, it's fiction. It's all made up. The physics works however the filmmakers decide it works. Earlier Trek movies have had physics even more stupid than anything in this movie (the Genesis Device, "fountain-of-youth" radiation, 20 minutes to the center of the galaxy), and nobody's put them in an alternate reality.
the schimitar torpedo won't hit enterprise for the first time in Nemesis, if it's not warp-drived.... since it was shoot during warp flight to a ship in warp flight"All warp-based?" Where are you getting that? Most of the space battles I recall seeing in the 24th-century shows and films were conducted at sublight, and the torpedoes didn't travel all that quickly.
I mean, the same physic that applied on screen before.
the schimitar torpedo won't hit enterprise for the first time in Nemesis, if it's not warp-drived.... since it was shoot during warp flight to a ship in warp flight
The Undiscovered Country showed the Praxis shock wave reaching the Excelsior parsecs away within minutes. Generations showed Soran's supernovae having instantaneous gravitational effects on the Nexus and distant starships, again over parsecs. ENT: "The Catwalk" showed a "neutronic storm" travelling faster than light. There's plenty of precedent in the Trek universe for FTL cosmic phenomena.
Besides, alternate timelines would have the same physical laws. They're alternate quantum states branching off from the same original universe, a universe whose laws were set down at the moment of its creation. After all, if two universes had different laws of physics, there's no way they'd evolve the same stars, the same planets, the same species, and the same individuals. Any universe with a planet Earth and a human species is going to be a temporal subset of our universe, one that diverged from the rest quite recently in cosmic terms. So every timeline we see in Trek must have the same physical laws; only the history is different.
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Besides, you can find equal or greater discontinuities between any two Trek series or films, or even within a single Trek series. Insurrection had Deanna claim she'd never kissed a bearded Riker even though she did so several times on camera in TNG. In TNG itself, Data routinely used contractions until it was suddenly asserted out of the blue that he never did, and he expressed signs of emotion for two years before he was retconned into an emotionless being. Khan's followers lost their ethnic diversity and got younger in the 15 years between "Space Seed" and TWOK. Trek continuity has never, ever been seamless, and yet we pretend that it's all a single reality because that's how fiction works: you pretend, you suspend disbelief, and you don't obsess over the inevitable glitches and inconsistencies that any long-running franchise created by multiple hands is bound to have. It's the prerogative of the creators of a fictional world to reinterpret and refine it as they go. And the reinterpretations and inconsistencies introduced in this movie are no greater than those found in previous Trek episodes and movies over the decades.
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This is make-believe. It's a bunch of stories that people make up to entertain you. And different creators are entitled to bring their own distinctive styles and approaches to the creation, so naturally this imaginary world is going to look different when it's presented to you by different creators. Again, there is nothing remotely new about this. The Trek universe depicted by Robert Wise in TMP was different from the Trek universe depicted by Roddenberry, Coon, and Justman in TOS. The Trek universe depicted by Harve Bennett and Nicholas Meyer was way different from either of those. The Trek universe depicted in TMP was different from any of those. And so on. Each new incarnation has taken a different approach to the look, feel, and content of the Trek universe. They've had different designs, different technologies, different alien species, different looks for the same alien species, different renderings of what warp drive or phasers or torpedoes look like and how they work, etc. Since it's not real, just something made up by creative people, it looks different when presented by different creators. That doesn't mean it's a bunch of alternate realities. Well, actually it does, because each incarnation of Trek has its differences from its predecessors. But we choose to pretend they're a consistent reality, because that's part of the conceit of the story.
And sometimes we do such a good job of pretending that all those past creations from different people fit together despite their many inconsistencies that we forget about those inconsistencies, so that when the latest new incarnation comes along and has its own differences from what came before, we mistakenly react to that as though there's something shockingly different about it. But there isn't. The new movie's discrepancies and continuity problems are no larger than those that have existed in past Trek productions. They're just newer.
The logic I can't agree with is when mistakes of the past are brought up to justify mistakes in the future. It's like a little kid that did something wrong blaming the other kid with "But he did it, too!"
Yes, it's fiction, it's not important. And with such a logic, it's a good thing, because if it was important, like engineering, or judiciary, we'd all be screwed. Well, cars had malfunctioning breaks and airbags before, why should we be changing that? People commit crimes every day and get away with it, so what's so bad about what I did?
Actually, the American legal system does have a strong basis in Common Law, which is built entirely of case precedent. So that's a bad counterexample.
You're a bad counterexample.Actually, the American legal system does have a strong basis in Common Law, which is built entirely of case precedent. So that's a bad counterexample.
The logic I can't agree with is when mistakes of the past are brought up to justify mistakes in the future. It's like a little kid that did something wrong blaming the other kid with "But he did it, too!"
Yes, it's fiction, it's not important.
Star Trek is not real. There is no single "correct" version of the universe. It is an imaginary creation, the creation of many different hands.
When different people work in the same fictional reality, it's not a mistake for them to portray it in subtly different ways. If twenty students in an art class paint their subject in twenty different ways, that doesn't mean nineteen of them are getting it wrong. It means each creator is interpreting the subject in his or her own distinctive way. Which is the whole point of creativity.
"Ships move at the speed of plot" is one of those excuses I really can't stand. If you write a story set in New York, will your hero get from Queens to Staten Island in 2 minutes, just because the plot requires it?
If so, then the plot is flawed, because it ignores the setting! And if your fictional setting is so totally random, then you haven't been creative!.
No.Is anyone at Bad Robot approving the Abramsverse outlines so they don't conflict...
Paula left CBS Television Licensing quite some time ago. I'm not sure if I'm supposed to say who's vetting the books now; he might value his privacy too much to be "outed."...or is it just Paula Block at CBS?
Will Maximus Decimus Meridius get from Germania to Spain in a few days, riding a horse, wounded and bleeding, just because plot requires it?"Ships move at the speed of plot" is one of those excuses I really can't stand. If you write a story set in New York, will your hero get from Queens to Staten Island in 2 minutes, just because the plot requires it?
What prevents you, in your time, when you're in charge, to finally make a correct, fully thought through version of the universe (as a tie-in writer, you barely can, I see that, but as a writer/director of one of the movies...)?
Whenever a writer didn't care... for example when the Enterprise only needs 3 minutes to Vulcan, and people tell them that it doesn't make sense...
Isn't that analogy more suitable for comic books?
Star Trek is, until now, more like a single project where those 20 art students are working on.
Creativity is the art of problem solving. I personally regard ditching continuity of an established universe just so you can create your story more easily to be the most lackluster way of being creative.
Paula left CBS Television Licensing quite some time ago. I'm not sure if I'm supposed to say who's vetting the books now; he might value his privacy too much to be "outed."![]()
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