I'd rather see it as a twelve hour miniseries myself. IMO it would really ruin the depth of the story if you tried to cut it down anymore than that.
No reason it has to be the same ship, or occur in the same year. Starfleet history has been different from 2233 onward, with the launch of the Enterprise delayed and its design heavily altered. A lot of other stuff about Starfleet activity and deployments could be different. It stands to reason that some Starfleet ship could eventually survey Ravanar IV and discover the metagenome, but it doesn't have to be the Constellation and it doesn't have to be in 2263 (not '65; remember, the prologue took place two years before the rest of Harbinger).
I hope I'm not opening a can of worms here (having been gone for a while, I wouldn't know if this is one of those "dead horse" topics), but can we say for certain that Starfleet history wasn't already different before 2233? We know that history changed when Nero came back in time, but isn't it theoretically possible that, the multiverse being what it is, he came back to a timeline that was already somewhat different from the "prime" universe? Am I reaching here, or could that be fairly possible?
No reason it has to be the same ship, or occur in the same year. Starfleet history has been different from 2233 onward, with the launch of the Enterprise delayed and its design heavily altered. A lot of other stuff about Starfleet activity and deployments could be different. It stands to reason that some Starfleet ship could eventually survey Ravanar IV and discover the metagenome, but it doesn't have to be the Constellation and it doesn't have to be in 2263 (not '65; remember, the prologue took place two years before the rest of Harbinger).
I hope I'm not opening a can of worms here (having been gone for a while, I wouldn't know if this is one of those "dead horse" topics), but can we say for certain that Starfleet history wasn't already different before 2233? We know that history changed when Nero came back in time, but isn't it theoretically possible that, the multiverse being what it is, he came back to a timeline that was already somewhat different from the "prime" universe? Am I reaching here, or could that be fairly possible?
The Kelvin is all the evidence you need that the timeline they went back to was an alternate one. Design is far too advanced, uniforms look more like a post-TNG design than pre-TOS, stardate isn't even close, the list goes on.
My personal favorite is that the timeline Nero went back to is one where Archer failed to resolve the Temporal Cold War and things continued to deviate from what we saw in the first three seasons of Enterprise. The only unanswered question being whether Nero did, in fact, come from the Prime timeline (and Spock, for that matter), or if the whole thing started and ended in that alternate timeline and the Prime Star Trek timeline was never touched upon.
I'm working up a fanfic along these lines....
^ but then would it not be better to make a mini series about the whole "a time to " series ...
I think A Time to Kill/A Time to Heal would be the best option. It's high-action, so it would sustain an action flick. It has a plot that can be condensed enough to fit a 2-3 hour length. And it's thematically complex enough to be worth telling in another medium.
Where does this come from? I haven't noticed anything that horrible in the books. Sure they do have more sex in them than the TV shows did, but I haven't seen where any of it is that objectionable.Secondly, it is politically incorrect in its objectification of women. Even a redblooded American male such as myself is repelled at times by the blatant titillation of fanboy wet dreams.
Maybe I'm a complete moron, but I actually like Tyrss and Choudhury. As for your objections to Tryss, that really kind of the point of the character, and IMO what makes her fun. She's not supposed to come across as your usual spit and polish Starfleet officer, and she's not supposed to act like a Vulcan. So you objection about her being Vulcan is pretty much the same as somebody complaining because Spock doesn't work as a human character. As for your whole Chinese thing, all I can say to that is... who care. As we've seen for the past 40 years of Trek pretty much all of the modern nationalities and races are still around, so I really don't understand you're problem.Third, the current TNG material is filled with problems. Again the urge to find the next Trek babe has turned more than half the crew into hotties. While this may appeal to young male fans, the allure of Trek on TV is the thoughtful nature of the stories. Do you really believe anyone would accept a smart-ass ensign who can't keep her clothes on as a Vulcan, or half-Vulcan/"Chinese". It's a mixed cliche. Trek exagerates ethnicity, and it has aliens that exagerate human personality traits. Since the term Chinese actually refers to about 1/4th of the humans currently on planet earth, and their economic power is on the rise, in 300 years it could well refer to the majority of human beings, and therefore mean nothing anymore. And nobody would believe that Picard would sort-of adopt this loose cannon, who obviously needs counseling, not an assignment as a bridge officer. Then there's the Hindu babe. Suffice it to say, if the people of India today get bent out of shape by Jethro Tull standing on one leg while playing a flute, image how upset they will be to see their rich religious traditions bandied about like hippy double-talk.
Actually Bowers has been described in the books as being dark skinned many times.Fourth, Aventine, could actually work. Here we have a crew that can mostly be played by new people, and Nicole DeBoer has matured beautifully. I haven't seen her act recently, but I think, as long as the director doesn't let her do the cute little nose wrinkle giggle, she would be able to project the necessary authority. And Bowers... have you ever noticed that nobody ever mentions his skin color? I think he would be a great character if played by an African-American.
Now here I actually do agree that SCE/COE would be a great TV series.But the series that I believe would actually make the best transition to television is COE. For one, the stories are novellas, a bit shorter, which means there is less to leave out. And the other big reason for me is that this is a Trek kind of thing. They solve problems and fix things and travel around on a smaller ship. I would really like to see it.
I always thought "Q-In-Law" would've made an outstanding DS9 episode. And I really don't care for Peter David's stuff all that much.
Third, the current TNG material is filled with problems. Again the urge to find the next Trek babe has turned more than half the crew into hotties. While this may appeal to young male fans, the allure of Trek on TV is the thoughtful nature of the stories.
Do you really believe anyone would accept a smart-ass ensign who can't keep her clothes on as a Vulcan...
, or half-Vulcan/"Chinese". It's a mixed cliche. Trek exagerates ethnicity, and it has aliens that exagerate human personality traits. Since the term Chinese actually refers to about 1/4th of the humans currently on planet earth, and their economic power is on the rise, in 300 years it could well refer to the majority of human beings, and therefore mean nothing anymore.
And nobody would believe that Picard would sort-of adopt this loose cannon, who obviously needs counseling, not an assignment as a bridge officer.
Then there's the Hindu babe. Suffice it to say, if the people of India today get bent out of shape by Jethro Tull standing on one leg while playing a flute, image how upset they will be to see their rich religious traditions bandied about like hippy double-talk.
I always thought "Q-In-Law" would've made an outstanding DS9 episode. And I really don't care for Peter David's stuff all that much.
Barrett & de Lancie perform well together on the Simon & Schuster Audioworks production!
. And nobody would believe that Picard would sort-of adopt this loose cannon, who obviously needs counseling, not an assignment as a bridge officer.
. And nobody would believe that Picard would sort-of adopt this loose cannon, who obviously needs counseling, not an assignment as a bridge officer.
I guess you never saw any episodes with Ro Laren.
craig keith said:lol its HBO tho ...... Think u should right a mini series script for vanguard lol. Is such a thing even possible beacuse its already a novel ?
Well, it's not as though the notion of adapting a novel for the screen is new or anything
That said, the chances of anyone actually adapting a Trek novel for the screen are about as good as Diane Lane calling me up for a date. But, there's no harm in dreaming![]()
In TOS, people could barely touch each other. Now it seems we have to keep making girlfriends for Worf. There are a lot of soap operas on TV. Trek should be intelligent.
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