You seem to think that Kirk is the protagonist of the movie, when in actuality, Spock is.
Once again, Boys and Girls... There is no canon. Canon ended when Enterprise went off the air. The people doing the movies can, will, and are doing whatever the hell they want.
The canon will end when whoever owns Star Trek stops making Star Trek based products. The people doing all the movies and TV shows having been "doing whatever the hell they want" since 1964.Once again, Boys and Girls... There is no canon. Canon ended when Enterprise went off the air. The people doing the movies can, will, and are doing whatever the hell they want.
The canon will end when whoever owns Star Trek stops making Star Trek based products.
The people doing all the movies and TV shows having been "doing whatever the hell they want" since 1964.
Those fans are using it wrong. Canon is the works approved by those who own the property. They're thinking of continuity.The canon will end when whoever owns Star Trek stops making Star Trek based products.
Wrong, the canon ended every time a series ended. Then a new canon would start with a new series, then end when that ended.. etc. "Canon", in the sense that fans often use it never actually existed.
Possibly. But I tend to doubt it. Though that "attitude" did give us ridge head Klingons.Exactly. And if they say that Sarek was really a Romulan spy in the next movie, or that Klingons have ridged boobs and anvil-heads, then so be it - regardless of whatever the past 40 years of Trek ever said.The people doing all the movies and TV shows having been "doing whatever the hell they want" since 1964.
You seem to think that Kirk is the protagonist of the movie, when in actuality, Spock is.
Yep. I'm not sure the writers realize this yet, but Spock is the character with the vastly more interesting arc, and they're naturally going to gravitate towards him in subsequent movies. Spock comes from a culture where he's expected to repress his emotions and has been whalloped with unimaginable emotional trauma. How can anyone switch from writing that character over to "Jimmy Kirk grows up?" There's no contest.
That's pretty much the way TOS worked back when it was a living series, much to Shatner's chagrin.![]()
Incorrect. Every story can have some applicability.
Incorrect. Every story has a message and meaning.
That is also incorrect. Certainly proven in stories like "Tribbles," or "Where No Man Has Gone Before," "Best of Both Worlds" (unless someone wants to bend straws and claim that the conflict between Riker and Shelby meant anything, which it didn't) etc.
Dang right TOS was proper, cause this new one is just a summer popcorn mess.The "proper" course of events was TOS.
Nope.
Movie: 1
Jeyl: 0
The alternate reality angle was likely important because it allowed future Star Trek movies to move independently of whatever happened in the TV shows. At the same time, it allowed any future TV show to continue in the original (or Prime) universe.I've pretty much just settled with the whole alternate reality and canon issue as being pointless. I honestly don't see why the alternate reality element had to be brought up in the first place. If they wanted to honor canon and all the stories that came before it, why not just be set the darn thing in it rather than throwing in all this time travel and alternate reality stuff? The alternate reality has absolutely no meaning or value and doesn't serve the story at all. You can cut out Uhura's "An alternate reality" and Spock's "Precisely" exchange out and nothing would be different. Nero has traveled back in time, is changing the course of events and everything is different. That's pretty much it.
The alternate reality angle was likely important because it allowed future Star Trek movies to move independently of whatever happened in the TV shows. At the same time, it allowed any future TV show to continue in the original (or Prime) universe.
Actually, the end result is the same as if they had done a total reboot. But we also got one last appearance of Leonard Nimoy as Spock out of it too. I tend to think most audiences liked that and what the original Spock brought to the film...The alternate reality angle was likely important because it allowed future Star Trek movies to move independently of whatever happened in the TV shows. At the same time, it allowed any future TV show to continue in the original (or Prime) universe.
It would have been easier for them to simply do a clean reboot if they wanted to move independently of what had come before. That would have also left the prime universe untouched. Easiest. Cleanest. They chose not to go in that direction so they are still tied to the previous shows.
I fail to see how STXI being tied to the previous shows is in any way a problem. Try hard enough and the butterfly effect can be used to explain away anything from an epic Klingon/Federation war or extragalactic invasion that didn't happen in TOS to the later non-appearance of the Doomsday Machine, V'ger and the whale probe.
As for inheriting the shared past of the Trek multiverse, I seriously doubt nuTrek is gonna spend it's time worrying about what Captain Archer was doing 100 years ago - TOS certainly didn't and they got on just fine![]()
Star Trek, even at it's most episodic, has references, technologies and assumptions inherited from Canon.
We don't see them because we already know them. They are obvious to us. Transporters, Gorn, The Enterprise, Starfleet, The Maquis, Cardassians, Romulans.
Star Trek, even at it's most episodic, has references, technologies and assumptions inherited from Canon.
We don't see them because we already know them. They are obvious to us. Transporters, Gorn, The Enterprise, Starfleet, The Maquis, Cardassians, Romulans.
Subtract Gorn, Maquis, and Cardassians, and add Klingons, Vulcans, and numerous other things, and you have this movie.
So this point is moot. There was nothing that made making another movie in the established universe "virtually impossible."
I'll bet that if JJ Abrams had made a true origin story instead of an alternate universe, just as many people would have seen it.
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