And I tried to explain why that's a misconception, and a hurtful one to me personally. But you're obviously too attached to your narrow stereotypes to give me a fair chance. If you're too petty to interact with me again, that costs me nothing.
Anyway, Kirk's mom died shortly before TWOK.
The TUC prose novelization suggests its the year 2299 or 2300. The year 2293 never made any sense. They look so OLD.
A lot of other stuff from that same novel (Time for Yesterday by A. C. Crispin) has been contradicted by later Trek productions.
I was curious about the take others had on continuity coming to the fore. I wouldn't have cited Dallas as an example though. A prime time soap is still a soap.![]()
True, but Dallas was a pioneer in making soaps respectable in prime-time, and "Who Shot J.R.?" was the granddaddy of season-ending cliffhangers (though I've seen it argued that it was "The Best of Both Worlds" that started them as a yearly tradition in TV). So it was influential on non-soap prime-time programming.
And before the '70s, reruns weren't even that common. (Star Trek changed the game by proving that people were interested in watching syndicated reruns, which ultimately may have been a bad thing because it led to a reduction in the number of new episodes per season.)
It's spelled Kellam de Forest, so it's not quite the same as DeForest Kelley (whose full name was actually Jackson DeForest Kelley).
True, but Dallas was a pioneer in making soaps respectable in prime-time, and "Who Shot J.R.?" was the granddaddy of season-ending cliffhangers (though I've seen it argued that it was "The Best of Both Worlds" that started them as a yearly tradition in TV). So it was influential on non-soap prime-time programming.
The time was very tight between 2,3, and 4, which is why it's considered a trilogy.
True, but it's still an amazing coincidence that someone using the rather off beat name of DeForest Kelley would be on a show utilizing the services of the even more off-beat Kellam de Forest. The similarity never ceased to give me a chuckle. Imagine the introduction at a party: "DeForest Kelley, I'd like you to meet, Kellam de Forest. Kellam, DeForest. Deforest, Kellam."
After BOBW, everyone got into it, and now we have sitcoms wearing the premise thin. Now producers use them as bargaining chips to try to keep failing shows on the air, never realizing that the networks don't give a crap if their money losing cancellations remain unresolved (see the recent V remake).
Then again, if the show doesn't come back, then the world was conquered, Anna won, the end. And all because Project Ar(i)es, despite having vast worldwide resources and intelligence with which to combat the Visitors, just sat passively by and entrusted the future of the human race to five morons in a basement. Kinda serves them right. Anna was far smarter, more proactive, more subtle, more careful, and more effective from start to finish, aside from getting temporarily sidetracked by trying to destroy the human soul. But she overcame that and rallied for the win, demonstrating great cleverness and poise under fire and great willingness to risk herself to achieve her goals -- and ultimately she succeeded because of the love and loyalty she inspired in her followers. In short, Anna showed more admirable qualities here than anyone else in the whole damn episode. I'd say she earned her victory fair and square.
Funny how this also connects to the length of TV seasons. The JR shooting cliffhanger was only created because CBS wanted two more episodes that season. The show was doing really well and wanted to extend the year (and therefore their profits). The producers had no idea what to do, because they already decided how to end the season. In a burst of inspiration, one of the producers said "JR needs to get his. Let's just shoot the bastard."
A trilogy has little to do with how soon a story takes place after the prior installment. It's more in how the stories connect. Star Wars The Phantom Menace takes place something like 10 years before Attack of the Clones. The story space between The Godfathers I & II is the same as the films release dates, yet it is still considered a trilogy. Star Trek's 2, 3, & 4 are a trilogy because they have a connected narrative throughout all three films, resolved in The Voyage Home.
(In the Mummy movies, an entire town moves from New England to the Deep South between films--and nobody seems to notice!)
(In the Mummy movies, an entire town moves from New England to the Deep South between films--and nobody seems to notice!)
Well, Angel Grove in Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers somehow managed to be both a colonial town in the 1790s and an Old West town in the 1890s, and seemed to be on the Pacific coast in the 1990s. Whereas Buffy's Sunnydale was a coastal city for several seasons but ended up in the middle of the desert in the series finale.
I think Smallville, Sunnydale, The Simpsons' Springfield, and a number of other TV communities have had a similar continuity issue in that they start out relatively small but then just keep getting bigger, accumulating their own universities and stadiums and multiple neighborhoods and industrial sectors and whatever else needs to be accreted onto them for the sake of a story, and thus ending up as pretty big cities. In around Smallville's second season or so, they even concocted a backstory that the city was founded by a Mr. Small, in order to reconcile the name with the city's growing size. (Not to mention that it ended up being anywhere from 3 hours' to a few minutes' drive from Metropolis.)
I never liked how GEN brought this Antonia one out of thin air, someone we'd never heard mentioned before yet who was supposedly so important in Kirk's life.
I never liked how GEN brought this Antonia one out of thin air, someone we'd never heard mentioned before yet who was supposedly so important in Kirk's life.
If it were up to me the name would have been Edith.
Love of his life who died by his own actions. He prevented McCoy from saving her even though he save millions of others. I would imagine that didn't make Kirk feel any better about it though. When he found himself in the Nexus he could have had her in the back of his mind as I'm sure she always was. Seeing Edith and realizing that it was all a dream would have been much better than the silly "I wasn't afraid to make that jump" bit. His emotional mind may have wanted Edith to be alive but he KNEW that she was dead. Once he realized that she could be real he would have questioned the rest of it and the story would have carried on as it did.
I never liked how GEN brought this Antonia one out of thin air, someone we'd never heard mentioned before yet who was supposedly so important in Kirk's life.
If it were up to me the name would have been Edith.
Love of his life who died by his own actions. He prevented McCoy from saving her even though he save millions of others. I would imagine that didn't make Kirk feel any better about it though. When he found himself in the Nexus he could have had her in the back of his mind as I'm sure she always was. Seeing Edith and realizing that it was all a dream would have been much better than the silly "I wasn't afraid to make that jump" bit. His emotional mind may have wanted Edith to be alive but he KNEW that she was dead. Once he realized that she could be real he would have questioned the rest of it and the story would have carried on as it did.
The problem there is that you would have to take time to recap "City on the Edge of Forever" which would have complicated an already convoluted plot involving bits and pieces of both TNG and TOS. Remember, you can't assume that the average moviegoer would know "City" by heart the way we do--and the movie already had to explain about the Nexus, Soran, Guinan, the Klingon sisters, Data's emotion chip, Picard's family in France, etc. The last thing GENERATIONS needed was a lot of TOS backstory about Edith, the Guardian of Forever, alternate timelines, and so on.
Me, I would have just mentioned "Carol" or "Gillian," neither of whom we were ever likely to see again anyway and whom don't require a lot of exposition. If audiences recognized the names from the earlier movies, cool. If not, no harm done.
It's not like you'd need to summarize the whole plot. For the non-fans Edith is just as generic as Antonia. For the fans it would be one big easter egg wrapped up in a big bow.
Kirk - Edith...?
Picard - A friend?
Kirk - Someone I knew a long, long time ago. But it can't be her. She died.
Picard - I'm sorry
Kirk - But if she's not real (glances around) then is any of this real either..
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