It still hurts...To get personal again, when I adapted MAN OF STEEL, I didn't try to sneak in references to Krypto
It still hurts...To get personal again, when I adapted MAN OF STEEL, I didn't try to sneak in references to Krypto
It still hurts...To get personal again, when I adapted MAN OF STEEL, I didn't try to sneak in references to Krypto
I'm so sorry. Good dog!
It still hurts...
I'm so sorry. Good dog!
Oh - I didn't go see Man of Steel because of the smashing noises and violence it seemed to contain, but knowing you wrote the novel makes me want to read it. I'll try and check it out.
But is it really Godzilla if it's not a guy in a rubber suit anymore?
And you don't think that they would have used CGI back then if they could have?Godzilla should always be a guy in a rubber suit, stepping on little plastic tank models and knocking over cardboard buildings. That's what made that old batch of Japanese monster movies so much fun in the first place.
nobody insists that it isn't really Godzilla unless his continuity stays intact!![]()
(I mean, but really, of course continuity isn't important to franchises that never really built much continuity to begin with. That's not surprising.)
*ding* *ding* *ding* *ding*!!! Thank you!![]()
(I mean, but really, of course continuity isn't important to franchises that never really built much continuity to begin with. That's not surprising.)
(I mean, but really, of course continuity isn't important to franchises that never really built much continuity to begin with. That's not surprising.)
Which sounds like TOS to a tee. The over-reliance (importance) of continuity is something that came around in the late-80's/early-90's.
And Enterprise just had to retcon stuff and insert stuff because...? You can't deride one series' continuity issues because a new show decided to wreck it decades later.I think Star Trek's continuity was a sort of house of cards, and shows like Enterprise really made it topple. In some ways I think a reboot was necessary. Or at the very least some severe retconning.
Okay, thanks for clearing that up. You made it sound at first like a much more extensive tossing out of everything and starting from scratch, with just a few borrowed terms plus the name Star Trek.Why even bother to call it Star Trek if you're redoing everything? That's just borrowing a famous name and riding its coattails. As for a "reclusive" Federation that doesn't want to go anywhere... it's a pretty big part of space. Are you saying that nobody goes beyond the Federation boundaries, or nobody goes much of anywhere within the Federation itself?
What? It's still Star Trek. By this logic, why call the New Doctor Who, Doctor Who? What I was describing is no different than the Time War, or setting TNG nearly a century after TOS. It would be the backdrop to establish a new world and to get the show off on the right foot for new and old audiences. Without having to do a hard reboot or to go into an alternate reality. It would creatively free the writers to do whatever they want, as they would have a hundred years between them and previous continuity, they could reinvent anything in anyway they saw fit. You want to turn the Klingons into a race of mystics who have turned away from their violent warrior culture? Go ahead, you have a hundred years to establish why that could have happened, and give the show an entirely new future-history.That's just one example, of course. You could do anything you wanted.
All the key races are there. Time and devastation have changed them dramatically enough that a sense of surprise and mystery is in the air when our heroes go out to meet them again. The old can still be referenced, but the audience does not need to be in the know about 50+ years of Trek canon to understand things.
Reclusive in the sense that Starfleet, the defensive and exploratory arm of the Federation, does not venture much further beyond patrolling the Federation borders and policing Federation planets. That the cataclysmic events (whatever they were) may have even been the fault of Starfleet itself, and as a result the modus operandi was changed from deep space penetration and exploration to defending our own borders.
Strictly speaking, Kirk didn't so much travel 80 years forward, as he was suspended in time for 80 years - like Scotty spent 75 years in the transporter buffer.Kirk had a son with Carol Marcus, his son was killed by Klingons, he was later accused of assassinating the Klingon chancelor, then was a key figure in the peace treaty with the Klingons. And then he time traveled 80 years into the future and died after helping Captain Picard.
Those are examples for important continuity bits.
Oh, I'm waiting... it's ridiculous that I can get a book from the UK in less than a week, but it takes a month or more to get one from the U.S.Wait until you see the next one . . .![]()
But it wasn't faithful to the concepts of the original series. Original Uhura was a professional. She didn't bring personal problems on-duty with her, and she never shushed Kirk so she could bitch and whine at her boyfriend - a fellow officer - on duty.But there's no harm in establishing a new continuity for Star Trek, provided that it's done in way that's faithful to the concepts and ideas that made the genre successful in the first place. Look at the Myriad Universes series. People loved those books even though they deviated from canon.
If the characters were written and acted properly, I'd give it a chance.A series based on the same concept-- this is how things would've turned out if...-- could work as long as it still has the feel of Star Trek. It might be jarring for fans (at first) to see an Enterprise commanded by Will Decker rather than James Kirk or first contact with the Cardassians presided over by the crew of the USS Reliant after a successful trip to Ceti Alpha VI. But the ideas could work if they were written well enough. There would, of course, be a stable of fans who rejected the idea and refused to watch, but that shouldn't spoil things for everyone else.
. . .it was felt they'd be relatable to the modern audience this way. But being represented as part of a Navy-esque Starfleet -- even a cartoony version thereof -- that comes at the expense of believability as professionals in their setting. So, it comes down to a question of whether that trade-off works for you.
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