I also think that the Enterprise timeline (created by the events in First Contact) leads us to the AbramsVerse, and not to TOS/TNG.
In this theory we account for why NX-01 is so advanced compared to TOS
In this theory we account for why NX-01 is so advanced compared to TOS
The technology in most people's living rooms an home offices is advanced compared to TOS. We are at odds with ourselves when demanding that TOS remain exactly as filmed in the 1960s AND that ENT show us something credible from the future.
Very good point. People need to get over this and invoke suspension of disbelief. TOS was filmed in the 1960s - to demand a 'prequel' series filmed 35 years later to hold exactly to what was presented in terms of a technological future then would be silly.
I think Enterprise fits in just fine with all the other Treks (and stands proudly with them to boot). There's the odd bit which doesn't quite fit, but no more than all the other series together.
A lot of Trek fans seem to have impossible standards; that the producers of all Trek managed to create this fictional future universe and make it all fit-more-or-less across 42 years (1964-2005) of production is incredible.
"In a Mirror, Darkly" has the MU crew amazed by the USS Defiant. It's not less advanced at all - to them, TOS is amazing futuristic technology-meets-art. It neatly explains why every Trek looks the way it does, from the bright colours, toggle switches and clunky buttons of TOS to the hotel lobby of TNG to the bright lights and swirly animated touchscreens of the new movies - it's all the whim of futuristic artist/designers.In this theory we account for why NX-01 is so advanced compared to TOS
The technology in most people's living rooms an home offices is advanced compared to TOS. We are at odds with ourselves when demanding that TOS remain exactly as filmed in the 1960s AND that ENT show us something credible from the future.
Perhaps not, through out TOS, TNG, etc (and TAS as well) there are reference to Humanity not sitting on their hands for a century, but instead exploding outward into interstellar space basically as soon as a warp drive was invented/discovered.Its been happening all through time before and after "Broken Bow". The version that Kirk knows is the one from "Broken Bow".The TCW also has already started before "Broken Bow" opens, so there may be yet another version of prequel events following Vulcan first contact.
The technology in most people's living rooms an home offices is advanced compared to TOS. We are at odds with ourselves when demanding that TOS remain exactly as filmed in the 1960s AND that ENT show us something credible from the future.
If we're using that metric, then certain episodes of TOS don't reconcile with the information in the first four live action series.Perhaps not, through out TOS, TNG, etc (and TAS as well) there are reference to Humanity not sitting on their hands for a century, but instead exploding outward into interstellar space basically as soon as a warp drive was invented/discovered.Its been happening all through time before and after "Broken Bow". The version that Kirk knows is the one from "Broken Bow".The TCW also has already started before "Broken Bow" opens, so there may be yet another version of prequel events following Vulcan first contact.
It's hard to reconcile the information in the first four live action series with that presented in the fifth.
In the first four series the century of being "held back" by the Vulcans apparently never happen.
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"In a Mirror, Darkly" has the MU crew amazed by the USS Defiant. It's not less advanced at all - to them, TOS is amazing futuristic technology-meets-art. It neatly explains why every Trek looks the way it does, from the bright colours, toggle switches and clunky buttons of TOS to the hotel lobby of TNG to the bright lights and swirly animated touchscreens of the new movies - it's all the whim of futuristic artist/designers.In this theory we account for why NX-01 is so advanced compared to TOS
The technology in most people's living rooms an home offices is advanced compared to TOS. We are at odds with ourselves when demanding that TOS remain exactly as filmed in the 1960s AND that ENT show us something credible from the future.
Very good point. People need to get over this and invoke suspension of disbelief. TOS was filmed in the 1960s - to demand a 'prequel' series filmed 35 years later to hold exactly to what was presented in terms of a technological future then would be silly.
The answer to both is "it's a TV show". The look of the tech is going to reflect the 2000s not the 60s or 80s. The creators also tried to keep the tech on par or more primitive that TOS. Sometimes it was just a hand wave with the nomenclature, but it was there.Yeah, there were basically two problems:
1) What was shown in ENT (certain technologies) were superior to TOS.
You can't have eighteen years or whatever it was with a consistent timeline of these things and then tell your audience "actually, no, everything changes".
2) The 'kitch-asthetic' of TOS had already been canonized by TNG/DS9/VOY era productions.
This one is far more insidious. Basically we could have simply accepted a 'cosmic retcon' of TOS, perhaps assuming tha the tech seen in TMP and TWOK represented what TOS "really" looked like. But instead we got future versions of Trek, like TNG's Relics or DS9's Trials and Tribbleations, which basically canonized TOS into the time frame. So I *don't* think it's unreasonable for the fandom to be slightly pissed that the 'prequel' didn't fit.
Frankly if I were the bean counters and my brief was "Make a new Star Trek show that has to recapture a TOS timeframe and feature a Starship Enterprise", then my first choice would be doing a show based on 1701-B. But maybe that's just me.![]()
I've never understood this line of thought. Giving it a 50s sf aesthetic seems too "on the nose" and shouts "It's a fake!!!!!".Ultimately I think if more concessions had been made to make ENT look 'pre-TOS', maybe with a stylized 1950s or 1940s sci-fi asthetic rather than the 1960s one of TOS, then it would have given ENT a unique look while still feeling adequately pre-TOS in design.
I've never understood this line of thought. Giving it a 50s sf aesthetic seems too "on the nose" and shouts "It's a fake!!!!!".Ultimately I think if more concessions had been made to make ENT look 'pre-TOS', maybe with a stylized 1950s or 1940s sci-fi asthetic rather than the 1960s one of TOS, then it would have given ENT a unique look while still feeling adequately pre-TOS in design.
The Enterprise aesthetic while having nods to TOS, is also an extrapolation of the styles of the late 20th/early 21st Centuries. That makes more sense to me than going deliberately "retro" because TOS was influenced by then contemporary styles.
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