Did Kirk command the Enterprise for a while after TMP?

Discussion in 'Star Trek Movies I-X' started by The Rock, Sep 16, 2020.

  1. Timo

    Timo Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Yeah. I mean, what sort of contrary proof could even theoretically exist? It's always possible to state "the first three minutes of TMP/Raiders of the Lost Ark/Jumanji/the 1988 Olympics take place in a different universe from the rest", regardless of whether they are somehow distinct from the rest or not.

    That's mostly true of every TOS episode, too. Or of most pairs of Trek TV shows. Connections are not a major or desirable feature in episodic entertainment, and Trek has seldom gone for cross-serializing, save for the 1990s.

    Yet they were still launching Saturn Vs in the late 1960s. We don't know when exactly the Trek space program diverged drastically from ours, but it's quite possible it happened after 1977, at which time the only significant difference was that there were six Grand Tourers, not two.

    After all, the diverging there is going to be a single event: the inventing of a propulsion system superior to the real-world ones. And it probably won't be a gradual event by any standard. Once the secret is out, every nation or other power will want their own superengine and supership, and we can forget all about chemical rockets and Hohmann transfer orbits.

    Timo Saloniemi
     
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  2. WarpFactorZ

    WarpFactorZ Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    This. I find it somewhat funny that Trek is so beholden to continuity and canon, yet prior to TWOK-TVH, there was very little, if any, continuity! It was really TNG that solidified the franchise as "one universe" with TOS references, and even then season 1 was very weakly strung together.

    Over the years, I've come to think that TWOK was what happened after they sent Gene home because he was drunk, threw TMP in the trash, and made Trek the way it should have been.
     
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  3. fireproof78

    fireproof78 Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Indeed, yes.
     
  4. Damian

    Damian Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    I think part of that is just the times. When Star Trek first aired in the 1960s most shows were episodic. Star Trek actually maintained a tighter continuity at that time then many of its contemporaries, though nothing like today.

    For example, I always liked "I Dream of Jeannie" and that continuity was constantly being revised. First it was if Jeannie ever got married she'd lose her powers. But she did get married and nothing happened. Then at first her parents were just mortals, later genies. And there were many other examples. Star Trek had some inconsistencies here and there, but the overall series did have a bit of a flow to it that makes some sense.

    But each series reflected the times it was made in. TNG was primarily episodic, but there was a stronger continuity within the show. DS9 was the first to dabble with serialized storytelling and each series went from there. The last 2 seasons of Enterprise took it even further. And now with Discovery is so serialized it's rare to see an episode on its own (as I presume is the case with Picard).

    But when you look at the TV landscape today, that's how TV is. And I think Star Trek as a franchise generally reflects the time it was made in.

    Personally I like a little of both. I enjoy some serialized story telling. But I don't mind a standalone episode here and there as well. It's nice to have an episode where a problem arises and is solved by the end of the episode.

    And yes, I am a continuity junkie and serialized stories play into that. Though you can certainly have episodic shows that still have a continuity (which is where I go back to the original series--it's not serialized at all, but there's still a bit of continuity there).

    And when it comes to TWOK vs. TMP I never got the sense they weren't in the same universe, or that TWOK was a 'soft reboot' or anything. I don't need references or a story line that binds them together. For me, just the fact that TWOK does nothing to contradict anything in TMP is enough for me personally. It helps they used the same sets and ship (the uniforms changes are pretty minor to me, and of course they have changed since so even that is consistent).

    In a way I compare it to The Exorcist III, after Exorcist II: The Heretic (I'm one of a select few that liked Exorcist II also, what can I say). William Peter Blatty hated Exorcist II and wanted nothing to do with it. But when you see III there is nothing there that actually contradicts II. They even focus on different characters. TWOK and TMP are much the same.
     
    Last edited: Sep 18, 2020
  5. drt

    drt Commodore Commodore

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    I think it's clear that Roddenberry intended TMP to be a soft reboot of the Trekverse, he pretty much explicitly states this in the novelization.

    There are also quite a few things in TNG season 1 that are retconned away later in the show's run. As others have pointed out elsewhere, the reason being that as control shifted away from Roddenberry, who wasn't as married to maintaining continuity, those that took the reins were Trek fans, and as such, more concerned that everything fit together.
     
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  6. BK613

    BK613 Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Yes, that actually seemed to be the intent. It certainly explains ADM Morrow's comment about the Enterprise's age in TSFS.
    Agree.
     
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  7. BillJ

    BillJ The King of Kings Premium Member

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    I’m not sure he was an “Academy Admiral” in TWOK. I figure he was still Chief of StarFleet Operations, this was simply the class he was mentoring.

    Nope. Never liked the idea of every person in the fleet commanding multiple five year missions. There would be more to StarFleet than that, and it shows a severe lack of imagination.
     
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  8. drt

    drt Commodore Commodore

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    I liked the way the five-year missions were presented in the Kelvinverse, a new deep-space program for a select few ships and that once they leave Earth, there was no returning until the end of the mission.

    TOS largely followed this, except for the few occasions when they were in Earth's neighborhood. This was to be TNG's mandate as well, but with a longer mission length (which is why the families were onboard). Farpoint was supposed to be the edge of Federation space and everything beyond that new territory, but that largely went out the window by the end of the first season.
     
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  9. yotsuya

    yotsuya Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    I think you are right that those who came later cared more. But it was really the Okudas who solidified the timeline, adapting as best they could to the hodgepodge of dates and references in TOS and the movies.

    To put it in modern dates, TOS was 65 (WNMHGB) to 69. The 5 year mission ended in 70. TMP was in 72/73. TWOK was after 83 (86 in the official timeline). TUC was around 93/95. So TMP was supposed to be after less time than the movie was after the series. They kind of reset that for TWOK, but then the next 3 movies were in short succesion in the timeline (when the films were made over 7 years). So then TUC went back to being about where it should be. They pushed it out 2 years to 93 for the official timeline. And the TOS section of Generations was also 93. When in reality it was 65 to 69, 79, 82, 84, 86, 89, 91, 95 for TOS to Generations.

    I've always had a few issues with the official timeline, but that is what they went forward with. Do you include TAS? Is that the end of the 5 year mission? When did Kirk take command? Was some of the mission before we started the series? But in general I agree with it to within a couple of years. In my timeline you have WNMHGB not too long after Kirk becomes captain and then after the damage the ship goes in for a major refit that takes several months and we start the series like 6 or more months after Sulu joins the crew. We have 3 seasons cover 3 years and then a year and a half for TAS and anything else you want to include (books or one of the fan productions) before the 5 year mission ends. Then 2.5 years to TMP. Then a gap... nothing official, only hints from dialog. Then TWOK/TSFS/TVH/TFF. Then a gap with Kirk as Captain. Then TUC and Generations. How long those gaps are is not specified. We can guess where TWOK fits form the 15 years in the dialog, but in some ways some of the episodes might make a better organized timeline if they where shuffled about a bit. The Menagerie should almost be 2 years into the mission unless Kirk took over at the end of Pike's last mission. Some have tried to set WNMHGB earlier with a gap and Season 3 as the end of the 5 year mission. But whatever way, you really have a lot of room to shuffle things around without damaging any continuity with the later series. I prefer to stick to production order for the episodes and the timeline I've outlined above for the movies with TAS being a 4th season and representing the end of the 5 year mission. I liked Star Trek Continues, but when they destroyed all the other Starships for the finale they lost me. Again a case of not checking the timeline and the behind the scenes references that many of us consider a secondary and canon to be followed where possible.
     
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  10. jackoverfull

    jackoverfull Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    sulu was on board in WNMHGB already, he was one of the heads of departments and one of his few lines consisted in explaining exponential growth.
     
  11. Nerys Myk

    Nerys Myk A Spock and a smile Premium Member

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    Yep, Sulu was the science guy for one episode. Or "astro-science" guy as was stated in the episode. Spock was a little more First Officer-ish in that one.
     
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  12. jackoverfull

    jackoverfull Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    For the first four episodes or so, I think. Wasn’t he head botanist in Man trap?
     
  13. Nerys Myk

    Nerys Myk A Spock and a smile Premium Member

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    I think that was just one of his hobbies. By episode 3 (production order) he's a helmsman.
     
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  14. Smellmet

    Smellmet Commodore Commodore

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    I never even saw it as that, I just saw TMP as the same universe continued but with more money to spend on how it looked and the fact it was a major movie. TWOK waa just years later, new uniforms? Doesn't matter as we never saw the years in between.

    Like I said before it all still works for me.
     
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  15. Lord Garth

    Lord Garth Admiral Admiral

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    Upward mobility too. Helmsman was something that could lead to Captain and Botanist wasn't. Looks like he was 4th in Command in TOS.
     
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  16. Nerys Myk

    Nerys Myk A Spock and a smile Premium Member

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    The Man Trap (the one where he is in the Botany lab) shows him at the helm at the episode's end. There is also a scene where Sulu pretty much takes charge while Kirk and Spock are on the planet. Scotty is more or less AWOL in this episode. ;)
    So fourth in command seems right, at least in the Man Trap.
     
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  17. Henoch

    Henoch Glowing Globe Premium Member

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    Assistant Chief Engineer, Lt. DeSalle was 5th in Command in Catspaw since Kirk, Spock, Scott and Sulu where all on the planet surface at the same time. :p
     
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  18. J.T.B.

    J.T.B. Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Spock was also science officer in WNMHGB, though. In the original writer's bible it says that science officer is ex officio second in command.

    Sulu is jumped over Scotty to take command in "Arena," which always annoyed me a bit.
     
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  19. Warped9

    Warped9 Admiral Admiral

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    TMP should have been set ten years after TOS, but dialog in the film states it's less than three years after TOS' 5-year mission. It's strongly implied in TMP that things are back the way they should be and the familiar crew is back aboard the refit Enterprise for another mission.

    TWOK feels as if it's suggesting TMP never happened since those events are never again referenced in successive films or series. But if we go by time references in TWOK then it takes place about 10-12 years after TMP. Thats plenty of time for at least one more voyage under Kirk. GEN implies Kirk has commanded an Enterprise (1701 and 1701A) for thirty years (which is a ridiculous notion). But going by that then Kirk did indeed stay with the Enterprise after TMP.

    "The Menagerie" established it wasn't impossible for someone to command the same ship for several years given Spock states he served with Pike for nine years. So Pike had the Enterprise for maybe at least ten years before handing it over to Kirk. With that precedent then it's not impossible to see Kirk commanding the Enterprise for easily ten years plus.
     
  20. BillJ

    BillJ The King of Kings Premium Member

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    Scotty was hungover.