*quietly closes Word*, so many wandering in the outer darkness. Show us the path to The Truth. It is the duty of the faithful to share The Word (and we don’t mean Microsoft).
Suuuuure it's not.I mean, the planets in the upper left above her are animated. I imagine it's just an artistic interpretation and nothing meant by it.
Squeee!A modern take on this maybe?
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Well, M'Benga and La'an are in the same space and staring at Pike while holding a weapon. I think La'an is planning a mutiny.Suuuuure it's not.
From 1966-2005 is one kind of trek. 2009 to now is another kind of trek for the marvel crowd. Everyone can have their opinion.
Dude, I haven't even hit the ignore button.
Picard largely sucked (or at least was a mess IMHO) including the vaunted season 3, Disco has had it's ups and downs, Lower Decks fills my Trekkie heart with great joy (and gratitude), and Prodigy and Strange New Worlds are the most fun I've had watching Star Trek in decades.
I hold all of those opinions, am not shy about expressing them, and haven't been banned anywhere. (OTOH, I haven't seen a dime from Paramount either!)
I even think the Enterprise is ~300m long and I'm still allowed in semi-polite company.
It does start to happen, yes.
Star Trek is the original shared cinematic universe. Kurtzman didn't create one, he expanded on the one that already had existed for decades.
On TV there was the Henning-Verse.Nitpicking: the very first shared cinematic universe would the the Universal Monsters films of the 1940s, when Frankenstein's monster, Dracula, and the Wolf Man started crossing over into each other films, beginning with FRANKENSTEIN MEETS THE WOLF MAN (1943) which is simultaneously a sequel to THE WOLF MAN (1941) and GHOST OF FRANKENSTEIN (1942), picking up on plot threads from both films. Followed by three other "monster mash" crossover movies.
And then there was the Toho giant-monster cinematic universe, with Godzilla, Rodan, Mothra, and company debuting in their own solo films before crossing over (and over and over) into each other's films, culminating in DESTROY ALL MONSTERS (1968), which, trust me, was pretty much the AVENGERS: ENDGAME of Japanese monster movies, bringing together all of Toho's kaiju in one big epic film. (Blew my eight-year-old mind, back in the day.)
All long before STAR TREK became cinematic universe.
If you want to talk about TV, well, most every television series was a "shared universe" with multiple writers, directors and producers.
Wow! Actual Starship porn. (and from a Saturday morning cartoon no less )A modern take on this maybe?
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Hell, the antics of the citizens of Hooerville predate Trek by atleast a few years!
On TV there was the Henning-Verse.![]()
There was also the Stanley -Ross verse, with Batman and The Green Hornet appearing in each other's episodes, and sharing a common TV universe.On TV there was the Henning-Verse.![]()
There was also the Stanley -Ross verse, with Batman and The Green Hornet appearing in each other's episodes, and sharing a common TV universe.
A lot of TV characters seem to live in Gotham high rises.There was also the Stanley -Ross verse, with Batman and The Green Hornet appearing in each other's episodes, and sharing a common TV universe.
That's where I know her from.Meanwhile, we're burying the lead: Captain Wynonna Earp is back!![]()
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