They appear to be Kirk and Spock and McCoy and the rest. I'm about as concerned about this as I am the number of versions there have been of James Bond. In neither case is there either a "true" or consistent history.
(Now, if "Star Trek XI" ends with Scotty and Sulu being killed off, then that will obviously spin off into a new timeline, like in "Yesterday's Enterprise."
This is how I also feel. If Kirk, Spock and McCoy don't 'feel' like Kirk, Spock and McCoy, then I will not be happy with the movie. If they do 'feel' right, then I don't care much if the Enterprise looks different or the technical details have changed. For me, it's all about the characters, and mostly just the Big 3.I will be MASSIVELY disappointed with this movie if the main players don't 'feel' right, as far as their personalities and the way the actors present themselves. The Big 3, especially, have to be right. I think this is going to be very hard to do. And, I will be extraordinarily disappointed if the new film doesn't promote all the great ideals and ideas that make Star Trek what it is. I don't give a rats ass how great this movie is, if those two things aren't in it I am gong to hate it.
Absolutely Right.They appear to be Kirk and Spock and McCoy and the rest. I'm about as concerned about this as I am the number of versions there have been of James Bond. In neither case is there either a "true" or consistent history.
However, I'm specifically talking about an "origin film". If this film is truly about an alternate timeline as the rumors say (although the rumors can be wrong), then we will not be getting a "TOS characters origin film" but rather a film depicting the origins of these other people (who very well may have the exact same personalities, but with different past experiences).
Actually, "Star Trek: First Contact" depicted three different timelines:^ The difference there is, we don't *know* if there was ever a version of history that didn't involve the events of ST:FC. It could have been a predestination paradox - i.e. those things were always supposed to happen, and there was never a timeline where they did not.
They returned to an identical timeline, but not the same timeline.I tend to believe this is true, since Picard and crew returned to the same timeline that they left.
Well, I haven't seen the movie, and I don't know how it will end, but if he goes back in time, screws up hisotry, and then someone else goes back in time and "fixes" history, then like Marty 1 in "Back to the Future" and Picard in "First Contact," "Star Trek XI" will see history "restored" by the end, so that there is still a Captain Kirk, a Federation, and a starship Enterprise. It's not "predestination" as depicted in the "Time's Arrow" causality-loop sense, but if the future is "close enough," then to us viewers and to the characters, it might as well be.I don't see how that can be possible here. Are we seriously considering that *Nero* might be part of such a predestination paradox? I admit I never thought of it that way, but I highly doubt it's possible.
They re-designed (or "improved") the Enterprise, the props and the costumes in EVERY ONE of the previous ten films. That has nothing to do with alternate timelines.For example, there's the obvious differences in technology and look of the Enterprise.
I suspect that Vulcan and San Francisco will still be around at the end of the movie -- Unless the producers abandon the past 40 years of reset-button storytelling and actually spin the movie series off into a new timeline where Vulcan does not exist, but I find this highly unlikely. I predict they'll take the "Back to the Future" route and history will be "restored" to a "close enough" state by the end, with only a few trivial details in a few characters' pasts being different.Also, if Nero destroys Vulcan, then obviously ST:TNG won't be possible as seen, since Vulcan still exists in that series. Ditto for San Francisco (we've seen it, and Starfleet Command, in several scenes set after TOS).
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