Just asking, as WNMHGB clearly has a different personell at cases - different Doctor, no Sulu or Chekov at the helm, Gary Mitchell present and so forth.
Well?
Well?
Just asking, as WNMHGB clearly has a different personell at cases - different Doctor, no Sulu or Chekov at the helm, Gary Mitchell present and so forth.
Well?
A: Yes and no, as far as we can tell.Continuity q: Will this be set post-"Where No Man Has Gone Before"
...the movie may break event canon in subtle ways for story, and we know that some design canon is likely to be broken or bent.
If it does, someone must be burned at the stake for this.
If it does, someone must be burned at the stake for this.
I wonder if Shakespeare expected his plays to always be performed in Elizabethan costumes? And with no actor ever recast?
And never to be translated from the original Klingon.
Many of Shakespeare's plays however don't get performed in period wear. Even sometimes they're performed in a very minimalist manner that is little set dressing and spare costuming. It isn't unheard of for them to be adapted and set in more modern times. I think this happened with a movie version of Henry V.As for the bard, I'd hope that something taking place in Elizabethan times would have characters dressed accordingly.
Never said that you did. But it fitted with what I was saying, and plenty of other fans have complained.I've never complained about the cast being changed.
But... ENT's "Mirror, Mirror" prequel was for TV, not the big screen. Changing the starship models (and costumes, and sets) for a feature film is the same argument for changing the TV model for ST:TMP.It's the idea of changing the Enterprise when there's no need (see ST:ENT "In a Mirror...").
But these plays are often presented very successfully in costumes from other periods. I've seen excellent stage versions of Shakespearean plays were everyone was dressed in 70s garb. Another where everyone was dressed as Mafia hitmen.As for the bard, I'd hope that something taking place in Elizabethan times would have characters dressed accordingly.
It may take place in multiple timeframes, but I believe the bulk of the story -- the main action -- (perhaps an hour+ of screentime) will take place in the time immediately prior to Kirk assuming command of the Enterprise, maybe months or weeks beforehand.It's set all over the place.
^
^^And more recently, Rupert Goold's MacBeth starring Patrick Stewart (for which Stewart received a Tony award nomination last month) is set in a 20th-century timeframe, albeit in an unspecified time and in an unspecified country.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.