Blasphemy! Ooooooo... you gonna rot in hell for that one!Spock doesn't have to shout.






As long as someone wears a sombrero, I will NOT boycott this movie!
Blasphemy! Ooooooo... you gonna rot in hell for that one!Spock doesn't have to shout.
If you were writing a screenplay about WW2, and decided ...
Really? I get a different impression most of the time.Most of this board cares.
Not this fan.Most of this board cares.
I'm not sure why people insist on feeling so threatened by this film.
Yes, I would be somewhat disappointed if the film makers somehow change the Star Trek I've followed for 35+ years. I was skeptical of Tim Burton's Batman when it was first announced back in the dizzy. I was worried it would be too dark and brooding, and it would never live up to the hype it generated. I gave in and eventually saw the film several weeks after it opened and thought that, though it was still way overhyped, Burton nailed it on so many levels. I have the same doubts about the current Batman franchise, but the kids seem to like it, so what do I know??
My point is, I am generally and genuinely curious about how Abrams and all will pull off a film in a universe that had basically been the care of so many of the same people for so long.
Other Iconic television and cultural icons have been recast plenty of times and I know that some are uncomfortable about Kirk and Spock being recast for the first time ever.
I felt the same way about the fan series Star Trek: The New Voyages/Phase II and there are moments of quality that even I will concede in some of the newer installments.
The people making the new Star Trek are pros who are fans of the show and of good storytelling. Could it be awful? Sure it could. But it could also be a pretty descent film, too. I have no reason not to give these guys the benefit of the doubt, at least until I've seen the film in the theatres.
They are guaranteed to get something "wrong" in the estimation of some "fans," but I also think Abrams team only well aware of the hornet's nest they're stirring up.
They're also making the movie with a whole new team, so why not let them come up with something of their own to contribute to the lore of the show? After all, isn't that what EVERY Trek writer has done over the last 40 years???
I'm not sure why people insist on feeling so threatened by this film.
*et cetera*
Heck, the BATMAN-SPIDERMAN-IRONMAN movies tweeked things here and there and yet their fans didn't have strokes over it
Whoa, whoa, whoa.. Hold on a sec.....some TREK fans are as whacko as Barry Manilow or General Hospital fans. Anything that isn't 'in line' can cause them to get their panties up in a bunch...
So I am with you..if they change something here and there and it works out then cool...I am with it!
Rob
Scorpio
If you were writing a screenplay about WW2, and decided ...
Fail. World War II is history; these things happened and it's important to represent them with some accuracy. Doing otherwise would be, at least, irresponsible..
:
All I'm saying is that a minimum of effort is all that would be required to fit any story they want to tell into established lore. .
Real life has continuity errors all the time.
I, however, can see right through it because I, and I am sure even you, could punch wholes in the continuity as it stands right now. Khan meeting chekov...
Which is one of the many reason disavow it ever happening and we should ALL have the same attitude about it: toss it out the window. I don't bother with, I don't watch it, I hate that pile of junk with a fiery passion.all the stuff ENTERPRISE monkeyed with...I mean, go down the list...
As long as one tosses Enterprise away, not so much.So what I am trying to say? The continuity of Trek already has holes in it you could drive a Galaxy Class starship through....and to hold this new movie, which is trying to reignite interest in a limp franchise, is not only wrong, it could be damaging as well.
SPOCK: Pure energy. Matter without form.
KIRK: Impossible.
from the bible
Stardates are a mathematical formula which varies depending on location in the galaxy, velocity of travel, and other factors, can vary widely from episode to episode
making of star trek
This time system adjusts for shifts in relative time which occur due to the vessel's speed and space warp capability. It has little relationship to Earth's time as we know it. One hour aboard the USS Enterprise at different times may equal as little as three Earth hours. The stardates specified in the log entry must be computed against the speed of the vessel, the space warp, and its position within our galaxy, in order to give a meaningful reading.
I'm not quite sure what I meant by that explanation, but a lot of people have indicated it makes sense. If so, I've been lucky again, and I'd just as soon forget the whole thing before I'm asked any further questions about it.
Uh, sorry, but the first episode that had Checkov has a Stardate that's earlier than Space Seed.
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