Besides, I don't see how it's a bad thing that the two movies used different mediums. It's not the first time that we've seen a franchise do both animation and live-action, or even have a direct sequel done in a different format
It's not about the medium, and I'm not saying it's bad. I'm saying that the makers of the sequel conceived of what they were doing, both concept and technique, in a fundamentally different way than the makers of the original did, so they don't fit together conceptually or artistically all that well. I'm not saying
Legacy is a bad movie, I'm just saying it's a reinterpretation from the ground up.
Although I am saying it's a
routine movie. That's the problem. It's a perfectly adequate CGI action movie, but there's nothing particularly special about it because CGI is so commonplace now. The original
TRON was not a great movie storywise, no, but it was
unique in a way its sequel couldn't even begin to approach. It was a fascinating and ambitious experiment in terms of concept and technique, and it's interesting to think about it in the context of the time it was made and the very different perception of computers that existed in the culture then. I think that glossing over the differences between the two films' underlying intentions and philosophies is losing that historical perspective.
Funny, I recall that the idea that the human creation being an impossibility and being overturned by the alien workings of the machine was the main theme of the sequel (the "perfect system" vs. the ISOs). (Besides, there's nothing in the movies that dictate that just because the computer systems developed into an alien world all on their own that someone couldn't try to create their own after learning about this other universe.)
Again, I'm not talking about whether you can handwave a way to reconcile the two movies, because it's always possible to do that. I'm talking about the underlying intentions of the storytellers and the very different ways they conceived of the computer world. I'm just saying it's important not to make the mistake of assuming that the original
TRON was intended to represent a programmed virtual world and avatars the way we might assume it was today. If you look at it closely, it's actually more of a fanciful allegory for what goes on inside a computer, in much the same way that Pixar's
Inside Out is an allegory for the workings of the human brain.
So I don't want to erase that distinction, and I'm not saying there's anything wrong with that distinction. I'm
acknowledging the difference between the two films' intentions because it's interesting to recognize and to think about, and because it's a difference that I think most people don't realize is there, which makes it worth calling attention to. I don't want to pretend it doesn't exist. As I keep saying, in-universe continuity is not the only level for discussing fiction. I'm talking about the different creative philosophies of the two sets of filmmakers, because that is a noteworthy thing to recognize about the creative process.
I'm not only a fan of behind-the-scenes filmmaking, I'm a student of history. So I think it's worth recognizing the different historical contexts and creative perspectives of different works of fiction, rather than ignoring that side of them just because they pretend to fit together. When I write
Star Trek fiction, I try to treat the stuff from the 1960s and the stuff from today as a single consistent reality, but when I talk about
Star Trek as fiction, then I'm going to acknowledge the differences in conception, philosophy, and technique as well as the similarities in-story, because those differences are worth knowing about and understanding.
I guess I'm pretty darn sure that had that third movie been made (too bad it wasn't), that the cartoon would bet sent off to do it's own thing, like that video game sequel (said to be the official followup by the original movie's creator) was when Legacy came out.
Maybe,
if it had been made. But it wasn't. The animated series was meant to be consistent with
Legacy, and as far as I know, it was. You don't need permission from a higher authority to see two works of fiction as mutually consistent. You just have to use your own perception of whether there actually are inconsistencies or not.
Sounds about like the same reasons Kirk would have for covering up Khan's exile (he thought it was a "waste" to just send Khan to a prison).
That's not even close to the same. Mitchell, Dehner, and Decker were dead; there was nothing to be gained by revealing unflattering truths about them, as all it would've done was to bring more sadness to their loved ones. Khan and his people were still alive, in need of observation and safeguarding, as well as an amazingly important find for historians (and Kirk was a history buff himself, remember), and they had no surviving loved ones (aside from Marla) to protect from anything.
"Dear Doctor" (ENT) and
Star Trek Into Darkness could be circumstantial evidence against that.
*sigh* Yes, obviously prequel works written
after TNG have retroactively used its stricter interpretation in stories set in or before the TOS era. I'm saying that's an error, or at least a retcon. Again, I'm not talking about these stories as if they were "real" in a consistent universe -- I'm talking about the different assumptions and intentions made by their creators in different eras, and warning against the fallacy of assuming that the modern interpretation of the work is the same interpretation that its original creators had.
Again, the point is that the common modern meme that "Kirk often violated the Prime Directive" is erroneous because it mistakenly assumes TOS's writers were working from TNG's assumptions. If you actually look at the text of TOS, it portrayed Kirk as
upholding the Prime Directive by having a zero-tolerance policy toward
others' interference. So this is just one of the many, many things that modern culture gets frustratingly wrong about James T. Kirk.
Before Khan took over the ship and Kirk got it back and left him on Ceti Alpha V, the Enterprise was en route to a starbase. While there were times that Kirk was indeed all alone with no superiors to back him up (e.g. "Arena" and "Balance of Terror"), it doesn't really sound like he was in a situation where he couldn't contact Starfleet for recommendations.
Even so, he'd never have earned command of a capital ship if he behaved as unprofessionally and with as much contempt for authority and discipline as modern audiences have somehow come to believe.
One can debate whether it would've been in Kirk's character to cover this whole thing up (if that was indeed how it happened), but it still seems improbable (to me, at least) that the Federation would just leave the colony there, given how much of a stain Khan had left on history and how reviled he was (say it was Hitler instead of Khan; would the colony being just left there make any sense?).
I think someone like Napoleon would be a better analogy than Hitler. No massacres under his rule, remember? Not to mention the two centuries of distance, which would tend to make historical acts of conquest seem more academic and morally neutral, of great interest to historians.
And why in the world would they
not leave the colony there? An uninhabited planet is the ideal prison, since there's no way off it. We already know the Federation has plenty of penal colonies; this is just an informal version of the exact same thing. All they'd have to do was set up a permanent monitoring presence.
And again, the explicit analogy was to the settlement of Australia, using prisoners to settle a new land both to reduce prison overcrowding and to facilitate colonial expansion at the same time. Since the 23rd-century Federation was heavily into territorial expansion and colonization, I see no reason they would've objected to using the Augments as prisoner labor to develop Ceti Alpha V as a way to atone for their crimes.
On the other hand, let's say Kirk did report it and no one objected to the colony being there. What would've been the reason that no one came back to support it and that no one outside of the 1701 crew seemed to know anything about it?
Because
The Wrath of Khan was a stupid movie whose premise made no damn sense, that's the reason. That's my whole point -- that the premise that the colony remained unknown 15 years later is absurd.
What's the name of Khan's ship got to do with anything? The ship wasn't for exiling prisoners, it was used by fugitives to escape justice.
See, this is why you need to consider the creative process and not just the in-universe continuity. The writers chose that name
because of the resonance with the historical practice they intended the episode to parallel. They expected their viewers to be historically literate enough to understand what the name
Botany Bay meant, and thus to understand the thinking behind Kirk's decision at the end. Writers often name things because of the resonances they want to evoke in the audience's mind,
regardless of whether the same reason for the name exists in-story.
(like, say how Professor X being crippled in X-Men: First Class cannot fit with any of the movies made before it).
The comics' Xavier has regained and re-lost the use of his legs several times over the decades, so that's actually one of the easier things to reconcile in the movie continuity.
However, it's pretty clear that Picard has no idea about the Borg and is hearing everything for the first time and that Guinen is the only source of info at the time, which suggests (taking the prequel into account) that the TNG crew, at least, didn't connect the dots between the Borg and the NX-01's cyborg encounter until after Q sent them back home.
Yes, Picard is hearing about them for the first time, but no, there's no proof that Guinan is the
only source of info -- only that she's the only one we
see them consulting onscreen. There is no line of dialogue saying "There's nothing in our computers about these Borg." But if you had a choice between reading computer files about stories passed along by the El-Aurian refugees decades ago vs. actually
talking to the El-Aurian refugee who was right there on your ship and was a good friend and trusted advisor, which would you pick?