Why don't they at least imply a possible crossover? I mean, Rapunzel and Flynn Rider, for instance, make sense being at Elsa's coronation.Cameos don't imply crossovers.
Why don't they at least imply a possible crossover? I mean, Rapunzel and Flynn Rider, for instance, make sense being at Elsa's coronation.Cameos don't imply crossovers.
I believe the Nicholas Cage movie "The Rock" is actually part of the James Bond continuity, or at least an alternate outcome of Bond continuity. Sean Connery's character is (to my eye at least) James Bond in every way but in name (damn those pesky copyright laws). I think this a version of the Bond-verse where Bond was imprisoned by US authorities after the story told in Diamond Are Forver (the one in Vegas) went really bad. Bond gets shuffled off to Federal prison until he gets sprung to help take-down Ed Harris in The Rock.
Why don't they at least imply a possible crossover? I mean, Rapunzel and Flynn Rider, for instance, make sense being at Elsa's coronation.
I'll give you one example: John Munch showed up on an episode of X-Files, yet that show is fictional within the Law & Order/Homicide: Life on the Street universe.
Munch's X-Files cameo was just a one-off joke, really.
And another one: Victor Ehrlich (a character from St. Elsewhere) shows up in the series finale of H:LOTS. Yet this obviously doesn't mean the entirety of L&O/H:LOTS is Tommy Westphall's dream, because it's absolutely possible that in the "real world" of St. Elsewhere, Ehrlich is real (no reason Tommy can't dream about real people, right?).
And there's nothing to disprove the theory that in St. Elsewhere, it's the final scene that's the dream, not the entire series.
Were Lost in Space and Forbidden Planet in the same continuity? I seem to remember Robbie the Robot turning up at some point, but I imagine I was very hungover when I saw it. Did he also appear in Colombo?
Also adamant that Bionic woman and NuBSG were meant to be within the same continuity in an aborted narrative. The cylon cast, playing augmented humans while it was ambiguous as to Galactica's time frame? That was the plan, I think.
Star Wars could probably coexist with other franchises in the same universe because it's a long time ago in a galaxy far far away. So it's billions of years and parsecs removed from any other universe, the only reason they couldn't coexist is direct contradictions in physics. The force could exist in almost any scifi universe, just nobody has figured it out or has the knack.
Hell, in Trek all telepathy could be the force and they just don't call it that.
But is there precedent for latent/untrained Jedi suddenly gaining full control of their power due to a weird space encounter?
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