How many trailers did contain that line, by the way? I know that some have made it out to be that the majority of the advertising and promotion campaign was coming from a standpoint of "This is not your father's Star Trek," thus (so it was maintained) pointedly and repeatedly dissing the longtime faithful Trek fan base, but was there really more than the one TV spot (aired about three weeks before the movie's release) and a couple of similarly-timed theater lobby one-sheets which actually said "This is not your father's Star Trek"?...
View most of the trailers that sta[t]e..."This is NOT your fathers Star Trek".
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Anyway, not trying to squirm out of the responsibility here, but I only joined after STXI. I figured if anyone would appreciate what "real Trek" is supposed to be about, it would be "Trekkies" right? Turns out most seem no different to "ordinary people" as far as I can tell. I have never been so disappointed in my life!![]()
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I've been here for years and, I agree with you! Some posters actually name episodes (TOS, TNG and the rest) wrong as well as certain plots and mixing them up and actually posted that way!....![]()
it's an origin story nonetheless, in the same way that Batman Begins was.
IMO Batman Begins fell apart the minute Bruce put on the suit, started talking in that stupid voice and especially when he started relying on silly techno-gimmicks like the sonic device in his boot that summoned all the bats. The lead-up to that was great, though.
love it even more
I'd say STXI very much treated the crew as mythological figures destined for greatness.
Which is why I said they're still both origin stories. One is a deep character-building origin story, and the other is done for no sake other than to just play in the Star Trek sandbox. One is a film's strength, the other is just there as dressing and nothing more.The term "Origin story" doesn't have anything to do with depth of character, it simply means "How X came to be".
Partially, this is why an origin story for a sizable group of people doesn't really work. All your examples of origin stories were mostly about one person. Groups seldom come together all at once, and it's very difficult to get them to do so effectively within a two hour time span.Star Trek isn't and has never been about one man. It's origin story reflected that.
The term "Origin story" doesn't have anything to do with depth of character, it simply means "How X came to be".
Star Trek, Batman Begins, the Star Wars prequels and X-Men Origins: Wolverine are all origin stories.
IMO Batman Begins fell apart the minute Bruce put on the suit, started talking in that stupid voice and especially when he started relying on silly techno-gimmicks like the sonic device in his boot that summoned all the bats. The lead-up to that was great, though.
Erm, dude, it's Batman. That's like saying Star Trek fell apart the minute the wore those uniforms and used tricorders.
As I pointed out in my last post*, STXI doesn't lead to anything and it certainly doesn't describe "how TOS came to be".** So by your own defintion, STXI is definitely not an "origin story". Since Ryan8bit agrees with you, it would seem he is also forced to agree that it isn't an OS as well.![]()
... he also knew his father.
Mostly everyone we saw serving aboard the Enterprise in TOS has either been with him in the same Academy class,
or he met them on the very first mission.
And newly introduced crewmembers from the new movie had bar fights with him years before they again met on the Enterprise on the very first mission.
As I pointed out in my last post*, STXI doesn't lead to anything and it certainly doesn't describe "how TOS came to be".** So by your own defintion, STXI is definitely not an "origin story". Since Ryan8bit agrees with you, it would seem he is also forced to agree that it isn't an OS as well.![]()
To me, an origin story is merely what illustrates how a character or multiple characters come to be their expected norm, regardless of canon. Just as I'm sure there are many contradictory novels, they can still easily be seen as origin stories.
I will admit that Star Trek is pretty different given its alternate universe angle. But ultimately the characters, with maybe the exception of Spock, are going to end up the same as what we recognize.
The alternate angle doesn't really mean what we nerds think it should. And an origin doesn't require a set canon or future just to be an origin.
How can't it be a backstory for the new canon?
How can't it be a backstory for the new canon?
Yeah, that one doesn't make any sense. When something has been erased and reconstructed, you can pretty much do whatever the hell you want with it.
How can't it be a backstory for the new canon?
Yeah, that one doesn't make any sense. When something has been erased and reconstructed, you can pretty much do whatever the hell you want with it.
Sure, but that would be a story, not a back-story. Something in the new universe would have to already exist for STXI to be the "back-story" to it. I hope I am not being too pedantic.![]()
Even if they do, that seems like trying to have the best of both, er, universes without STXI actually explaining anything about a later situation.![]()
Hmmm, we will have to disagree about that. It seems to me that STXI isn't a back-story for the original canon and can't be a back-story for the new canon.
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