TeutonicNights said:
NO ONE violates cannon or else!
http://www.imdb.com/gallery/mptv/1059/9735-0003.jpg.html?path=gallery&path_key=0066636&seq=2
ktanner3 said:
I saw an interesting point brought up in another thread. In the second pilot you had different characters for the ships helmsmen,doctor,and various other parts. There was no Doctor Mcoy,Uhura or Chekovv.Sulu wasn't anything more than a background character. Should the new movie follow canon to the letter and have Doctor Fix and Lt.Kelso,or should a little twisting allow Uhura,Mcoy,Sulu,Scotty and Checkov be in their usual spots? How much would this playing fast and loose with Trek history bother you?
sturmde said:
James Blish already dealt with this, erm, about 40 frigging years ago. Dr. McCoy is away to a medical conference, Dr. Piper is filling in during his absence. Sulu's in line for command, he has to do turns in all areas, including sciences, as he was a physics major at the Academy. Alden is Uhura's #1 assistant, and often pulls bridge duty opposite hers. And we know from Khan, that Chekov was somewhere else on the ship other than the bridge.
Sort of silly to ask about Star Trek XI following canon, when one isn't even familiar with 40+ years of Trek.
Stone_Cold_Sisko said:
What I DO mind is stuff like:
The Enterprise meeting and battling the Ferengi, only for it to be "reconciled" with "well they never told us their name!".
That's just shitty, contrived, and lame wrapped up in a "learn how to write" sandwich.
Theodore Jay Miller said:
Stone_Cold_Sisko said:
What I DO mind is stuff like:
The Enterprise meeting and battling the Ferengi, only for it to be "reconciled" with "well they never told us their name!".
That's just shitty, contrived, and lame wrapped up in a "learn how to write" sandwich.
it seems reasonable enough to me. On one of his missions, Archer encounters a few greedy, big-eared space pirates from an unknown race; if they give a name for themselves, it's something other than Ferengi. (As an analogy, consider a set of names like Hessians, Prussians, Germans, and Nazis.)
200 years later, Starfleet hears rumors about a mysterious Ferengi empire; they don't know much about these Ferengi, including what they look like. So until Picard's crew actually see the Ferengi, there's no reason to make the connection between the mysterious Ferengi empire and one particular small group of space pirates from 200 years before.
Theodore Jay Miller said:
Stone_Cold_Sisko said:
What I DO mind is stuff like:
The Enterprise meeting and battling the Ferengi, only for it to be "reconciled" with "well they never told us their name!".
That's just shitty, contrived, and lame wrapped up in a "learn how to write" sandwich.
it seems reasonable enough to me. On one of his missions, Archer encounters a few greedy, big-eared space pirates from an unknown race; if they give a name for themselves, it's something other than Ferengi. (As an analogy, consider a set of names like Hessians, Prussians, Germans, and Nazis.)
200 years later, Starfleet hears rumors about a mysterious Ferengi empire; they don't know much about these Ferengi, including what they look like. So until Picard's crew actually see the Ferengi, there's no reason to make the connection between the mysterious Ferengi empire and one particular small group of space pirates from 200 years before.
Theodore Jay Miller said:
Stone_Cold_Sisko said:
What I DO mind is stuff like:
The Enterprise meeting and battling the Ferengi, only for it to be "reconciled" with "well they never told us their name!".
That's just shitty, contrived, and lame wrapped up in a "learn how to write" sandwich.
it seems reasonable enough to me. On one of his missions, Archer encounters a few greedy, big-eared space pirates from an unknown race; if they give a name for themselves, it's something other than Ferengi. (As an analogy, consider a set of names like Hessians, Prussians, Germans, and Nazis.)
200 years later, Starfleet hears rumors about a mysterious Ferengi empire; they don't know much about these Ferengi, including what they look like. So until Picard's crew actually see the Ferengi, there's no reason to make the connection between the mysterious Ferengi empire and one particular small group of space pirates from 200 years before.
occultcross said:
Sort of silly to mouth off at others when nothing you wrote is canonical. If it's in anything other than the finished aired episodes/films, Abrahm's violation of it or otherwise is not fodder for this thread.
200 years later, Starfleet hears rumors about a mysterious Ferengi empire; they don't know much about these Ferengi, including what they look like.
sturmde said:
occultcross said:
Sort of silly to mouth off at others when nothing you wrote is canonical. If it's in anything other than the finished aired episodes/films, Abrahm's violation of it or otherwise is not fodder for this thread.
I didn't say Blish was Holy High Canon. I simply said that Blish was able to work around these issues 40 years ago and not get in the way of the story. I'm sure JJ and O&K have had no problems making similar accomodations as needed in their script.
Anyone who's read Star Trek 1-12 and Mudd's Angels is quite aware of a little violation of canon not getting in the way of a story, if it's retconned well. Many place WNMHGB as far as a year and a half into Kirk's 5YM. If O&K choose, there's no reason that McCoy can't be there at the start, and Sulu shown working a rotation at say, Navigator before going to Engineering, then Sciences, then Helm... Furthermore, Mitchell might not be available yet, and Kirk is forced to appoint Spock as First Officer, even though he'd have rather had Mitchell.
Orci's bright and well-versed in the unpenned sections of Kirk's 1701 years. They'll have no problem, and nothing they write will end up being any true violation of canon.
Anyway, who the hell is Abrahm?
Always has to be one...Number666 said:
Wahgts wron weth my speling and gnit piccing?
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