Kryton Kryngle said:
Ellison wants more money!![]()
He's got hungry llamas to feed.
Kryton Kryngle said:
Ellison wants more money!![]()
Still, with only two broadcast works about the Guardian, it's hard to choose which version to treat as authoritative.
Forbin said:
Somebody installed a remote?
In the ST universe, the rule of thumb with the timeline is pretty much: Whatever the ultimate outcome of the episode/film is, that's what was supposed to happen all along. The timleline often appears to be mutable in the short term, but ultimately it's fixed.Jackson_Roykirk said:
***Warning: 'Yesteryear' Spoilers Below***
First Off, let me say that I think 'Yesteryear' is a fine story. However, I must nitpick...
...I'm not experienced in the ways of time travel like some people are, but I can't help but wonder WHY Spock had to be there to save himself. I sort of understand the whole "Spock was away watching the Conception of the Orion Civilization" thing. What I don't understand was what if he WASN'T observing the Orions? Would he have had any reason to go through the GOF and save himself otherwise? Probably not. If he wasn't observing the Orions, he would have probably just been on the Enterprise in some other part of the Galaxy doing exploration stuff. He wouldn't have woken up one morning saying to himself "I need to go back in time and save myself". Also, why does the GOF playing back Vulcan history cause that history to change?
I think DC Fontana should have thought of some better reason for 7-year old Spock to have not survived.
..Oh, and one more "nitpick". If I were McCoy, Scotty, Therin (the Andorian First Officer), and the others in the "Spock-less" timeframe, I would protest to Kirk and Spock more vehemently about screwing with "their" timeline -- whose to say which one is the correct timeline. Maybe Spock was supposed to die. They were a bit cavalier about the lives the others have been living without Spock.
Don't get me wrong, I loved this episode. It, along with a small handful of other TAS eps, made TAS a worthwhile project. I'm just the type of guy who likes all loose ends tied up in my TV shows and movies. When I bring these kind of things up with my wife, she always says "don't worry about it -- it's just TV (or a movie)", but that answer just isn't good enough for me.![]()
Jackson_Roykirk said:
I sort of understand the whole "Spock was away watching the Conception of the Orion Civilization" thing. What I don't understand was what if he WASN'T observing the Orions?
Frosty the Vorta said:
Kryton Kryngle said:
Ellison wants more money!![]()
He's got hungry llamas to feed.
Therin of Andor said:
The problem occurred because the other historians were using the Guardian and their tricorders to observe Vulcan's recent past while Spock, Kirk and Erickson were in Orion's past.
Therin of Andor said:...But... Kirk and Erickson should have gone with Spock because, although Spock returns to a Thelin-free Enterprise, the Kirk that did not know him is still with Thelin and the McCoy who doesn't know Spock. Yes?
Of course, the real paradox here is I-Chaya. If Spock was Selek all along, if he went back "in the first place" as a result of the altered timeline here, then why doesn't he remember I-Chaya dying in the "original" timeline?
Therin of Andor said:
But... Kirk and Erickson should have gone with Spock because, although Spock returns to a Thelin-free Enterprise, the Kirk that did not know him is still with Thelin and the McCoy who doesn't know Spock. Yes?
Timo said:
(Or did you mean "the Kirk that did not know Thelin"?)
Jackson_Roykirk said:
...and by the way Therin, in my post I meant to write "Thelin". I didn't mean to steal your screen name 'Therin of Andor'®
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