LOL, yeah he name checks an "ancestor". That's a fun continuity discussion coming up![]()
Which can be interpreted two ways. Is Spock claiming Holmes as his ancestor -- or Arthur Conan Doyle? Since Doyle is actually the source of the line Spock quotes.
LOL, yeah he name checks an "ancestor". That's a fun continuity discussion coming up![]()
There’s a seven percent chance you’re right.Which can be interpreted two ways. Is Spock claiming Holmes as his ancestor -- or Arthur Conan Doyle? Since Doyle is actually the source of the line Spock quotes.
Well, most of Conan Doyle's/Watson's Sherlock Holmes stories give at least a year when they took place, so that was a big hint.Considering Holmes spanned radio, film and TV how did audience back then figure out "when" Holmes is supposed to happen?
There was an article in The Best of Trek back in the day speculating that Sherlock Holmes was really a Vulcan stranded on Earth. It was a fun bit of creative speculation.Which can be interpreted two ways. Is Spock claiming Holmes as his ancestor -- or Arthur Conan Doyle? Since Doyle is actually the source of the line Spock quotes.
I dunno, seven per-cent doesn't sound like much of a solution to me.There’s a seven percent chance you’re right.
Well, most of Conan Doyle's/Watson's Sherlock Holmes stories give at least a year when they took place, so that was a big hint.We know that Holmes and Watson met in 1881, Holmes was presumed dead in 1891, returned to London in 1894, and retired in 1903. It varies beyond that, but that's the basic framework of the stories. (Keep in mind that Doyle wrote 60 Holmes stories over the course of 40 years, from 1887 until 1927, and he wasn't too focused on keeping the dates straight, so all sorts of errors and contradictions occur.)
I was talking about Doyle's original stories, not the films. The films are a whole different thing. Some of them are directly adapted from Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories, but a lot of them aren't.If the year is given for when each Holmes film takes place then that counts as establishing the setting for each story, no? Does someone whip out a time-traveling machine to hop back to an earlier film where the audience would see such continuity?![]()
I was being somewhat facetious about the multiverse thing. My point was that previous generations were not as hung up on "canon" and continuity, to the extent that a popular movie series could literally jump ahead fifty years in time, while keeping the same cast at the same age, and movie audiences just took it in stride. There was no attempt to "explain" that these were the grand-children of the original Holmes and Watson and Lestrade and Mrs. Hudson (who just happened to look and act exactly like their forebears) or any other contrivance. And, as far as I know, nobody stormed out of SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE VOICE OF TERROR in protest. Or fired off angry screeds to their local newspapers.
There's perhaps something to be said for that attitude.
Yet your examples are for stories that have no time-travel/alt universe plots so why would the audience even ask for an explanation to something that isn't in the story? ....
Forget the time-travel option. I suggested another perfectly mundane "explanation" in terms of, "oh, this is Sherlock Holmes, Jr." that Universal Studios could have resorted to had they felt it necessary. Plain old heredity certainly exists in the mainstream universe of detective stories, so that option was available.
But my point is the audiences didn't demand or expect any sort of explanation, not even a non-SF one, nor did the filmmakers feel obliged to prove any internal explanation -- beyond wartime patriotism. "Even Sherlock Holmes is joining the fight against the Axis. Buy War Bonds!"
And yet the series continued merrily on its way for another 12 movies without anybody worrying about this grievous violation of continuity. Or demanding an "explanation."
So why are modern audiences so much more obsessed with "canon"? To the extent that it sometimes seems to be getting in the way of them, well, actually enjoying this stuff.
None of which makes it a plausible in universe evolution of the OS/interfaces/whatever.
Considering Holmes spanned radio, film and TV how did audience back then figure out "when" Holmes is supposed to happen?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_actors_who_have_played_Sherlock_Holmes
And did any of the stories ever have any time-travel or alternate universe devices to make the audience aware of the need for continuity?
If the year is given for when each Holmes film takes place then that counts as establishing the setting for each story, no? Does someone whip out a time-traveling machine to hop back to an earlier film where the audience would see such continuity?![]()
Which can be interpreted two ways. Is Spock claiming Holmes as his ancestor -- or Arthur Conan Doyle? Since Doyle is actually the source of the line Spock quotes.
I was going to say it had to be Doyle (and NOT because "O'Doyle Rules!") because Holmes is a fictitious character, and then I had to laugh at myself because so is Spock. But if Holmes is a fiction within the Trek universe - which he appears to be - then Spock could related to Doyle through his mom. There really wouldn't be a need to add unnecessary complications by placing a Vulcan back in Earth's timeline. But what if he was a half-Vulcan... could Spock be his own grandpa?![]()
There was so much of a difference between 1880s London and 1940s London that it might as well have had a science fiction explanation, though.
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