Problem with future Trek is that we know they survive another 700 years. That takes a lot of the dramatic excitement out of it.My preference would of been simply to set it in the future (post Nemesis). And I'm not just saying this primarily for canon preservation issues but from a creative viewpoint. Clean slate, can do anything they want, put the Federation in peril etc. Still don't understand why they didn't do this.
The U.S.S. Constellation's (Starship Class) Registry is NCC-1017 the Enterprise's (also Starship Class) is NCC-1701...so, yeah, your point again?But the Kelvin's registry is 0514, while Discovery's is 1031, and the Shenzhou's is 1227, so shouldn't that mean they were built long afterwards? Although the registries have never actually made any sense, it does at least imply that the Kelvin is a much older ship.
Many have read your post band SHOWN YOU that since ST:TMP the "Klingon look' generally HASN'T been all that consistent. (You feel the TNG era should be the 'standard' but it never has been as STVI:TUC was released DURING TNG's run; and unless you really want to squint/ignore how they looked in that film - they DIDN'T look like TNG Klingons (you recall the Pink blood too?) The people responding to you AREN'T the ones with blinders on RE the Klingon look in the Star Trek franchise.Klingons. Not the whole show.
People really aren't reading my posts, are they? I'm not talking about the whole damn show, I'm talking about the Klingons.
Honestly, answer me this. If the trailer had been 100% exactly the same, but the Klingons looked like TNG Klingons, would you have felt the show looked outdated? No, you wouldn't have.
Like I said, there are a lot of inconsistencies, but in general the ships progress from NCC-1701 to NX-2000 and so on. Also the real world reason for the Constellation's registry is because they just rearranged 1701 from the Enterprise model kit.The U.S.S. Constellation's (Starship Class) Registry is NCC-1017 the Enterprise's (also Starship Class) is NCC-1701...so, yeah, your point again?![]()
TNG HARDLY held to canon any better than TOS did.That's why holding tight to canon doesn't matter. Perhaps during the original run, and then TNG, holding on to canon was more important, but after all these decades, with all of the changes, the retcons, and such, it's just a hot mess. No wonder CBS said "fuck it, let's go back to just before Kirk."
Pike likes things retro.![]()
If it's Prime Universe, something really big happens in the three years between "The Cage" and Discovery, then undoes itself before "Where No Man Has Gone Before"... or maybe it's another reboot.
Because what would really make sense is using a sci-fi vision from the 1960s in 2017 rather than a 2017 vision of sci-fi because "canon."![]()
If it's Prime Universe, something really big happens in the three years between "The Cage" and Discovery, then undoes itself before "Where No Man Has Gone Before"... or maybe it's another reboot.
The Cage: Filmed in 1965![]()
If it's Prime Universe, something really big happens in the three years between "The Cage" and Discovery, then undoes itself before "Where No Man Has Gone Before"... or maybe it's another reboot.
I KNOW the production reason for that in 1967 they could have also to 1710 but because TV resolution of the day was low - they were concerned viewers might mistake the Costellation for the Enterprise.Like I said, there are a lot of inconsistencies, but in general the ships progress from NCC-1701 to NX-2000 and so on. Also the real world reason for the Constellation's registry is because they just rearranged 1701 from the Enterprise model kit.
If someone wants to imagine that this is set in the Kelvin universe there's nothing that stops them, but it doesn't make it so.
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If it's Prime Universe, something really big happens in the three years between "The Cage" and Discovery, then undoes itself before "Where No Man Has Gone Before"... or maybe it's another reboot.
Not unless technology gets bombed back to the stone age and there is the Great Rebuilding of 2175.And the same comparison can be made between TOS and Enterprise... we just have to face it and deal with the fact that production values and props in 1966 SUCKED. They were great for their time, and the vision of the future was "visionary"... but it turned out to be half-way non-realistic. Each iteration of Star Trek places the aesthetic of the technology into the future based on what we have now and where we think it'll go. To expect that we'd still be using 6" CRT monitors for video conferencing 250 years from now is silly; likewise, no one in 1966 would have foreseen that PDF files and tablets with email would replace most paper print outs for short term use of sharing... or that we'd NOT be wearing turtleneck sweaters and Cuban heeled boots.
Common what ?The Cage: Filmed in 1965
Discovery: Filmed in 2017
Winner? Common Sense
Totally agree. And quite frankly, I find it a little odd they're even using what are essentially flip phones that far into the future. That is probably just a concession for the people who are primed (no pun intended) to get upset about the time period and tech changes.And the same comparison can be made between TOS and Enterprise... we just have to face it and deal with the fact that production values and props in 1966 SUCKED. They were great for their time, and the vision of the future was "visionary"... but it turned out to be half-way non-realistic. Each iteration of Star Trek places the aesthetic of the technology into the future based on what we have now and where we think it'll go. To expect that we'd still be using 6" CRT monitors for video conferencing 250 years from now is silly; likewise, no one in 1966 would have foreseen that PDF files and tablets with email would replace most paper print outs for short term use of sharing... or that we'd NOT be wearing turtleneck sweaters and Cuban heeled boots.
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