His presence was felt.I didn't know Khan appeared in all "the new movies".
His presence was felt.I didn't know Khan appeared in all "the new movies".
You probably just don't like The Original Series, is all, and you want to rubbish it because it isn't exactly like the following TV shows or movies.
I hate that they ever used the word and that overzealous, unimaginative Trekkies are still belaboring the point. Sad.
Says the overzealous Star Trek fan on a Star Trek message board.Unfortunately, Gene Roddenberry made things very messy by declaring things canon and non-canon through his lawyer and others. I hate that they ever used the word and that overzealous, unimaginative Trekkies are still belaboring the point. Sad.
I will now retcon this conversation
You know all of you are just quite simply raping my childhood! I hope you're HAPPY!!!Belay that! I retcon this man's retcon.
I think GR felt the same way."Space Seed" was always one of the most popular episodes of Star Trek, right back to the beginning. I imagine that was due partly to Montalban's performance, partly to the story concept which was pretty science-fictiony back in the day, and maybe a little to the fact that it filled in a bit of historical context to the era in which the show was set.
Of the two, TWOK really seems a bit dumber and more trivial.
Heh, that last part reads like a Trump tweet.Unfortunately, Gene Roddenberry made things very messy by declaring things canon and non-canon through his lawyer and others. I hate that they ever used the word and that overzealous, unimaginative Trekkies are still belaboring the point. Sad.
Canon is probably the least interesting thing about Star Trek, yet it generates a disproportionate amount of debate and frustration in the fandom relative to its importance. imho, canon only matters when it does become fun and interesting (i.e. The Way of the Warrior) but sucks like nothing else when it becomes The Thing That Matters Most and drowns out whatever else might actually be interesting about a story.
Right, I do think a set of events described as "canon" can be valuable so that a) we're all generally talking about the same thing and b) so writers can have some fun with continuity when it suits them. My whole thing though is canon should always be subordinate to story. If a tidbit of canon gets in the way of a good story, get it outta here. Too much stock in canon is a dangerously dull thing.If you have no canon, it can never be used for the fun and interesting. On balance, I would rather have it and get those fun and interesting moments.
I'm talking about a spectrum here. Think of it like going from The Simpsons on one end where nothing matters all the way to ENT explaining Klingon foreheads for no reason on the other. I think Trek should occupy the space between those extremes. Use canon when it's fun and interesting, discard it when it obstructs interesting and fun things.^ But without continuity and story-progressing/cohesive world-building, we get something like The Simpson's.
^ But without continuity and story-progressing/cohesive world-building, we get something like The Simpson's.
Canon can be fun. But it can just as easily be a straitjacket that fans force writers to wear. The Way of the Warrior = fun and interesting. Worrying about whether DSC is Kelvin or Prime or complaining that DSC doesn't look like TOS = meaningless and dull.But canon is fun. The Affliction/Divergence two-parter is among my top ten fav episodes (if counted as one story). It's action, ships, characters, FX, and continuity porn at their best. Like a visualisation of a Christopher L. Bennet novel.
The Simpsons is also an example of how continuity becomes absurdly impossible when a property runs this long.^ But without continuity and story-progressing/cohesive world-building, we get something like The Simpson's.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.