But (avoidable, unnecessary) visual contradictions can't be explained away like that, because visual information by its very nature is presented as solid fact.
If I was hired as the ultimate overlord of Star Trek my first rule would be:That's where you have to remember that STAR TREK isn't fact; it's theater, and that a change in art direction is just . . . a change in art direction. It doesn't always need an "in-universe" explanation. It's like recasting an actor; you just need to suspend your disbelief and assume it or they always looked that way.
I do not either and I will not allow apparent incongruences to detract from my enjoyment. That is missing the larger story for nitpicking details that are not adding enjoyment to match them beat for beat.
Same here. They have moved back to a check-box mentality by my estimation that doesn't expand the franchise. And all it does is appeal to fans who want a lot of everything to tie all together. It creates a very strange idea of Star Trek that isn't always congruent to exploring possibilities of storytelling but content to stay inside it's safe little box.I really wish they would start finding people with zero exposure to the franchise, start looking for people to take it in a direction away from nostalgia porn.
No. Every fictional universe has "inconsistencies" or "contradictions" in the lore.
It happens. Especially in such a long-running franchise that has the input of so many people.
That's why I think they should hire people with more exposure to the franchise. People who could instantly say "Oh, that one's been done already," to every overly familiar idea, but have a brain full of ideas of new places to take the series. People who don't have to go check Memory Alpha looking for references to drop in to score points, but can just write stories that exist in the universe.I really wish they would start finding people with zero exposure to the franchise, start looking for people to take it in a direction away from nostalgia porn.
People who don't have to go check Memory Alpha looking for references to drop in to score points...
"Prime" is ever changing, updating and reinventing.There's contradictions and inconsistencies, then there's just doing their own thing and waving at the fans and going, "yeah, sure its all Prime!"
"Prime" is ever changing, updating and reinventing.
I have DVDs and an internet connection. I'm good.I think very few folks are aware of that. I think most believe that they are keeping everything the same as much as possible, they can't fathom that TOS is simply going to be retconned out of the franchise sometime down the road.
I have DVDs and an internet connection. I'm good.
They're taking more of a loose adaptation approach, where all this stuff can be "recast" as easily as an actor. Which version of the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 is the "correct" one? Whichever, since both versions appeared in modern Treks (the SNW version in PIC S1, the TOS one in Prodigy and Lower Decks). Even the Enterprise in Strange New Worlds is a little different to how it appeared in Discovery season 2 or Short Treks. There's no longer a concrete answer for how big the Enterprise is. But does it really matter?
I can do what they're doing now, and I don't have to go to Memory Alpha!![]()
I get why characters like Batman get reinvented, and the version of him I grew attached to came into being a long long way down the line, but I gave up on the comics a couple of reboots ago because nothing seemed to matter anymore.The older I get, the more I think that there's no "definitive" version of anything, whether we're talking Batman, Godzilla, Sherlock Holmes, or Star Trek. Nor should there be.
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