That's all.always forget that there were Klingons in TMP. Where in that whole mess did they fit them in again? One of their ships makes a cameo and V'ger eats them, right? Do I forget something or was that all?
That's all.always forget that there were Klingons in TMP. Where in that whole mess did they fit them in again? One of their ships makes a cameo and V'ger eats them, right? Do I forget something or was that all?
That's all.
Yes, I did.I always forget that there were Klingons in TMP. Where in that whole mess did they fit them in again? One of their ships makes a cameo and V'ger eats them, right? Do I forget something or was that all?
Also @Nerys Myk that's an awesome edit, did you do that yourself?
Yup. It was a big expensive cinematic event. Of course new make up.Makes me wonder why they were there at all, just to show off the new makeup?
Never to be seen again. Though I assume if Gene had been in charge of STII we might have seen the design again.Yup. It was a big expensive cinematic event. Of course new make up.
Beyond The Final Reflection, another novel establishes that the pure-bred Klingons initially avoided contact with humans due to the risk of infection to human disease that could kill them, and once a vaccine had been developed started to make direct contact, ah, conflict.I would as well, plus it would have been fun to see Worf as a TOS Klingon, even better if nobody would have commented or reacted to how different he looks
Okay I can accept that as being pretty creative.
Alright, that sounds pretty cool, though personally I still prefer the "we just updated the makeup and Klingons always had ridged heads." explanation.
Because the ridgehead Klingons look cooler/more alien (imho)
I remember them being one of the driving elements of the plot. Soran wasn't going to get much done without them, and they were the reason the Enterprise D was destroyed.Kinda reminds me of the Duras Sisters who were kinda just...there...in Generations and got killed off rather unceremoniously.
I think Babylon 5 comes closest. JMS did backflips to make everything as consistent as possible, despite unexpected personnel losses.Is there any canon of a franchise, that isn't inconstistent and contradictory on some levels?
I think Babylon 5 comes closest. JMS did backflips to make everything as consistent as possible, despite unexpected personnel losses.
I think Babylon 5 comes closest. JMS did backflips to make everything as consistent as possible, despite unexpected personnel losses.
As strong as my love for B5 is... I'm not sure, if I would count it as a real 'franchise'. Basically, it is one series including some extra movies with an early-cancelled spin-off and a few books. Maybe it is something, that become a fully-grown franchise in a better parallel universe, but in this universe, it was cut off just at the jump to the franchise status...
It depends on how minor of changes you want to include in your "on some level."Is there any canon of a franchise, that isn't inconstistent and contradictory on some levels?
Star Wars has what, 28 hours of live action story?
Star Trek has 500+.
I’d say just be grateful it’s nothing like that other franchise, Doctor Who. I stopped watching after Peter Capaldi left as the writing and acting had gone terribly downhill, but from what I’ve heard the current head writer has retconned it so the previous 57 years of canon are now totally redundant. If they did that on Trek, I... daren’t even imagine.
Sure it can. Especially when, as in the case of so much trivia like Shatner's mare having a foal or the combination to Kirk's safe, it's not relevant to telling a good story. Trivia is not more important than story.To be clear, I'm not suggesting that fans would do a better job of making shows even if they know more of the material. I'm suggesting that some of us know that Shatner's mare had a foal this morning.And whatever else that might mean, it is a level of knowledge and devotion to the subject matter that can't be discounted.
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Tons of Who canon.I know very little about Dr Who, but I thought there was no real canon over the 50 years or so - sorta like James Bond, in that sense.
Yep. But Who has a built in mechanism for being inconsistent: ongoing changes to the timeline.Tons of Who canon.
Doctor Who has a canon, just no one gives a shit about staying consistent with it. One of the franchise's most renowned producers is quoted saying "Continuity is only whatever I can remember."I know very little about Dr Who, but I thought there was no real canon over the 50 years or so - sorta like James Bond, in that sense.
Everyone always says that, but it's not really accurate. For the most part, time travel is just a means of transportation in Doctor Who. Very few stories are actually about time travel itself and the implications associated with it. Indeed, it's only the Steven Moffat era of 2010-2017 where that was a regular thing for the show.But Who has a built in mechanism for being inconsistent: ongoing changes to the timeline.
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