Alas, amongst a fandom where "hate the current product, worship the older stuff as perfection" appears to be policy, that's never going to happen.I'd settle for all Trek being treated somewhat equally.
Alas, amongst a fandom where "hate the current product, worship the older stuff as perfection" appears to be policy, that's never going to happen.I'd settle for all Trek being treated somewhat equally.
And?
Really enjoying the selective targeting of characters for death.
Ichab dies. Tears and protests.
Kirk dies? Meh, there's always Pike.
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Did they? Or is that just the story that gets better traction?They gave him a unnecessary brutal death to just give the original actor the middle finger for being a Republican or asshole or something. N
I sure can. To give a known character a brutal death for drama and show the stakes are upped. Hardly the first time in fiction and far from the last. No need for sinister motivations.Well it can't be proven but I can't think of any other reason to give a character such a brutal death.
The reason was to give Seven of Nine motivation.Well it can't be proven but I can't think of any other reason to give a character such a brutal death.
They gave him a unnecessary brutal death to just give the original actor the middle finger for being a Republican or asshole or something.
The reason was to give Seven of Nine motivation.
The rumour is it had to do with him being a dick towards Anthony Rapp during the Kevin Spacey accusation. I've heard they made up though.
What better way to decry criticism than to tar all with one (straw) brush?Alas, amongst a fandom where "hate the current product, worship the older stuff as perfection" appears to be policy, that's never going to happen.
Trying to write fiction for adults. That would be a reason.Well it can't be proven but I can't think of any other reason to give a character such a brutal death.
As a gen Y, I feel that disproves your point somewhat.For Trek to have an active future as a media franchise with any creative energy at all, it will have to come to treat continuity the way superhero comics do.
Or, whatever relevance it has can die with us Boomers and Gen Xers. Your call.
The best example I can think of a strong and enduring TV franchise is probably Star Trek. It's been going since the '60s, just like the Fantastic Four, Spider-Man and the X-Men! I think if Star Trek is going to continue to exist as a TV show it should probably look back at Star Trek and treat its continuity the way Star Trek does.For Trek to have an active future as a media franchise with any creative energy at all, it will have to come to treat continuity the way superhero comics do.
Or, whatever relevance it has can die with us Boomers and Gen Xers. Your call.
"[W]e will body-check canon when we need to, and we have. We've moved some folks around in terms of timelines, we put some folks together who aren't necessarily canonically together at the same time, we pull some things forward because ultimately story wins. But trying to stay within canon is an awfully fun exercise, and leads to solutions that you might not come up with if you didn't have those boundaries."
"We don't really worry about it. [...] But we're thoughtful in the same way that we're thoughtful of Pike's journey and where he has to go and how that works. I don't mean his death, because God knows we've talked about that until we're blue in the face, just where he is canonically in terms of location, who is or isn't on the Enterprise."
"[Y]ou can see ... stuff where we're a little bit already in violation. We've already pulled some folks onto the ship that probably weren't really there — at least we certainly have never heard of Uhura being on Pike's Enterprise. And yet here she is. We are thoughtful, but not slavish."
There's some video game series that completely redesign things between releases but they're meant to still be the same universe.
Like look at Elder Scrolls, or Fallout. Some of the enemy and species designs are completely changed between entries.
“Fridging”:Well it can't be proven but I can't think of any other reason to give a character such a brutal death.
"Weren't really there?"I think Akiva Goldsman has the absolute right approach when it comes to the issue. Yes, the canon matters, but only to a certain point. If they see a good reason to bend it a little bit for the sake of story, they will.
The real reason was Terry Farrell had a reaction to the make up so the opted for spots. Terry Farrell being allergic to the make up was also the reason why Jadzia doesn't join the mission to reveal the changeling in 'apocalypse rising', despite the characters extensive knowledge of Klingon culture.I'm glad they went with the second makeup design. The TNG Trill makeup was just too "Forehead Alien of the Week" for my tastes and less extraterrestrial in feel. The spots up and down the sides of her face and neck make the Trill distinct and more exotic.
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