Yet both have Gotham City, the Joker, Riddler, Commissioner Gordon. The basic blocks. The tone is different.
The tone is kinda big deal.Yet both have Gotham City, the Joker, Riddler, Commissioner Gordon. The basic blocks. The tone is different.
That really doesn't work for me. It drains a lot of enjoyment out of the whole experience. When I read or watch stories set in a shared/ongoing universe, a big part of the satisfaction is from seeing how all the pieces fit together — the worldbuilding and continuity that's bigger than any single story or character.
In a sense, that bigger-picture perspective makes it easier to see any particular story or series as sharing the level of the best aspects of the fictional reality, rather than lowered to (or averaged with) its worst. You know what I mean? With Trek, for instance, I like being able to think of it as the fictional milieu that gave us "The Naked Time" and "Yesterday's Enterprise," and to forget about things like "Spock's Brain" and "Thresholds." If every story is just its own thing, free to contradict the others, you don't get to build that kind of headcanon.
Considering the time it has spanned and the number of people involved the Trek continuity has actually been amazingly consistent.I understand that totally, I know many people do see it that way. The problem, though, is trek simply has never been worldbuilt with that much attention to detail and therefore there will always be the outliers to any version of the trek universe you internalise. Different teams and individuals have been generally pretty free to stay within the broad strokes and spirit of the universe but not get too hung up on details, but often the fans actually apply more stringent standards after the fact which obviously means the gaps start to show. It's exactly what has kept this site going so long.
The tone is kinda big deal.
Considering the time it has spanned and the number of people involved the Trek continuity has actually been amazingly consistent.
Well, in the broadest possible strokes, yes. But you can't paint a picture using only broad strokes. (Well, you can if you're doing non-representational art, but roll with me here.) Likewise, you can't tell a story without getting into details of tone, and character, and setting. It's those details that make the story. When they clash, that's usually a bad thing.Yet both have Gotham City, the Joker, Riddler, Commissioner Gordon. The basic blocks. The tone is different. ... Yet both are undeniably "Batman".
Sure. No fictional continuity is perfectly consistent and flawless. As I've posted elsewhere, Conan Doyle even contradicted himself within the Sherlock Holmes canon, and he had the advantage of being a single author with total control over his creation. It's a limit condition, a goal you can only approach asymptotically. Still, it's worth trying to approach it. There's a difference between making that effort, and saying "meh, it's just entertainment, the creators can change whatever they want whenever they want for the sake of a 'good story'."I understand that totally, I know many people do see it that way. The problem, though, is trek simply has never been worldbuilt with that much attention to detail and therefore there will always be the outliers to any version of the trek universe you internalise...
Well, speaking just for myself, I try to keep it in perspective, and I think I have a very long fuse. YMMV; I can't speak for anyone else. But I'm self-aware enough to acknowledge that continuity is a big part of why I enjoy genre fiction, and I find it interesting to talk about. It's not the most important thing in my life, but most of my life doesn't get talked about on these forums.Sometimes this can add to the enjoyment, that's what drives a lot of fanfiction, reconciling the inconsistencies, but people do get angry about this stuff, like bizarrely angry at times...
Still, it's worth trying to approach it. There's a difference between making that effort, and saying "meh, it's just entertainment, the creators can change whatever they want whenever they want for the sake of a 'good story'."
Well, speaking just for myself, I try to keep it in perspective, and I think I have a very long fuse. YMMV; I can't speak for anyone else. But I'm self-aware enough to acknowledge that continuity is a big part of why I enjoy genre fiction, and I find it interesting to talk about.
Technically true. Yet apart of some names, they have basically nothing in common.Yet both are undeniably "Batman".
They have definitely tried. The approach certainly has been completely different than for example with the Bond films.I'm not sure the people making trek have ever consistently (pun intended) tried though. It simply hasn't been a priority.
They have definitely tried. The approach certainly has been completely different than for example with the Bond films.
Except for the one that states "They're all reboots."Like I said, no theory really accounts for everything.)
I wouldn't. Disco's approach to continuity is to name drop some familiar things whether it made sense or not, while merrily wrecking the big picture. So the ENT approach, basically.Ironically I'd say Discovery shows far more signs of that effort than much of the franchise
Sadly Discovery's effort hasn't resulted in good story. Screwing with the timeline has been for gimmick purposes and what do we get out of it? Weird arsed looking Klingons getting bettered by Spock's retro invented sister.Still, it's worth trying to approach it. There's a difference between making that effort, and saying "meh, it's just entertainment, the creators can change whatever they want whenever they want for the sake of a 'good story'."
There are lots of things that make a fictional story "good." The plot, the characters, the themes, the setting, the tone, the look, the way all these things interact with one another and fit together (or don't) and change over time. Continuity is a major component of the setting (and interweaves with most of the other aspects as well). It's hard to try to tell a good story when your setting is internally inconsistent.
The current climate we live in has made it more acceptable for people to make up their own facts and insist on standing by them even though the actual facts contradict them...
while merrily wrecking the big picture.
That much is certainly clear...other than that the phrase "actual facts" is redundant.
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