I've tried to understand the whole two timelines thing since I was made aware of the fact that there are two timelines in Trek, but no matter how much I try I can't manage to find it makes sense. What's the deal?
Oohhh I see. That makes sense. Thank you for informing me!The Kelvin Timeline is a contrivance to allow the creative flexibility of storylines that don't stick strictly to established continuity.
Personally I went into ST09 "blind" and expected it to be a direct prequel to TOS itself. But then the story went in unexpected directions like having the planet Vulcan destroyed. The "alternate reality" concept was good enough for me.
Trek fandom generally expects everything to fit together, instead of accepting completely different and unconnected continuities like you see with comic book franchises or anime.
Kor
Multiple Timelines also allow contradiction in newer works that take place during or before existing works.It allows everything old to co-exist with everything new. Spock Prime only leaves the prime timeline after all his episode appearances, so they're intact, too.
Multiple Timelines also allow contradiction in newer works that take place during or before existing works.
It's the easiest / path of least resistance to fixing issues that occur with cannon over a Franchise with 58+ years of IRL content.
There's actually several timelines in Trek, and have been since TOS. There was the Mirror Universe, Lazarus B's universe, and then Kelvin.I've tried to understand the whole two timelines thing since I was made aware of the fact that there are two timelines in Trek, but no matter how much I try I can't manage to find it makes sense. What's the deal?
There is no point.I've tried to understand the whole two timelines thing since I was made aware of the fact that there are two timelines in Trek, but no matter how much I try I can't manage to find it makes sense. What's the deal?
Setting these newer stories in an alternate timeline was a way of making outcomes uncertain again: we don't "know" what happens to these characters because we haven't yet seen the future of this timeline.
At the time the original Star Trek stories were written, the prevailing real-world theory held that there was a single timeline -- you could go forward; you could go back; you could alter something and break the timeline, such that it would need to be "fixed" in order to "restore" things to "the way they should be".
Since then, real-world theory has acknowledged other possibilities, including one which says that any significant decision point has the potential to lead to more than one outcome -- or more than one timeline.
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Tree diagram (probability theory) - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Trek fandom generally expects everything to fit together, instead of accepting completely different and unconnected continuities like you see with comic book franchises or anime.
My personal theory on why they went for "alternate timeline" instead of "it's a reboot, cope," is that:
-On the one hand, we're right in the middle of the Battlestar Galactica reboot and all the fan backlash that was happening there. Especially during pre-production of the 2006 movie, the dust wouldn't have settled yet. I'm sure many of the powers-that-were were concerned about a similar fan backlash if they just straight up reset everything. An "alternate timeline" that's established as part of the storytelling may well have seemed like a good way around that. (And possibly would have worked if they'd handled it better.)
-On the other hand, doing the "alternate timeline" approach meant they could do the Nimoy crossover and so in a way, have their cake and eat it too, getting the creative freedom to do basically whatever they wanted and getting the nostalgia bump by having the classic actor be present.
Ultimately, the main problem with the Abrams movies is nothing to do with the "alternate timeline" being handled poorly (though it was), it's because Abrams knew nothing about Trek and the movies play more as Star Wars than Star Trek.
The Force Awakens may be a rushed, derivative rehash of Star Wars, but at least it fits in the world, tonally and thematically.
Setting these newer stories in an alternate timeline was a way of making outcomes uncertain again: we don't "know" what happens to these characters because we haven't yet seen the future of this timeline.
He should have left the Kelvin timeline, too. We don't know that there wasn't something he was supposed to do in the Prime timeline that he didn't do because he was no longer there to do it.It allows everything old to co-exist with everything new. Spock Prime only leaves the prime timeline after all his episode appearances, so they're intact, too.
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