No, just that I don't discuss Star Wars in a *checks notes* Kelvin films thread. We've already included real life anecdotal evidence.How convenient that when you said
you also cut off any argument from other works (like Rey or Finn from Star Wars) or real life that contradict this narrative.
He did fine.He didn't do a good job either for old fans like me or the mainstream audience he claimed to be marketing for who knew nothing about Trek
I'd argue that everything you say proves my point even further as nothing about Winona that we see in her screentime indicates she'd be the type of person who'd leave Jim with an abusive uncle (her brother)/boyfriend/new husband (I don't believe the film ever clarifies if they ever settled on who this guy was).
I don't think you were supposed to.I can see both ways, but ultimately, I really don't like the destruction of Romulus or Vulcan.
He didn't do a good job either for old fans like me...
It has for more than 20 years been the policy at this BBS to quote only the pertinent portion of the post being replied to. If the rest is not being addressed, then there's no reason and no need to quote it.How convenient that when you said
you also cut off any argument from other works (like Rey or Finn from Star Wars) or real life that contradict this narrative.As for Star Wars, that's not the topic of this thread.
Everything is prone to contradiction, including the movies. ( See: "Vader murdered your father." ) Books and such exist at that insecure level of canon that can be contradicted at any time. If you want to call that "non-canonical" then no one can stop you, but if these things were never canon in the first place then there would have been no point in decanonizing them. In the pre-Disney era a distinction was made between that level of canon -- where the material has no presumption of "job security", so to speak -- and "non-canon", which was a separate basket.It was never more than a marketing tactic on the publishers' part to claim the EU comics and books were canonical, and frankly I always considered it a dishonest tactic, because it was obvious that they were just as prone to contradiction as the non-canonical tie-ins to Star Trek or most anything else.
Didn't like the second one (TWOK had been done and better the first time).
Someday I'll have to watch it again.Actually what I like about Into Darkness is that it's not the same story as TWOK at all, aside from the contrived rehash/reversal of the death scene, which is the worst part of a film I otherwise mostly enjoyed. It's really a much better Khan story, because he's the nuanced, rational figure he was in "Space Seed" rather than the caricatured obsessive madman he was reduced to in TWOK, and because he actually gets to have significant interaction with the crew rather than just having a few exchanges over comms. And it's the only time we get to see Kirk and Khan working together as allies, which makes it interestingly different. I regret that the one small part of the film that does blatantly copy TWOK overshadows all the more original parts in the public's minds.
I’m not “plenty,” but I am a first-generation Trekkie who watched TOS as a 6-9 year old when it was on NBC. And I thought ‘09 was just fine. Didn’t care for Into Darkness, but thought Beyond was the best of the three. By a wide margin.Plenty of fans who were watching the Original Series when it was still airing new episodes were able to enjoy these movies.
I'm curious, does it being non-canon ruin your enjoyment of those older materials? They did the same to the Treklit verse when Picard started, and I'm still enjoying those older books.At least the original Trek universe survived JJ. When JJ went over to that other Star franchise, the original Star Wars universe as fans knew it did not survive (even the Ewok movies and the original 2003 Clone Wars were purged from the canon).
They did the same to the Treklit verse when Picard started, and I'm still enjoying those older books.
Someday I'll have to watch it again.
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