Does Batman Begins invalidate Tim Burton's Batman? Does The Batman invalidate Batman: The Animated Series? Do any of them invalidate Adam West's Batman?
We've seen this argument over and over again... Batman hasn't been internally consistent between movies, series or comic books, so who cares at this point. Superman hasn't been internally consistent between movies, series or comic books, so who cares at this point. Spider-man hasn't been internally consistent between movies, series or comic books, so who cares at this point. James Bond hasn't been internally consistent between movies and books, so who cares at this point.
Right. And what I'm suggesting is, if
Star Trek evolves to allow multiple interpretations instead of only one continuity, maybe that's a GOOD thing.
No, it isn't.
Having different versions of the story is not the same thing as "not making an effort to be true to yourself."
Yes, actually, it IS.
And, yes, Trek did that for forty years. And then it died. Obviously, sticking to the old formula wasn't working too well. Time to try something new.
Oh, no, not this again. Is it really so hard to understand the following: It didn't do that for forty years, it only did that for 35. If ONLY it had done so for forty years, we wouldn't be in for this mess. For if they had KEPT the continuity, Enterprise would have broken with the formula of the 15 years before that RADICALLY, and we wouldn't be in this mess.
In short; you can break the having become stale formula, without changing the continuity. And continuing to claim it can't, or it's the same thing, shows how completely unwilling you are to grasp simple logic.
1. I don't accept the idea that having a new continuity is "defacing" it. It's just another way of doing the legend.
When that "new continuity" came about through lazy, uncreative, unwilling to challenge oneself writing; nothing but formulaic Hollywood movie totally empty of everything meaningful including science, then yes, it IS defacing it.
2. "If Star Trek was dying, let it die." Well, that says it all, doesn't it? Purity or death. I don't want Star Trek to die, and I think that evolution is superior to "purity."
Oh, and again...
It makes me sigh, to hear these contradictory terms used as if they mean the same thing.
No, "evolution" does not mean that Star Trek can't remain "pure", or rather keep the essence of what Star Trek is intact.
When "evolution" means a meaningless, Hollywood formulaic movie only interested in the next kewl thing, with the next kewl visual, without a care in the world of what Star Trek is, what good story telling is, what good science fiction is, that "evolution" turns it into a pile of crap.
Turning Star Trek into a pile of crap is not only not better than anything, it's horribly WORSE than just about anything else.
He had the opportunity to stay pretty faithful and didn't (and we don't need to see the film to see that),
Um, yeah, actually we do.
No, actually, we don't. I refer you to the ridiculous Enterprise built on Earth scene. I refer you to all the other scenes talked about.
so now he had better have an overwhelmingly compelling story to make up for the first majorly internally inconsistent Trek production.
It's not the first internally inconsistent Trek production. The first internally inconsistent Trek production was "Where No Man Has Gone Before," where suddenly Spock goes from a grinning, yelling, emotional guy in "The Cage" to a stoic Vulcan who suppresses his emotions.
Odd, isn't it? That the writers apparently didn't think so inconsistent that they couldn't use it. It's almost like they establish that... shock, Spock wasn't always so well in control of his emotions. What a horror! It's inconsistent! There was character development!
Sorry, but Kirk didn't kiss her, she kissed him.
Oh... maybe you're right. It sure looks like
he's fighting her off. Oh, wait... he only
starts fighting her away when she pulls a knife on him!
Face it, you don't know the show well enough to be judging if anyone else is
fan enough to argue their points.
First of all, whether he is fighting her off, doesn't even really matter. I didn't say anything about Kirk fighting her off, just that HE didn't kiss HER. Big difference with her forcing herself onto him - but...
In case you hadn't noticed, friend, he's backing away from her. The only reason he's not fighting her off in the beginning is because he's a gentlemen that doesn't hit women easily. But eh - I know, when a woman is backing away from an assailant and telling him "no", she isn't being raped, because she didn't fight him off!
But for more than 40 years Star Trek has made a good faith effort (even if mistakes were made) to stay internally consistent and true to itself...
And how'd that work out for them? Shows and films of diminishing returns and rating.
Which we all know, is NOT because they kept to continuity - indeed with Enterprise they DID NOT even REMOTELY do so - but that they kept suck in TNG formula twice over with Voyager and Enterprise.