Interesting watching 30 and 40yo actors play themselves as 20yo Ensigns in the crossover. Not surprisingly, they gave the younger actor significantly more screentime.
Interesting watching 30 and 40yo actors play themselves as 20yo Ensigns in the crossover. Not surprisingly, they gave the younger actor significantly more screentime.
I don't think Mariner is in her 20's her best friend from the Academy is a Captain so I'm assuming about a decade has passed since she graduated the Academy. She's giving Harry Kim a run for being Ensign longest.
As for Boimler hey being a late 24th century boy is rough and ages you look at Jack Crusher.
Not the first time, really.
In TMP it's supposed to be only 2 1/2 years since the Five Year Mission ended (and 4 1/2 since the series ended at "Year 3") however it was a decade for the actors.
The characters are supposed to be in their 20s and 30s at this point with the exception of Scotty and McCoy (late 40s) and I think Spock, although the actors were in their 40s, 50s, and almost 60 (Also Doohan and Kelly).
Although honestly they do mostly pull it off in part due to makeup and everybody ordered to get in a lot of fitness.
With the sequels they actually take place in the "real world" gap from TOS (19-25 years) so they were allowed to look more like their actual ages, especially since it's one of the core themes of Nick Meyer's two films.
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Remember when people thought Lower Decks was failing? Lol, it's got four seasons at least now. Strange New Worlds is also getting ranked in the Nielsen top 10 streaming shows too. This year has probably been the best year of Star Trek since the 90's even if something like Prodigy failed.
#InGunnITrust, #ZackSnyderistheBlueprint, #ReleasetheAyerCut
Considering they know the romulans and even fought a war with them without ever seeing what they look like or learning much about what's behind the borders of their empire at this point, it's rather reasonable that the Federation knows of certain species and even where their border might be allready without having made direct contact or regular flight paths towards them yet.
Unlike Kim she actualy wants to stay ensign though.
Harry's situation meanwhile is just weird, given that he was basicly command crew by the mid point of the show and acted in a capacity and role close to a lieutenant commander.
If i recall right there were also hints that Mariner is actualy a Dominion war veteran and might have allready been a young adult while on the Enterprise D.
Plus age should be a rather difficult subject to determine in the world of Star Trek anyway given the advanced medical technology ("The doctor gave me a pill and i grew a new kidney!"). If not for the actors actualy aging, it would make sense that the natural life expectancy of humans by the point of Next Generation would be more than a hundred years with effects of aging slowed down.
Last edited by Grunty; 07-23-2023 at 04:35 PM.
I have that same idea that, with a little fudging, Mr. Flint could have been a Lathanite. He could even have been a Lathanite who was lost from his parents and didn't know what he really was and thought he must just be a freak mutation. If the Lathanites are eventually shown to have extremely fast healing, to the point of recovering from otherwise mortal wounds, that would work. But, if he is the person Pelia mentioned, it doesn't work as well. But, alternate reality. Everything doesn't have to be exactly true to TOS.
Showing Bajor and Cardassia as already known to the Federation struck me as a bit like "Enterprise" encountering the Ferengi, a bit of silly name-dropping.
I did hope they would find a way to show live action Tendi and Rutherford. But it was overall a really good yet lighthearted story.
I loved how much they played on that scene from "The Cage" where Spock smiled and how much things like that go against the image we have of some of the characters because we only see the big picture and the official history, not the every day stuff.
Apparently, they are going to play Spapell as a brief anomaly .. The only unfortunate part is if they play Chapel as falling into the same trap as she and all female characters did in TOS, just there to be a love interest (or unrequited love in Chapel's case) for male characters.
It was fun seeing Boimler geeking out like a fan over these people who are historical figures to him, and seeing their reactions to it.
Power with Girl is better.
I think it's more in the way of them knowing that the Gorn exist ten years and more before Kirk's Enterprise encounters them for the first time with no idea who they are and other choices to play a bit fast and loose with canon. I think these versions of Spock and Chapel will never fit 100% with TOS and the writers know that but they are trying to do a prequel to a show from sixty years before and they've made the choice to play a bit fast and loose with this just as they've done the same thing with the casual 1960s sexism.
Power with Girl is better.
I did like seeing Pike's crew going through their own noticed hero worship of Archer's crew as well. One could consider these actions silly, but to be honest, I also remember Geordi in First Contact with Zefram Cochrane as well as Ben Sisko getting Kirk's autograph. Senior officers do a better job of hiding their feelings, but this seems to be a fairly common reaction considering.
I’ll don the mask and wear the cape
If I am super, how can I wait?
Kind of interesting in TNG the adventures of Kirk and Co. aren't really venerated as much by that crew. Think it was because at first Gene wanted the series to do it's own thing at first.
And of course in DS9 Bashir and Odo are totally in the dark about the Klingons that Kirk frequently fought.
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Think in the original Trek there wasn't anything particularly special about the Enterprise-other starships probably ran into weird stuff like they did, although many didn't make it out or they were picking up the mess of a wayward captain.
Think the movies largely started the trend of it and it's crew being 'special'. Especially since it directly saves the Earth twice. Even then in TWOK/TFSF it's relegated to training duty and decommissioning, and apart from Kirk the crew are treated somewhat poorly by fellow members of Starfleet. TNG of course made it's Enterprise the Federation flagship I think in season one.
Last edited by ChrisIII; 07-24-2023 at 11:57 AM.
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In TOS, the Enterprise wasn't the flagship yet. That came some time later. Not even sure it was the flagship in the TOS movies.
But, by virtue of being the first and only Star Trek show at the time, they did almost everything first.
First to time travel: The Naked Time and Tomorrow is Yesterday.
First to be sent on an intentional time travel mission in Assignment: Earth.
First to encounter the Gorn.
I wouldn't say the first to encounter non-corporeal aliens since they don't seem shocked at a Thalasian appearing on the bridge in "Charlie X".
Probably the first to encounter something on the power level of Trelane.
The ones that discovered the existence of the Mirror Universe in "Mirror, Mirror".
And so on.
I don't think shows like Enterprise, "Discovery" and SNW really undermine these things because most people don't take retroactive continuity all that seriously in most cases. Rehashing that stuff instead of finding something different to do just makes one group of people dismiss a show entirely (which I think is stupid to not judge the quality on its own merits), another group shunt it into an alternate reality (that's me) and another accept it as canon in the core setting.
Incidentally, loved "Those Old Scientists" (TOS). But, as usual, Star Trek has time travel work however they want it to work for that story.
This one falls into: You can change the past, which could cause the future you knew to be erased. Likewise, that alternate future can be erased by going back and correcting the things you changed.
Then there's the Kelvin timeline: Changing the past just causes a divergent timeline. The future you "changed" did not change *at all*. It's still next door and perfectly happy. You just now live in another reality. There's no point going back and trying to correct it because that will just create yet another timeline that does not stop the first two (Prime and Kelvin, in this case), from existing.
Power with Girl is better.