I've read somewhere that James Doohan's son is being given a cameo role.
What's the betting that he'll be playing a brief scene as a young engineer who gets corrected/shown how to do something properly by Simon Pegg's "Scotty"?
What I mean by that is that I think the original Enterprise looked cheap and tacky... I didn't like the way the nacelles were laid out... and thought that the refit for the movies looked much sleeker whilst remaining faithful to the original. Granted it was the 60's and there were budgets and less obsession with design, but I just don't like it as much.
I wouldn't have objected to them updating the original effects footage to reflect the superior design of the Constitution refit.
I think the reason time travel stories aren't popular anymore with established sci-fi shows are because they usually come off as cheap. They get caught up in their own "clever" constructs and ultimately result in nothing.
And some science geeks get really pissed because time travel into the past is considered impossible, even theoretically.
I think the reason time travel stories aren't popular anymore with established sci-fi shows are because they usually come off as cheap. They get caught up in their own "clever" constructs and ultimately result in nothing. And some science geeks get really pissed because time travel into the past is considered impossible, even theoretically.
Though I personally have no problem with the occassional time travel ep in a series, a movie should be a bigger deal and more "important."
Well no surprise that I'm in complete disagreement with that and consider TOS untouchable. The cheap look is absolutely part of its charm. And isn't it more impressive that Kirk did so much with such a crappy looking ship? It feels like they're in constant danger of disintegrating. Now that's space exploration.
They tried to get into that aspect of it in Enterprise and I liked that. Enterprise was actually a cool premise. And then they started writing and filming episodes and, er, .....blech.
My understanding to the objection traveling to the past is more physical than logical. That is- how would one actually do that? You could travel to the future by traveling past the speed of light (still ridiculous because mathematically the closer you get to c the closer your mass approaches infinity, but whatever). But how would past traveling actually work?
Since our universe hasn't collapsed in a hopeless jumble of paradoxes, I'd say that we never discover time travel. Nor will any other intelligent race do so, and still be in our universe.
And don't forget the other theory...that everything you did as a time traveller actually made history run the way it did... that time travel is possible but the timeline is unalterable.
Obviously, that's what science says whenever a new theory comes about. But when you hit the "how on earth could you even meaningfully test this theory?" stage, I just don't see how a science can ever be made of it.
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