Just watched Go Ask Alice, and if it weren't for his voice being so distinct, I wouldn't have recognized @WilliamShatner at all until one scene where he took off the thickest glasses I ever seen him wear not to mention the most 70s mustache. Got used to his TJ Hooker look I guess
@DiscussingFilm The final fight sequence of any superhero show has to be epic and top any and all fight sequences that came before it. It has to give yo chills up and down your spine and tingles at the base of your skull. This just didn't do any of that.
@IanRunkle Phased out due to cords draping close to hot burners and pots. Some weren't grounded. Others had to have a dedicated fuse box in the oven that would frequently get blown, and if it didn't have that, it would overload the kitchen circuit.
@DoctorWhoWorld_ I'm not sure if "happier ending" is quite how I would put it ,but maybe a lot more growth they should always end up greater in some aspect than when they started. Even if their chosen path or original goal in life is changed.
@jondelarroz It feels like the Christmas special is sending the show off into a hopefully short to medium hiatus. That might only end with a shake-up of bts creators and likely clean slating as best they can the status of the doctors regeneration. I don't think BP is the Doctor not long term
@jondelarroz Because he was a fan of Star Trek first and foremost as opposed to the big studios who just wanted to crank out nonsensical slop to maybe make some money. Lesson to learn from the past two decades don't work on a franchise if you don't respect the source material.
I have a solution for Star Trek that can tie in United and remove the Kurtzman universe entirely:
Years into his presidency, Jonathan Archer and the nascent United Federation of Planets are rocked by escalating temporal anomalies that threaten the Romulan War peace and the young Federation itself.
Starfleet traces the disturbances to the still-unresolved Temporal Cold War, and discovers that the shadowy “Future Guy” who once manipulated the Suliban Cabal was none other than Archer himself, projected from a devastated 28th-century future. In that broken timeline (the one containing the Burn, the Federation’s near-collapse, and all the Kurtzman-era cataclysms), a desperate Archer had volunteered to become a non-corporeal agent, trying to steer 22nd-century events toward a stronger Federation.
Instead, his well-intentioned meddling fractured the prime timeline, birthing the divergent horrors he was attempting to prevent.
Working with a time-displaced descendant and a preserved message from his own Enterprise crew, President Archer confronts his future self in a temporal nexus aboard the new flagship USS United. He convinces the older version to stand down, allowing the original, unaltered timeline to reassert itself.
The Kurtzman-era disasters are retroactively erased, revealed as the “bad future” that no longer exists, restoring continuity and ushering in a stable golden age of exploration. The series then proceeds from this corrected prime timeline, with Archer’s presidency now free to focus on building the Federation we always wanted to see, setting up ongoing stories of unity, diplomacy, and discovery without the baggage of the last decade’s continuity snarls.
What do you think?