rtsurfer wrote:Do you think most people really care about the details that we argue over and what is or isn't official canon?
Just based on my own experiences during my six year tenure over on robotech.com and all of the questions that I've received via e-mail and instant messenger since my posting privileges were revoked for "heresy", I'd have to say yes. Mind you, it would be remiss of me not to go one step further and qualify that remark by saying that it tends to be the newer members of the Robotech fandom who are interested in issues of continuity and canon, rather than the bitter and disgruntled "old guard".
rtsurfer wrote:Don't they just want a useful and enjoyable product that allows them to suspend disbelief?
Y'know... I could say something here, but my brand of tough honesty would almost certainly end up being interpreted as saying something untoward.
jaymz wrote:For that you still need a relatively coherent base to start from and the powers that be have essentially not done the best they can in giving us that
At least Tommy Yune made an attempt to clean up the continuity and give us a relatively coherent base for the new canon. It's a step in the right direction, IMO.
NB: I'm gonna have to pare Anjay's down for the sake of readability before it ends up as a horrible nested-quote nightmare resembling an infinity shot.
Sgt Anjay wrote:Well, for one, the need for there to be "the" story, instead of stories told in a really interesting setting is neither universal nor absolute. And I've been able to discuss Robotech for decades now; sometimes it gets ugly, usually it gets passionate (not necessarily a bad thing), and many times the different bases, which factoids and tidbits and clues came from which point in which story, is the coolest part of the whole thing.
If being able to hold a civil discussion a particular aspect of a series without having to first spend a hundred or so posts arguing the validity of each person's interpretation of a single line of dialogue to no useful end is wrong, then I don't wanna be right.
Sgt Anjay wrote:Totally 100% agree they need to know what they're actually taking into account in order to make new product, what happened and what didn't, and that this can be used as a common base.
Uh... wait, doesn't this seem a little paradoxical? I mean, you've spent the bulk of your post asserting that having an official canon defined by the creative director is thirty-one flavors of evil, and now you're pulling a 180 and telling us you 100% agree that such a thing is essential to producing future Robotech narratives.
Sgt Anjay wrote:100% disagree there must only be one, draconian version of Robotech that disavows everything else because t it cannot be enjoyed as a version of Robotech without ruining everything always foreverz!!!.
That the old comics, novels, and what have you are all non-canon these days really shouldn't be detracting anything from your enjoyment of them... unless you're not really as indifferent to canon as you'd like to appear... it just means that they're not part of the official story of Robotech that's being told, and not applicable to elements in its narrative. As you say, they can still be enjoyed as a version of Robotech... just not the definitive version of Robotech's story.
Sgt Anjay wrote:The retcon-hammer's never popular. The efficacy of top-down "this is how the story should be" coming after the fact is pretty controversial...just ask a Legion of Super-Heroes fan, or Spider-man fans, just to start with.
I dunno, I'm pretty sure I could think of a couple retcons that would be popular... and a few that were. Tossing the pre-2001 printed materials went over pretty well in Robotech's fandom, at least with the newer fans. There certainly wasn't much love for the novels when I was active on robotech.com, to the extent that the admins of the site had to chime in and threaten bannings for anyone who dismissed threads about the novels as a waste of time or space. I'd also be prepared to bet that having Lucas retcon Jar-Jar Binks out of existence would have the Star Wars fans dancing in the street.
Sgt Anjay wrote:Also...I still see three identifiable ships in during Southern Cross.
And I see three variations on the Tristar-class platform... ain't it grand?
josephddm wrote:To Seto:
For me they are still alot smart,because they put things right every certain time period to include all the new animation,designs,character instead of letting time pass and let things fall into oblivion.
Oh, there's no denying they're plenty smart... if they weren't, Macross wouldn't have enjoyed a string of hit titles over the decades. In part, it's those continuity materials that the creators put together during the production process that help the many, MANY titles in Macross come together into a cohesive whole while still giving the impression that we have yet to see more than just the tiniest sliver of Macross's universe. The way that Macross's creators have made a habit of trying to mix up the formula in each new title and bring in a new and engaging cast each time has helped keep it fresh.
josephddm wrote:Also HG has enough animation and designs to establish their canon because is what they are trying to do from the start of the Shadow Chronicles project.
Really, I doubt they do. From a very early stage, Robotech has been stagnating itself by fixating on a handful of established characters to the exclusion of everyone else. Even though Southern Cross is the nominal linchpin holding Robotech's story together, EVERYTHING in Robotech revolves around the Macross Saga. The Masters Saga had to make Southern Cross's protagonist into Max and Miriya's daughter to make her even the slightest bit tolerable, the entire New Generation is about Scott and crew running interference behind Invid lines while they wait for Rick Hunter to come pull their fat out of the fire, Untold Story was originally conceived as a Macross Saga side-story, and even after being altered still had a Macross Saga macguffin at the center of its plot, Robotech II: the Sentinels was the continuing adventures of the Macross Saga cast, and Shadow Chronicles was just an alarmingly Rick-centric continuation of that. (I guess, when you think about it like that, the ending of RTSC puts a whole new meaning to being Rick-rolled)
Apart from the "original 85", the Shadow Chronicles movie, and the handful of comics produced after '01, what do they have? The only title currently in production is one that was already revealed to just be a retread of a story they've already told twice in the new canon, and everything else has been stalled in development hell since it was announced. If they REALLY padded it, they might have enough material for five or six issues of a Macross Chronicle-style encyclopedia... and at that point, why not just print it as a single book and have done with it?
If it weren't for Palladium and the RPG, there would be nothing worthwhile going in for RT at all, which makes it all the more important for Palladium to get it in gear and get the New Gen book and the Spaceships book in the hands of the fans as soon as possible.