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While I think the Star Trek (2009) movie was pretty cool looking, its story-line wreaks total havoc with all the existing post original series content.

I know that Gene Roddenberry was very strict about what was considered canon in the past, basically anything he didn't like well (like the animated series). But now, since his death, it seems like all the later series are considered canon.

Is the latest Star Trek (2009) considered canon?

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    I refer you to the Star Trek motto: "We Hate Continuity." atwitsendcomics.com/comics/index/23/Old-Kirk Mar 10, 2011 at 22:27
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    Myself and some of my friends are of the opinion that the Temporal Cold War of ST:ENT erased (or at least veered away from) the timeline of the 2009 movie and set it to the one depicted in TNG/DS9/VOY ;)
    – Izkata
    Nov 4, 2011 at 23:04
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    Post nothing, the movie wrecks the Original Series content too! The only thing left untouched is...*shudder* Star Trek: Enterprise.
    – Zibbobz
    Apr 9, 2014 at 13:37
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    Star Trek isn't Star Wars. Canon really isn't that important to it.
    – user36551
    Mar 7, 2015 at 2:44
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    It's a separate canon, similar to how Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy is different from the Burton / Schumacher one. However, in this case the difference is "handwaved" by the writers saying that it's an alternative universe caused by Nero changing in time-line. But really it's just a case of they wanted to start the story again without having to worry about consistency with the existing canon.
    – komodosp
    Dec 15, 2016 at 8:59

6 Answers 6

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Since the events of the 2009 movie take place in an alternate timeline to that of the original series, there is no logical problem with it being canon.

The hows and whys are detailed here: Bob Orci Explains How The New Star Trek Movie Fits With Trek Canon (and Real Science)

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    It doesn't really happen in an alternate universe, but in an alternate timeline. I'm not trying to be picky, I'm just pointing out that alternate timelines are created and destroyed quite often in Star Trek, while I think alternate universes, like paralel universes are only a few. So, yes, no reason to not make it canon. Jan 11, 2011 at 21:51
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    Surely an alternate timeline needs an alternate universe to happen in? Surely Vulcan can't be extant and destroyed in the same universe (it's a planet after all, not a sub atomic particle . . . nor a cat for that matter).
    – user296
    Jan 20, 2011 at 13:24
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    I wonder how many people realise that Star Trek Enterprise is supposed to have happened before the events of Star Trek (2009) and must therefore be considered canon in both timelines.
    – Timwi
    Feb 21, 2011 at 21:05
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    Time travel is like Duct Tape to Star Trek writers. Mar 22, 2013 at 3:55
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    Well that's certainly true. And to me, given how different the Kelvin looks from anything we've seen from that era before, it indicates an even earlier point of divergence. Maybe an asteroid or something got sucked into that black hole and went even further back, changing everything from an even earlier point and explaining the differences. But now I'm just making stuff up.
    – Nerrolken
    Dec 18, 2014 at 18:32
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Being an "official" product, and given the fact that Gene has passed -- Yeah, I would consider it canon.

Like it or hate it (I enjoyed it myself) it does conveniently "reboot" the timeline in a manner that lets it remain canon without making any of the previous films inaccurate to the new storyline.

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    Totally — it seemed to me like someone had said to J. J. Abrams “Oh, you’re writing the Trek reboot? Shame it won’t be canon.” and he thought to himself “Challenge: accepted.” Mar 18, 2011 at 2:39
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It's probably best to think of it as "new" canon. They rewrote history so continuity with the old series doesn't matter. Which lets them play with those tensions, of course--those of us who know the old material can enjoy the changes to the universe, a sort of meta-level of writing for the "in crowd".

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    I agree with the accepted answer. There's no reason to consider this "new canon" any more than we need to consider the alternate Tasha Yar universe or the Mirror Universe "new canon" Jan 11, 2011 at 22:35
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It has its own canon. It's not the same as Gene Roddenberry's canon. I was surprised at seeing Spock's love story with Uhura in the reboot because they're not the way I know the characters. Uhura appears to be attracted to Spock in 'The Man Trap' (Who isn't) and tries to flirt with him and he has no idea what she's doing and she gives up really quickly while making a quip at Spock. She's attracted to him. There's no indication that she's in love with him. Spock doesn't appear to be any close to Uhura than he is to Sulu or Chekov or Scotty. Uhura even says that Kirk is the "closest thing [Spock] has to a friend." When Spock dies in Wrath of Khan it's Kirk who is at the glass. Uhura isn't mourning more than anybody else. Kirk is the one who risks everything in Search for Spock to bring him back. In other words, they are not together in TOS canon after 79 episodes and 6 movies and even in the reboot Spock Prime (Who is from the TOS timeline). Now, the writers may have thought about having Spock and Uhura pursue a romance and it may have been because of racism as they didn't, but the point is that they scrapped the idea and they weren't even shown to be that close. There have always been fans who think Spock would work well with Uhura but it wasn't an official relationship in TOS and Spock was actually a lot closer and more affectionate toward Captain Kirk. People may tease K/S "slasher" and say that this isn't canon either but the characters are still a lot closer.

I was surprised by the pairing in the reboot because it was against the relationship that had been (Or hadn't been) established for over 40 years. But then people always point out that it's an alternative reality/timeline. In THAT canon, Spock has a pre-existing affectionate relationship with Uhura before he befriends Kirk. At the time of the first movie Uhura appears to be his only friend, she is a respected student and apparently (Although not really stated clearly) a lover. Part of the reason I felt a bit let down by the romance (Despite good acting and good chemistry) was because they had taken a very interesting character like Spock and made him almost into a typical archetypal male hero. Cool thing about Spock was that he could be a strong male character without constantly chasing chicks the way Kirk did. Also, Uhura is the only frequent female character. It doesn't seem particularly creative to match Spock with the only female around and also have Kirk chasing her to create a love-triangle. In TOS Uhura was a respected member of the crew and she wasn't automatically turned into a love interest for all the males around her. Now one of Uhura's main plotlines is that she's pining over Spock. Despite my disappointment, it IS a different timeline and people will point that out. But then they'll go ahead and claim that Abrams making Spock-Uhura a canonical relationship in the reboot makes it canonical in the alternative timeline. IT DOESN'T. If it's a different canon, then it's a different canon. End of story. The canon overlaps when Spock Prime comes into the reboot universe but the character's stories are different. What happens in the reboot timeline only happens in the reality of the reboot. If we're so obsessed with canon to the point of making fun of "slash fangirl" then we shouldn't be claiming that an alternative timeline effects the canon of the original timeline. By that logic, Spock's mother is dead at the beginning of TOS, which we clearly see that he isn't, and Vulcan has been destroyed which it clearly hasn't and Kirk has not brother called Sam which he clearly does.

After my little rant, the reboot has A canon but it isn't the same as Gene Roddenberry's canon. Pine's Kirk is BASED on Shatner's Kirk but he's the alternative timeline Kirk. He's not exactly the same guy as TOS Kirk.

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The Uhuru/Spock love story could be canon if you take into consideration the timeline was altered as soon as George Kirks ship encountered the anomaly at the beginning of the movie, from that point in time an alteration to the timeline has occurred. Whatever the consequences of that were, they occurred in such a way that it facilitated sometime in the future a relationship between Uhuru and Spock that would not have occurred otherwise.

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  • Butterfly effect
    – Adeptus
    Dec 16, 2014 at 3:58
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No. Research has been done by Midnight's Edge that shows that the Star Trek 2009 movie series reboot and ST:Discovery are part of a separate "prime" universe, which can use elements of the original canon universe, but must make them at least 25% different from canon in order to have the right to make money from tie-in products. This includes "old Spock" in the 2009 movie and his future timeline as well. See link:

Edit: There comes a breaking point where there are sufficient changes that it becomes a completely different thing. Unless you completely do away with canon, making the OP's question meaningless, as it appears CBS and Paramount are doing (based on this admittedly secondary source). "Also CBS and Paramount have stated that Star Trek Canon is fluidic and is governed by the current running series and thus if it changes something (no matter how you may like or hate it) that new change is Canon and changes the original previously established Canon." https://www.quora.com/Is-Star-Trek-Discovery-canon-to-the-original-series

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    Random YouTubers (no matter how many subscribers they have) are not the arbiters of what is and isn't canon in the Trek Universe
    – Valorum
    Feb 27, 2019 at 16:25
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    This also seems to be a smarter of unsourced rumour and downright gueswork
    – Valorum
    Feb 27, 2019 at 16:26
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    Well, the Midnight's Edge youtuber looked closely at who had the rights to use what, and how that affected their creative decisions. It's a fascinating listen, in any case - I didn't expect to listen to more than 10 minutes of it, but I ended up finishing it.
    – MikeC
    Feb 28, 2019 at 2:17
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    Who decides what is canon? It would seem we have two choices. The creators of content decide, or we the fans, as a group, decide. This video is something I have seen several longtime fans of Star Trek point to as being evidence of there being two separate continuities rather than one. If the fans, as a group, broadly determine what is canon, than this is very relevant. But if canon is everything that is broadcast, or everything that is printed, than the OPs question is irrelevant and can be answered with a simple, unsourced "yes".
    – MikeC
    Feb 28, 2019 at 2:25

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