HAPPY FIRST CONTACT DAY!!
April 5,2063
It's not lost on us that, yes, we're toasting a day that hasn’t
happened... yet. But, really, when has that stopped anyone who loves
science fiction? Now, before we jump into a detailed explanation of what
First Contact Day is within Star Trek canon, we thought we’d address a practical matter: how and why did the writers-producers of Star Trek: First Contact
choose April 5 as First Contact Day? We turned to the film’s co-writer,
Ronald D. Moore, who offered a remarkably simple, sensible and succinct
explanation. “The short answer on First Contact Day is that it's my
oldest son, Jonathan's birthday,” Moore told StarTrek.com. “And that's the only reason the date was chosen.”
First Contact Day pays tribute to the flight of the Phoenix and the
pivotal first interaction between humans and Vulcans. It occurred on
April 5, 2063. That night, the Vulcan survey ship the T’Plana-Hath
landed in Bozeman, Montana, after tracking the warp signature of the
Phoenix. The Phoenix was the spacecraft that marked mankind’s first
successful attempt at achieving warp drive. Just minutes later, a robed
Vulcan, displaying the split-fingered Vulcan greeting, made the
acquaintance of Dr. Zefram Cochrane, pilot of the Phoenix and inventor
of warp drive. First Contact was made, and it paved the way to the
formation of the United Federation of Planets.
Anyone eager to discover more about First Contact and First Contact Day should watch the TOS episode “Metamorphosis,” with Glenn Corbett as Cochrane; the TNG big-screen adventure First Contact, with James Cromwell in the part (which he played again, briefly, on Enterprise); the books First Contact (the novelization of the feature) and First Frontier; and also Voyager episode “Homestead,”
in which Neelix and Naomi Wildman throw a party celebrating the 315th
anniversary of First Contact Day, complete with heaping portions of
Cochrane’s favorite food (cheese pierogies), a classic jukebox and Tuvok
flashing the Vulcan salute and speaking the legendary line, “Live long
and prosper.”
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario