I don't think I said anything that indicated I meant "...vs-obsessed nerds...". Please don't use straw men.Stark wrote:By 'people' do you mean people in general, or vs-obsessed nerds? Because lots of fiction has no canon policy at all and people take them seriously just fine.
I think this is a good example of Connor's point. Canon rules or levels or in or out of canon just don't matter that much - and in this specific example, the idea that fucking continuity would be an important obstacle to the project is absurd. If rights holders wanted to do it, nothing in the goddamn EU or pre/post ROTJ stuff would slow them down. Canon's importance to fiction in general has been over-valued to many by the vs debate and the specific need there for agreed content with which to debate.
Of course the rights holders can ignore continuity. But being legal does not make something good writing. I don't think continuity would prevent a Star Trek vs Star Wars film though. It just has to be considered.
I'll try to address Connor MacLeod's arguments later.