Kang I think but Kor is close behind! The original Klingons were far more impressive than their turtle headed descendants! Why didn't they kep the Mark Lenard ridges from TMP I often ask myelf!
JB
JB
He certainly rates better than the dudes from "Friday's Child" and "A Private Little War."This guy, for the win!
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Prepare to be boarded...or destroyed.
Mara, no doubt.
She was a nice contrast to the more aggressive male counterparts. I didn't like "Day of the Dove" when I was younger (grade school, teenage), but I think in retrospect it was because I didn't appreciate that it works best as something symbolic. There would be much less of an episode there without her, yet she seems to get overlooked. So, Mara.
Personally I do think that the Klingons were never as good as in TUC, where they truly seemed like a believable alien warrior culture. In the 24th century they sometimes went too overboard with them (and evidently they were often played for laughs) and in TOS they were just Soviet-expies in a layer of shoe cream and a Fu Manchu beard.
That all aside I do think that Mara was cool. My favorite Klingon in all of Star Trek is Azetbur and Mara is sorta a proto-Azetbur, someone who's true to her heritage but who's willing to shove it aside and act sensibly when needed.
^Well you and me know by now that we have differing taste in many aspects.The dinner scene is probably one of my favorite scenes in all the Star Trek movies.
Weenies? Hmmm I would say it takes courage to opt for peace when your whole culture glorifies war. I loved Gorkon and Azetbur for this.
I think what they tried in TUC was to show a different side to the Klingons other than war and honour and imperialism. Of course it's up to everybody if they like that "other side" to the Klingons or not. We see it's not just always the death penalty with them but they have a legal system and prisons and all sort of things.
The one Klingon scene I don't like in TUC is when Uhura asks Random Klingon#1 about Shakespear and stops midway because she's so repulsed by his way of eating. That was a bit comic relief again.
I find the TOS Klingons much more interchangeable with humans and mustache twirly a lot of the time.
^Well you and me know by now that we have differing taste in many aspects.The dinner scene is probably one of my favorite scenes in all the Star Trek movies.
Weenies? Hmmm I would say it takes courage to opt for peace when your whole culture glorifies war. I loved Gorkon and Azetbur for this.
I think what they tried in TUC was to show a different side to the Klingons other than war and honour and imperialism. Of course it's up to everybody if they like that "other side" to the Klingons or not. We see it's not just always the death penalty with them but they have a legal system and prisons and all sort of things.
The one Klingon scene I don't like in TUC is when Uhura asks Random Klingon#1 about Shakespear and stops midway because she's so repulsed by his way of eating. That was a bit comic relief again.
I find the TOS Klingons much more interchangeable with humans and mustache twirly a lot of the time.
Meyer Trek...yeesh.
I voted for Kang...even though Kor is a CLOSE second. Kang is a better match for Kirk, especially in an action / adventure environment. His character was more fleshed out too...he had Mara, his wife, and that whole situation added tremendous dimension to him. He demonstrated cunning and guile, but was also sensible and intelligent enough to overcome the entity with Kirk in the end.
Kang is the model example I go to when I think of the balance of what a realistic Klingon should be. Not a drunken moron who head-butts people (TNG Klingons) and not a devious slime bag (TOS Kras and Krell), but a smart and proud warrior.
Although, I must say, Kras and Krell had their places too. You can tell that the Empire had agents who were very good at manipulating civilizations on various under-developed planets. These were not warriors or battlecruiser captains...they are manipulators and schemers. I think it does a nice job fleshing out the race by showing all different kinds, and not having them all be stereotypes of each other.
Meyer Trek...yeesh.
Don't get me wrong, Nick Meyer (with Harve Bennett) pretty much single-handedly made modern Trek what it is. And, WOK is my favorite movie of all time.
That said, I find TVH and TUC to be my two least-favorite of the original 6.
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