It's not canon, if they leave this information out of the show.
Star Trek does this a lot.
Star Trek does this a lot.
I do wonder how much of the Klingon story line was incomplete after Fuller was gone.If that's the case, shouldn't we have seen some non-puritans? I get the impression they didn't think this through very well.
And this highlights why the Klingons are so interesting to me. They are not typical Klingons, and they don't want to live by those rules. Please, can we have more of this?I don't think this has been confirmed in the show yet, but according to Ted Sullivan in September, it's 200 years old and some of the coffins are 300 years old:
http://trekcore.com/blog/2017/09/kl...n-new-star-trek-discovery-producer-interview/
It’s a 200-year-old ship. This is a group of Klingons who’ve gone back to a puritan way of life. They look very different: they wear armor that’s 200 years old and they don’t have any hair.
Their commander [T’Kuvma, played by Chris Obi] runs his Klingon house – the house of T’Kuvma – by the rules of Kahless, the Klingon messiah. And he calls himself the second coming of the Klingon messiah.
In the past, Klingons have not really cared about their dead – they’re not like marines. But these Klingons are. The outside of the ship is covered in thousands of coffins. Some are 300 years old, some are just two days old.
Downstairs is the death room, where they prepare their dead; then the coffins get raised up and put on the outside.
According to Kol, T'Kuvma is a "fool", the ship is "disgraced" with "outcasts and vermin". Even if he knew all along the ship and crew survived, he easily would have let them rot.
Yes? We've seen plenty of non-puritans. Basically every Klingon other than L'Rell and the Sarcophagus crew.If that's the case, shouldn't we have seen some non-puritans? I get the impression they didn't think this through very well.
I don't think this has been confirmed in the show yet, but according to Ted Sullivan in September, it's 200 years old and some of the coffins are 300 years old:
Pretty sure that's intentional, as this is pretty much exactly what Kol is.Kol reminds me of a third world warlord who happened to have some advanced technology. He is deceitful and ruthless but completely lacks the brains to plan beyond cloaked and uncloaked attacks.
If that's the case, shouldn't we have seen some non-puritans? I get the impression they didn't think this through very well.
This is my impression of Star Trek Discovery klingons: "waa waaa you're stealing our identity"
It might seem an odd reason to not get the Klingons but I've found having the subtitles a frustrating way of trying to literally understand them. The 'product' that is a Klingon here is hard work. Much of what they are doing is positioning so Michael can be pivotal in the conflict, it's a writers' strategy. That being said the Klingons made more sense in the last episode than Starfleet. The transmitter on Pahvo was supposed to allow Starfleet the ability to detect cloaked vessels. Yet Starfleet ordered Discovery to 'save itself' and go back to Federation space to help other scientists devise a solution to... solving the invisibility of Klingon cloaked vessels. What the? The answer was right in front of them. You'd think that would be a fight worth taking just for their own war efforts. If Lorca expected Discovery at warp 5 to take three hours to get back to base couldn't within the same amount of time if not less other Starfleet vessels be sent to Pahvo to support Discovery defend the Phavans and this precious transmitter? What is with these Starfleet Admirals?Quite honestly, it's impossible to tell the motivations of the Klingons as a whole, because we have only had substantial speaking roles from T'Kumva, Voq, L'Rell, and Kol. Maybe two other Klingons in the entire series have had a line or two of dialogue. It's one of the reasons I don't understand the claim that the goal of the show was to "flesh the Klingons out more" because a single, not-particularly good episode of DS9 (say Soldiers of the Empire) gave us more insight into the Klingon race than nine episodes of Discovery have to date.
Mirror Universe T'Kuvma? Yes, please.There is only one puritan Klingon left, Voq. For now, he is missing.
T'Kuvma is dead. His "house" is dead or disbanded. His sacred ship destroyed.
Kol, T'Kuvma's usurper, is now dead, his united empire shattered, unless someone immediately steps up to the plate, but why would they? Kol formed his alliance with bribery, and fear. All those other houses have what they want, and no longer need fear Kol.
We are left with typical Klingons, save one or two Klingon spies....unless the messiah returns in an alternate dimension.
Please make him a pacifist. Like, instead of a figurative Klingon Jesus, a literal Klingon Jesus.Mirror Universe T'Kuvma? Yes, please.
Black Klingon Jesus. Cool and holy at the same time. I am onboard.Please make him a pacifist. Like, instead of a figurative Klingon Jesus, a literal Klingon Jesus.
The transmitter on Pahvo was supposed to allow Starfleet the ability to detect cloaked vessels. Yet Starfleet ordered Discovery to 'save itself' and go back to Federation space to help other scientists devise a solution to... solving the invisibility of Klingon cloaked vessels. What the? The answer was right in front of them.
Don't underestimate the power of vindictiveness.You’d think a dozen houses in person would not leave the Binary stars without it. (Especially since Kol came back for it anyway).
I've not had this problem...The problem boils down once more to poor writing, i.e. they crammed too much content in only a few episodes. Hopefully, they'll resolve this problem in future ones.
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