Well we only saw a handful of Klingons in TOS, really. Not nearly enough to conclude we had seen all there was to see of the Empire, but that was nonetheless the assumption of fans then and now.That's a big assumption. We only saw three ships.
Well we only saw a handful of Klingons in TOS, really. Not nearly enough to conclude we had seen all there was to see of the Empire, but that was nonetheless the assumption of fans then and now.That's a big assumption. We only saw three ships.
Problem with Discovery is that they positioned themselves before a known quantity and chose to screw it up.That's a big assumption. We only saw three ships.
Changing the look isn't screwing up.
The Klingons just don't fit. However all that aside for a minute was it worth it? When I think to those first few episodes of Discovery the Klingons have been heavy going. Their whole presentation and the writing of them has been a drag. Those blessed, tiresome subtitles were enough to drive the sanest fan up the wall.
Then I must be a crazy fanThe Klingons just don't fit. However all that aside for a minute was it worth it? When I think to those first few episodes of Discovery the Klingons have been heavy going. Their whole presentation and the writing of them has been a drag. Those blessed, tiresome subtitles were enough to drive the sanest fan up the wall.
This. Somehow the 8 or so episodes featuring Klingons meant we had seen every facet of the Empire.Well we only saw a handful of Klingons in TOS, really. Not nearly enough to conclude we had seen all there was to see of the Empire, but that was nonetheless the assumption of fans then and now.
Same reason they "simply aren't used" in anything but two episodes of Deep Space Nine. They never explained it there either. You can assume they all broke down or you can assume they only use them off screen or you can assume those weird tri-screen displays are holograms or literally whatever cuz this happens all the time in Star Trek.I think what you're both missing here, and what makes that particular fanwank explanation (whether from actual fans or a writer's Tweets) less than satisfactory, is that the comparison people are making is not to the holograms used over a century "chronologically-later" in universe. It's to TOS, which is all of a decade later, in which holographic comms simply aren't used, period, in any way, shape, or form.
Apparently I'm the only one of the two of us who knows what that concept actually means.Okay, now you're just taking the piss here. It cannot be that you are unfamiliar with the very concept of a fictional reality
Hardly. But then, the producer's choice of sound effects in a radio show is about as relevant as their choice of visuals in a television show. I realize you struggle with analogies, but here's another one: if somebody was doing a radio show that was supposed to be in the same fictional setting as the Panicked America broadcast, he probably wouldn't use the same sound effects that Orson Wells used in 1938.So by your lights, we may as well be tuning in to a radio show.
Exactly. Significant changes to the Klingons, their technology and their ships with no narrative justification. Same problem as before.The changes in TMP, however, were all explicable in-story. The one notable exception to that was the appearance of the Klingons...
In which case you are well aware that there is a SHITLOAD of discontinuity to be reconciled. You have also encountered situations where a flashback, or even a "retelling" of an old issue recreates a previous story using more contemporary artwork. Spiderman has a few particularly grievous examples in multiple revisits of the Green Goblin story arc, partially because it's been told like a dozen times in a dozen different mediums, but also because it's been revisited in dreams, flashbacks, "What If" scenarios and the like, with the Green Goblin's costume and glider often being modified -- sometimes drastically -- by whoever is doing the artwork.I'm not a fan of anime, but I definitely am of comics. I have devoted countless hours to reconciling the fine points of the continuity of various comic-book realities...
You are once again trying to push a subjective point of view as if it was a universal concept. You DON'T LIKE the way things look, that's fine. But you're not in a position to argue that the things you don't like about it are of paramount importance to the integrity of the product, anymore than you could plausibly that Discovery's background music is unforgivably un-treklike (to be honest, you'd be on far sturdier ground in that case).You just really don't get it. (Or at least, you're pretending not to.) You're talking about two completely different levels of suspension of disbelief.
The reason is obvious: they couldn't afford to show regular use of holograms on a 1968 TV budget.Perhaps. But DSC has bent over backwards to force viewers to wonder what that reason might be...
Writers don't do makeup design.Bad writing...
The one thing you COULDN'T do? Turn Michal Burnham into a man. The reason you can't do this is because Tilly tells Michal in "Context is for Kings" that she's only ever heard of one WOMAN named Michal and that's Michal Burnham. You also couldn't (plausibly, at least) replace Mirror Georgiou with someone who looks completely unlike Prime Georgiou, because her looking exactly like Prime Georgiou is a major plot point and Sarek even comments on this.
I'm perfectly sane and I prefer Klingons speaking Klingon with English subtitles.Those blessed, tiresome subtitles were enough to drive the sanest fan up the wall.
Because the story would have to be written to be in some way consistent with the actual presentation. It doesn't make sense to have Georgiou played by Michelle Yeoh and Mirror Georgiou played by Tyler Perry in drag and then have Sarek say "The resemblance is remarkable!" That would be weird and confusing.Your theory doesn't explain why we couldn't make these different casting choices, though. You insist that story is paramount and that visual presentation simply does not matter. If that is true, then why would it matter if I cast Lawrence Fishburn as Burnham or as Mirror Georgiou? His appearance on screen is just presentation, afterall.
Yeah there's a huge difference between internal show consistency and cross-show consistency. I want a series to be consistent with itself. Outside that, meh.Because the story would have to be written to be in some way consistent with the actual presentation. It doesn't make sense to have Georgiou played by Michelle Yeoh and Mirror Georgiou played by Tyler Perry in drag and then have Sarek say "The resemblance is remarkable!"
Because the story would have to be written to be in some way consistent with the actual presentation. It doesn't make sense to have Georgiou played by Michelle Yeoh and Mirror Georgiou played by Tyler Perry in drag and then have Sarek say "The resemblance is remarkable!"
Exactly WHAT? Georgiou doesn't have to be played by Michelle Yeoh in every future incarnation of Star Trek. Just in the episodes where where her mirror universe counterpart obviously looks exactly the same as she does. Hell, they could probably get away with someone who looks SIMILAR to her if Michelle Yeoh refused to reprise the role; that would be sub-optimal, but hardly unprecedented:Exactly.
I said it above but I'll say it again. There's a difference between internal show consistency and cross-show consistency.I don't understand your position - you just spent pages and pages arguing that visuals are mere presentation and their consistency is irrelevant. Now you are claiming that visuals are significant and that their consistency is relevant, which is what I have been arguing (and that's why I said "exactly").
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