Please don't erase the existence of the talented artists who design the makeup, starships, and so forth. The showrunner doesn't just will them into being. This is my point. Changing a makeup artist or a production designer is no different from changing an actor. It's thoughtless to assume the only personnel changes that count are the ones you can see in front of you. The people who aren't on camera are just as important as the actors are. They're creative, talented artists every bit as much as the actors are. When we're talking about Klingon makeups, we're not just talking about ridge patterns and head shapes. We're talking about the creativity and artistic style of Fred Phillips, Tom Burman & family, Michael Westmore, Richard Snell, Neville Page, and Glenn Hetrick.
I never once said anything bad about the artists. Even though I didn't like the design being for Klingons, I never once said it was a bad design, in fact I think it is a great design and they did an incredible job on the execution, I just would have preferred it be for somebody other than the Klingons.
There are plenty of ways a make up artist could find a way to make something there own without completely redesigning the whole thing. I thought the Kelvinverse Klingons were a great way to make some changes to the design, but still keep them recognizable as Klingons.
You're also ignoring the fact that it wasn't the artists' decision to change the Klingons design, it was Brian Fuller. And once we got past his presence and into Season 2 they changed them to look closer to what they used to look like, so they obviously had no problem going with the original design.
You wouldn't expect a recast actor to precisely duplicate the original actor's performance; obviously it's better for them to be themselves, to bring their own distinct style and talent to it. You don't want Roger Moore's James Bond to be an imitation of Sean Connery, you want him to make the role his own.
No, of course not, but they still usually bring enough familiar elements into their performance to be recognizable as that character, even if they still put their own twist on things.
By the same token, you wouldn't expect a new artist on a comic book to imitate their predecessor's style; on the contrary, the fact that each artist has a different individual style is part of the attraction of using different artists.
Yes, but they usually still stick to the same general design, and when they don't there's usually either a specific story reason, or it's an overall reboot.
There's no reason it should be any different for makeup designers or tech designers. What they do is art, creating something that doesn't exist to begin with and thus has no absolute "right" form. So they're completely entitled to bring their personal style and imagination to the work, and if you can't open your mind enough to appreciate their artistry, that is 100 percent your problem, not theirs.
I don't have problem with artists bring their own style to things, but when your coming into a preexisting franchise, there are certain elements you have to work with. I think it wouldn't quite as shocking to see the Klingons and everything around them so completely redesigned, if everything else had been as drastically changed, but most of the other familiar elements had been changed as drastically, but they weren't. The only thing that really came close was the Tellerites, but even that wasn't quite as jarring since they hadn't appeared anywhere near as many times as the Klingons, and almost every time they appeared they were changed.
How many times do I have to restate the obvious that the change from TOS to TMP was even more jarring to my generation? We survived it.
Of course, and I never meant to imply that those of us complaining about the weren't going to survive this change. Like I've said before, the design actually grew on my over time, and by the end of Season 1, I actually liked them. But I'm not going to deny that it was a massively jarring change, and I still would have preferred to see them stick to something closer to what we got before.