Also, makeup tests for The Cage back in the mid 60s had her look pretty alien.Define "now". DC Fontana established that Number One was Illyrian in 1989.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/birdofthegalaxy/4235980676
Also, makeup tests for The Cage back in the mid 60s had her look pretty alien.Define "now". DC Fontana established that Number One was Illyrian in 1989.
Why couldn't it have been both?Kirk's exact words in the episode were "a product of controlled genetics," which can easily mean either. Selective breeding or gene manipulation. So it still covers all the bases.
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58 years from pilot to series, and the wait was worth it. Strange New Worlds is doing well with the audience and even better with critics. It's old and familiar with a lot that's fresh and new. A new look, a fresh new take on familiar characters and a popular lead. And what about Captain Pike anyway? He's a man who knows that he'll end up without the use of his body and in a chair. And it's all being done with a good dose of sci fi. Trek has always been socially relevant and this is another big issue that we'll get to see play out, so this show goes out to all those in a similar situation.
For now though, we'll be moving on to another character that's taken on a mysterious quality. The infamous Number One. Who is she? She now has a name, but what's the deal with her? If sightings are to be believed, she's been on 20th-century earth with Gary Seven and she's Robin Lefler's mother. Or maybe that's all hearsay and we'll get something closer to the truth with this episode.
Light it up!
"The U.S.S. Enterprise encounters a contagion that ravages the ship. One by one, the entire crew is incapacitated except for Number One, Una Chin-Riley, who must now confront a secret she’s been hiding as she races to find a cure." - TrekMovie.com
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58 years from pilot to series, and the wait was worth it. Strange New Worlds is doing well with the audience and even better with critics. It's old and familiar with a lot that's fresh and new. A new look, a fresh new take on familiar characters and a popular lead. And what about Captain Pike anyway? He's a man who knows that he'll end up without the use of his body and in a chair. And it's all being done with a good dose of sci fi. Trek has always been socially relevant and this is another big issue that we'll get to see play out, so this show goes out to all those in a similar situation.
For now though, we'll be moving on to another character that's taken on a mysterious quality. The infamous Number One. Who is she? She now has a name, but what's the deal with her? If sightings are to be believed, she's been on 20th-century earth with Gary Seven and she's Robin Lefler's mother. Or maybe that's all hearsay and we'll get something closer to the truth with this episode.
Light it up!
"The U.S.S. Enterprise encounters a contagion that ravages the ship. One by one, the entire crew is incapacitated except for Number One, Una Chin-Riley, who must now confront a secret she’s been hiding as she races to find a cure." - TrekMovie.com
I admit I am coming into this discussion without having read all of the prior 14 pages, but if the point of contention is that Una doesn't look like the Illyrians from Enterprise, we actually see an Enterprise-style, forehead-ridged Illyrian in the "Override, override!" scene where Una looks at a roster of genetic modifications. Seems clear they're the same species.
So, I guess that communicates Una is intended to be an alien, not from a human colony that goes by the name Illyrian.
Did anyone else tense up at M'Benga's bedtime story at the end, where he's talking about a dark object that has the power to conquer the whole storybook land, or whatever?
Felt like foreshadowing for a Discovery-style "all sentient life in the universe" threat! I swear I have PTSD from the relentlessly absurd stakes on the other live action shows. Don't start alluding to big looming galaxy-ending threats in your third episode, SNW! I had such a strong "YOU PROMISED ME EPISODIC! EPISODIC!!!!!" reaction.![]()
Well of course, other time travel events in Trek, such as in First Contact, have also made their mark, but Nero's change, specifically, didn't affect the past of where he ended up in the timeline. I don't see how it could be retroactive, so I'd like you to explain. I mean, the changes made in the past stay there. Otherwise ANY change would create a time loop or paradox. Avengers Endgame kind of made a lot of sense in that respect.
The idea that selective breeding would result in superhuman abilities by less than 30 years after the show began was ludicrous. I also note that in that TOS episode the Eugenics War and WW3 were one and the same.
Graduate student? Doctoral candidate? Research fellow? Just because?Liked that Chapel uses those degrees and PhD finally to solve the problem. I assume she has a PhD. Why else would Korby employ her?
I dunno. I'm not entirely convinced that the Illyrians from ENT...
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... have similar-enough cranial ridges to the Illyrian kid seen in the Starfleet database image in SNW...
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... to assume that they must be the same species.
They could be the same species. I think that's a valid interpretation. But I think the evidence is inconclusive and it's just as legitimate to interpret them as separate species with similar names.
Personally, I think the ENT Illyrians are a separate species with a similar name, and that the SNW Illyrians are a nation of Human Augments who emigrated from Earth some time between First Contact and the launch of the NX-01.
I speculate this for a couple of reasons:
1) It makes it easier to believe that Una could pass a genetic scan as Human if Illyrians are just modified Humans.
2) It's more interesting to me if Illyrians are Humans with a profoundly different culture than Humans in the UFP/U.E.
3) La'an calls Una an "Augment," which doesn't make any sense outside of the context of Human history with genetic engineering.
4) There is a potential inconsistency if the SNW Illyrians are aliens. We know from ENT S4 that Denobulans routinely use genetic engineering, yet there is no indication whatsoever that Earthers, Vulcans, Andorians, or Tellarites have any prejudices against Denobulans for that. So why would those same cultures have such a profound prejudice against Illyrians but not Denobulans? It makes more sense that there would be a sense of anger and betrayal and resentment if the Illyrians were Humans who rejected Earth's anti-genetic engineering values.
Edited to add: Admittedly the weakness in my interpretation that they're separate species is the presence of what looks like fictitious alien script on the okudagram, but I weigh the reasons I listed higher than that. End edit.
I mean, if SNW is using the Doctor Who-style season structure, what will probably happen is that semi-serialized recurring background elements/B-plots will come together and comprise the A-plot of the season finale. So for instance, Doctor Who season 2 had a bunch of episodic, standalone stories where a mysterious organization called "Torchwood" operated in the background until suddenly we saw Torchwood driving the A-plot of the last two episodes of the season. Whedon and co. used a similar structure on Buffy the Vampire Slayer -- for example, the Mayor is a recurring B-plot antagonist in a bunch of episodic stories at the start of S3, but he gradually takes over and then becomes the A-plot antagonist by the last two episodes of the season.
If SNW follows that pattern, then its episodes will stay episodic, but a recurring background element will take over in 1x09/1x10.
They began as the same species, but they engineered themselves to survive on different planets. Not sure where cranial ridges fit into all that. Maybe an after effect of changes to internal systems like sinuses?
No need, but I appreciate it.I apologize to @Belz...
Excited to see M'Benga's arc continue. Perhaps he leaves Enterprise briefly to save his daughter and we see a glimpse of Boyce, who knows.
Was that Number One test makeup or Orion Girl test makeup?Also, makeup tests for The Cage back in the mid 60s had her look pretty alien.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/birdofthegalaxy/4235980676
So, Number One is an Illyrian now? Please, no more retcons!
The former. Maybe before they settled on Spock's own makeup, since there are similarities.Was that Number One test makeup or Orion Girl test makeup?
I think that test was for the Orions. The source in the infamous color correction incident.Also, makeup tests for The Cage back in the mid 60s had her look pretty alien.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/birdofthegalaxy/4235980676
He wanted to get into her pants?Graduate student? Doctoral candidate? Research fellow? Just because?
That's not what the description there says. birdofthegalaxy says there:The former. Maybe before they settled on Spock's own makeup, since there are similarities.
You always manage to use fewer words.I think that test was for the Orions. The source in the infamous color correction incident.
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