Was my thoughts in the theater when I watch and enjoyed it.You know, I thought that very reason years ago when I was trying to make sense of that mess of a movie. My inner brain feels somewhat vindicated.
Thank you for that.
Was my thoughts in the theater when I watch and enjoyed it.You know, I thought that very reason years ago when I was trying to make sense of that mess of a movie. My inner brain feels somewhat vindicated.
Thank you for that.
It's a sliding scale, nothing characters at one end and Khan Noonien Singh at the other.Yup. This idea that all characters are equal is a nonstarter.
Welcome to the confusing world of fandom. Things are not important until they absolutely are.It's a sliding scale, nothing characters at one end and Khan Noonien Singh at the other.
Still don't get why fans can accept a million totally different Jokers but that there must only be One True Khan. It's a movie, ffs.
why not, given the right conditions? We’re talking about a universe where literal USA and URRS developed on another world independently, down to flags and wordings in declarations.Would 'asian' (so to speak) Vulcans also exist?
Another story I got was to avoid shaving the guest actors’ eyebrows.AFAIK, they only did that because they didn't trust TNG viewers to tell Romulans from Vulcans.
he was the transporter operator in a bunch of TOS episodes and had a cameo appearance on the reliant. The only memorable moment with him I can think of is when his mirror alter ego is punished by mirror Spock.I have no freaking idea who the hell "Lt.Kyle" is even supposed to
In fact, she is actually half Vulcan, half Romulan, as per dialogue in Picard episode 1x8.I just remembered commander Oh. Ok, she's Romulan in fact
Is this the movie where The Joker looks like a punk rocker with bad makeup?
As for Sherlock Holmes, he's been pretty beaten up in trecent years, hasn't he. I remember some crap series recently when he was an ordinary guy in the 2020's or 2010's USA.
I think it's very messed upp with all those timelines and with even more contradictions than before.
Well, as for Discovery I did quit that one because I didn't like the storytelling,
As for Picard, I tried as long as I could to find positive things in it, I really wanted to like it since it was exactly what I've been waiting for, a series in the 24th century with some old favorite characters involved. But in the long run, I found it just like a weak excho of what TNG had been.
I started to miss episodes and when one of my local channel stopped airing it, I just didn't bother to pay a streaming service to continue watching. I have to spend my money on more important things, like constantly having to replace the DS9 DVD:s of lousy quality which Paramount petrster us with and which starts to malfunction after three or four viweings.
In my personal opinion and way of descibing things, something I do like is "good" and something I don't like is "bad".
I know and I'm not atking it seriously. But it would be nice with a 24th century series with more accurate animation and depth.
Sorry, but I find it only destrictive for the sake of destruction.
I can understand the lack of continuity in TOS. After all, it was the beginning of the series and continuity wasn't the most common thing back in those days. But they should habve learned something since then, shouldn't they?
However, I must admit that I'm guilty to such an error myself.
yes, but those variations often has to do with which environment their into.
As for the TNG uniforms, I'm referring to the season 1-2 uniforms.
I haven't been able to watch Strange New Worlds yet but I will do that. Maybe something I would like!![]()
But there we are! Producers, ego or not who ruin something just for having a dramatic effect instead of coming up with good well-thought stories.
I mean, everyone with some interest in Star Trek knows that Klingons used to be enemies to the Federation and rather mean enemies too, something which changed later on. It's not necessary to turn them into monsters just for some effect.
Not to mention that the Klingons did look different in TOS, rthen their appearance was changed and it took a lot of explanations to justify that. Then the Turtles show up. Talk about character destruction! Not only that but stupidity as well.
If those producers are so clever and if they want effects, why don't they simply come up with a show set in the 24th century with the Turtles as new enemies from the Gamma Quadrant, Andromeda Galaxy and whatsoever instead of this constant destruction and messinfg up of the TOS era.
Well first of all, I'm happy that Vulcan still exists in the Prime Timeline.
But:What we have here is outrageous!
They have managed to ruin two interesting, fascinating Star Trek species into some half-a**ed crap.
It reminds me of a merger between two great sports clubs not so far from where I live, erasing decades of history and culture to become something artificial without culture. No wonder that the supporters abandoned the whole project and in the long run at least one of the clubs was reconstructed.
Or when some of the members from two rock bands I really liked got together and created a new band which never could come up to the magic the two former bands had. No surprise that it didn't last either.
But Cardassia was never destroyed in the same way as Vulcan and Romulus have been. Cardassia still exists and is rebuilding,
Sci said:Nah. It's fine. If there's no reason a character needs to be white, then there's no reason to keep them white.
Also, again, Kyle is not a character so much as he is a cardboard cutout.
That's all well and good, but I would invite you to consider the impact of real-world power dynamics on the question of when it is appropriate to reconceptualize a character's race.
I won't go into politics here but I find it as unacceptable to replace Sisko or Tuvok with a white or Asian guy as it is to replace Kyle or some other white character with a black or Asian guy.
I've been a ST fan--in ultra-diverse California--since the 70s and no one in or out of the ST fan social groups (filled with people from the four corners of the world) ever complained about Montalbán being cast as Khan.
Just the opposite--he was one of the most celebrated guest stars in the franchise's history. The reason is that he was the actor responsible for infusing Khan with a very unique magnetism / threatening presence that was all Montalbán; the script did not bring all of that to the character, so there was no template any actor would be able to use to deliver a great character in the manner seen.
Montalbán was not Sikh, but one must also remember that Khan's race was not written as a relevant, defining element which shaped who he was and how he responded to the world around him.
Again, a creative writer would create a new character, rather than screw up an established character just to trade on ST fandom's memory of a noble and sympathetic Cochrane from "Metamorphosis".
He was merely identifying the surviving members of Khan's party; it was not a line indicating any sort of questioning about / surprise at the racial make-up of the party.
I don't see it quite that drastically. To me, there are only three distinct Klingons: the TOS versions, the TMP versions (and everything beyond that from STIII to ENT were just extrapolations from that starting point), and the DSC versions.
I'm actually liking the idea that the reason the DSC Klingons look so weird is because that's how Burnham sees them - the monsters who murdered her family.
Neither Zachary Quinto nor Ethan Peck are Ashkenazi Jewish - was it a mistake to cast them as Spock?
I don't like remakes. 9 out of 10 are downright horrible.
I started to watch VOY by mere accident in the beginning of 1998 and I must admit that I did have some inttial doubts about Tuvok, not because the actor was black but because we'd never seen a Vulcan with dark skin before.
Of course, the existence of several 'races' (probably the wrong word) in other sentient species isn't surprising. What would be surprising there would be the same types of 'races' in other species. Would 'asian' (so to speak) Vulcans also exist?
IDK whether I'd go so far as calling a blond Spock "aryianized" I mean there are Ashkenazi Jewish people who have naturally blond hair and Shatner's also Jewish and Kirk was played by blond, blue-eyed actor Chris Pine in the Kelvin Timeline. Also neither character was identified as Jewish in-universe, so it wouldn't be the same as re-casting Uhura with a white actress.
The bigger reason I'd say why Spock won't be re-cast with blond hair is because he's a hugely established character who had always been at the forefront of the franchise, which Robert April and Lt.Kyle are not.
Spock's a character people who is known by people who haven't even seen Star Trek and that includes his general appearance.
Making Spock randomly blond would be like Rings of Power having a black haired actress play Galadriel.
Robert April and Lt.Kyle on the other hand? I'm into Star Trek and I only vaguely know that April was the first captain of the TOS enterprise in the lore and I have no freaking idea who the hell "Lt.Kyle" is even supposed to be.
Nope, the TMP versions are different from the TSFS/TVH/TFF/TUC/TNG/DS9/VOY/ENT versions. They all only have a single boney ridge down the center of their foreheads -- totally different design from the numerous intricate bumps later Klingons have.
Sci said:Nope, the TMP versions are different from the TSFS/TVH/TFF/TUC/TNG/DS9/VOY/ENT versions. They all only have a single boney ridge down the center of their foreheads -- totally different design from the numerous intricate bumps later Klingons have.
That's an extremely minimal defining characteristic.
Especially considering that TSFS onward showed that Klingon brow ridges are rarely similar between individual Klingons, unless they are related.
For all we know, the bridge crew of the IKS Amar were all family members.
So are pointy ears! But every single Klingon in TMP had the exact same extremely specific makeup design of a single ridge down the forehead. There was absolutely no diversity in makeup design.
Yes, that is the way the Klingon makeup design changed after TMP.
Sure, if you want an in-universe rationalization for the differences between the Klingon makeup design in TMP vs. TSFS. But the makeup design is not the same. So Klingon makeup designs have changed at least three times: From TOS to TMP, from TMP to TSFS/TNG, and from TSFS/TNG to DIS.
You're welcome to think how you want. I see little difference in the Klingons from TMP to ENT.
It's not a matter of subjective evaluation. The makeup design changed. In TMP, all Klingons had a single boney ridge down the center of their foreheads; from TSFS to ENT, all Klingons had intricate bumps throughout their entire foreheads.
It's fair to say that you don't think the change is large enough to care about, but the change is objectively there.
Dude, I don't fucking care about makeup differences.
But you clearly do. You care about some makeup differences but not others.
I've run into plenty of people complaining about the idea of casting a Mexican actor of European heritage to play a character identified in dialogue as being Sikh, who is identified as having ruled in India, and who has a Sikh name.
I agree that Montalbán's performance was amazing! I also think that either the character should have been reconceptualized to match Montalbán's heritage once he was cast, or that a Mexican actor of European heritage should not have been cast to play a character of Sikh heritage.
Nope. It needed to be Cochrane, because it needed to be about a character the TNG stars had already been depicted as being familiar with from their history turning out to be different than their history had taught them. Cochrane had already been established as the guy who invented warp and as being venerated for it, and TNG had already established that inventing warp was when First Contact usually happens. Their plot mechanics required it to be Cochrane. And! Making it Cochrane added depth to what had been a very two-dimensional character in "Metamorphosis."
But... who the hell identifies groups of people like that?
No, but I also think the question is a bit more complicated with Spock. Spock isn't textually Ashkenazi Jewish, but he's clearly coded as such --
they even use the Jewish Kohanim priestly blessing as the Vulcan salute.
Re Yeoman Colt:They did?
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