Last I checked, they were. Though I haven't watched the episode in some time because the Gorn can go the way of Q as far as I'm concerned.Wasn’t Spock and Uhura on the Enterprise when they encounter the Gorn in SNW?
Last I checked, they were. Though I haven't watched the episode in some time because the Gorn can go the way of Q as far as I'm concerned.Wasn’t Spock and Uhura on the Enterprise when they encounter the Gorn in SNW?
I think it's also testament to how much Star Trek has evolved:
As of now, it has a Lord-of-Rings-like lore with clearly defined races. This is akin to a Dwarf never having seen an Elf, it just doesn't vibe very well with how everything is presented now
Well, here's where they were early in season one. Interview with Memento Mori co-writer Davy Perez.Presumption.
“We discussed this quite a bit, how to honor the idea that people either haven't seen [the Gorn] and in some cases might not even believe they exist,” writer Davy Perez tells Inverse. “There is a lot we still don’t know about the Gorn. What was fun for me was using parts from ‘Arena’ we do know to inform some of their behavior.”
Perez points out that in “Arena,” Kirk is told by the Metrons that the creature he fights is a Gorn, which gave the writers “room to play” while making sure the moment for Kirk still made sense.
“Our goal is never to undo people’s experience with The Original Series,” Perez explains. “But if we can manage it, perhaps to give us an interesting perspective to consider that lines up with the original stories.”
This has nothing to do with what they look like. It has to do with the fact that the bridge crew found out that they were chasing a Gorn ship. Something that three of them were intimately (traumatically) familiar with. And Kirk should have been aware of Starfleet's (and the Enterprise's) history with them.The wholee issue can be easily solved if there is simply more than one kind of Gorn. A Chihuahua and a Great Dane are both the same species, yet they look incredibly different.
If I recall correctly, no one really reacted at all to the mention of "Gorn." NO one seemed to be shocked or intrigued at the word.This has nothing to do with what they look like. It has to do with the fact that the bridge crew found out that they were chasing a Gorn ship. Something that three of them were intimately (traumatically) familiar with. And Kirk should have been aware of Starfleet's (and the Enterprise's) history with them.
All of this was before Kirk ever laid eyes on the green rubber bugger. And no, I didn't expect Kirk to then say "THAT'S not what a Gorn looks like!"
If I recall correctly, no one really reacted at all to the mention of "Gorn." NO one seemed to be shocked or intrigued at the word.
Like they'd never heard it before.If I recall correctly, no one really reacted at all to the mention of "Gorn." NO one seemed to be shocked or intrigued at the word.
That's one possible interpretation. I'm not saying it all works perfectly, just that there is a little wiggle room to make it all work with just a little imagination and creative thinking.Like they'd never heard it before.
I'd rather they not be held back by something as minor as whether or not Uhura winced at the mention of the Gorn.
Oh, that was definitely the intent of the writers. Clearly, they were implying this was a first-time encounter. I just like that SNW found a little sliver of wiggle room to make it mostly work, in my opinion, that it wasn't actually a first encounter. Granted, that's just my take on things.There is more to it than that. I think the intent of the original writer was that this was a first encounter. At least everything in the episode seems to point to that being the case.
But then they miss out on that sweet, sweet TOS nostalgia.I mean, they could have called the new ones the Xorn and treated them as a Gorn-oid species, then you respect the original episode, still make a connection (since they seem to be obsessed with that) and not have anything contradictory working against it.
But then they miss out on that sweet, sweet TOS nostalgia.
I dunno. After being beaten over the head by TNG-DS9-VOY nostalgia, I kinda dig the callbacks to TOS. Probably why after TOS, Strange New Worlds and Enterprise are my favourite series. Gimme more TOS races and imagery!As big of a fan as I am of TOS, I’m simply tired of nostalgia for the sake of nostalgia.
Indeed. I never felt they never heard the word "Gorn" before. Only that Kirk didn't know what it looked like.That's one possible interpretation. I'm not saying it all works perfectly, just that there is a little wiggle room to make it all work with just a little imagination and creative thinking.
I'd rather they not be held back by something as minor as whether or not Uhura winced at the mention of the Gorn.
So, they decide to add on more to the lore rather than just create their own alien species never to be heard of again?Well, here's where they were early in season one. Interview with Memento Mori co-writer Davy Perez.
So, they decide to add on more to the lore rather than just create their own alien species never to be heard of again?
Because Trek is stuck in its "Glory Days" stage.If they create something memorable and meaningful, then why would they never be heard of again?
Did people think Arena was a first encounter?
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