I don't know how a raבe can have several genders
I don't know how a rae can have several genders...
What kind of more alien threat could the Jaridians have been? You can't have your series villain be a black hole or a force of nature or evolutionary stagnation. You do need someone to shoot a gun at eventually. This is television![]()
I do agree the initial portrayal of the Jardians were as dumb warrior Klingons. But in the fourth season they did manage to make them more multi-faceted and sympathetic. My memory is feint but Lili goes and joins the Jaridians and falls in love with one and I think they even did an episode or two from their perspective.
If you don't understand how to create an alien threat more genuinely exotic than the Jaridians, then I emphatically recommend you read more prose science fiction. There have been some fantastically imaginative efforts at creating bizarre, mysterious, inhuman alien intelligences in literature.
If you don't understand how to create an alien threat more genuinely exotic than the Jaridians, then I emphatically recommend you read more prose science fiction. There have been some fantastically imaginative efforts at creating bizarre, mysterious, inhuman alien intelligences in literature.
Any specific instances of particularly well done inhuman alien intelligences that you would recommend?
I'm trying to remember, but wasn't the entire point of the series, even back in the first episodes, that the Taelons (and the Jaridians) needed humanity to survive? Doesn't that suggest some inherent common denominator?
Well, the Jaridians were not named until season 2, and retroactively making the Amish probe one of theirs stinks of retcon.
Zo'or didn't really get evil until the third season. He was first played as opportunistic and a bit of a dick, but he didn't do anything that was outright eeeevil. By season three, he was a mustache-twirling villain.
I exaggerate, but from the beginning, Zo'or came across as a more overtly antagonistic and unfriendly character, and simply a more humanlike character. I just didn't find him as intriguingly alien as Da'an because he didn't have the same ambiguities and exotic presence. Zo'or's introduction was the beginning of the erosion of the Taelons from something wildly imaginative and unprecedented on television to something more conventional and uninspired.
It is random. Gertz did commentary for "Decision", "Infection", and "The Joining" (which, unfortunately [but not surprisingly], shies away from mentioning the reasoning behind replacing Boone). However, in other episodes with Rod Roddenberry, Von Flores, and Lisa Howard doing commentary, they reference Gertz as head writer. Again, they don't get into specifics. Without going through each of the commentary episodes, I can't say exactly how it was said.Well, when were those episodes? My understanding is that Gertz was the head writer for the back half of the first season, replacing Okie.You could be right. I really don't know either. On the audio commentary for a couple of the first season episodes, Gertz was referred to as the head writer multiple times. Now, it could be because he eventually did become that in the second season, but I would figure they would specify at least once (especially since Gertz was doing some of the commentaries himself).
Oh, I didn't mean to suggest that the original arc was literally going to feature the Jaridians. I mean that the Taelons had an enemy out there that they were somehow related to. Given the Taelon myth introduced in "Avatar" with the two quarreling brothers, and later developments in the story arc of the show suggest this might have come into play more (not to mention the mysterious sleepers, who the Taelons are afraid of).I've always gotten the sense that the original idea for the mysterious threat the Taelons were awaiting was going to be something far less conventional than the Jaridians, who might as well have been Klingons, just one more warlike humanoid race with latex on their faces. There was a first-season episode where some hints about the mysterious threat began to emerge, and I recall Da'an saying that it was something that humans weren't yet ready to comprehend. No way is that compatible with something as dull as the Jaridians.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.