I'm hoping for flat foreheads in something akin to the original Klingon uniforms (I got to see one of the TOS Klingon costumes up close at the Intrepid this summer, and it looked very cool), but I'll settle for a mix.
If it was an unexplained or even only partially explained (no further than Worf's explanation in Trials and Tribbs) then I would agree they would ignore the flathead. But now the flatheads are deeply ingrained in canonical story, and not just any story but the one about Khan's people.
This is where I differ in opinion on the soft reboot. I don't believe they'll throw out the events of a major 3-part Trek story or any story from any of the series.
To me the nuTrek Klingons were just undeveloped background characters. I didn't see the design as that different, just a variation on the 1979 TMP look like all the rest.They'll ignore anything that's inconvenient. Fuller has indicated that they're rethinking the look of whole Trek species in significant ways - they're not going to sweat continuity details from over a decade ago that were only part of a series watched by fewer than two million people at the time.
The new Klingons may be as different as the Klingons in the nuTrek movies.
I'm hoping for flat foreheads in something akin to the original Klingon uniforms (I got to see one of the TOS Klingon costumes up close at the Intrepid this summer, and it looked very cool), but I'll settle for a mix.
I always liked the idea in the Chris Claremont/Adam Hughes graphic novel Debt of Honor that the smooth-headed Klingons were discommoded by the movie era. Perhaps something like that happened to the bumpy-headed Klingons at the time of TOS and STD.I really like the idea of a mix and one half subjugating the other. And yes, they would dress different. The flatheads would be refined, style-concious half but still rude compared to humans, while the bumpies are having trouble keeping food in their mouths.
Could they ignore the flatheads completely? Of course, they can do anything that they want. I haven't heard an argument of why they should want to or why it would be better to have one or the other type of Klingon
In this case, I'm saying ignoring bigger events in continuity could be more of a headache than dealing with them.
Having said all that, does anyone have any thoughts on how they think the Klingons will be handled? Supporting characters instead of outright antagonists like on TNG or back to the animosity of TOS era? Smarter like the movies or more barbaric like TNG?
For those who read the novels, it turned out that not all Klingons were afflicted with the virus from Enterprise. So, we had both smooth and bumpy Klingons. The smooth-headed ones were considered outcasts and paria. COuld work here as well.
What's canon is that first contact was in 2151 according to Broken Bow.
Enterprise later explained the lack of ridges in TOS era Klingons too.
Depends how you interpret canon, in my view the events in enterprise never existed and the new show runners would be wise to flush all that rubbish out of the nearest airlock.
Even if the absurd augment disease with its convenient 100 year time limit had really happened, then it would not be believable that Bashir wouldn't have known at least part of the reason they had no ridges, since it would be contained in medical records that he would have studied.
If the new show runners decide to ignore the enterprise revisionism, then they could come up with a much more imaginative (and believable) alternative reason if they do decide to address the question.
That's not really up for interpretation. Enterprise is and always will be canon. Unless someone in a position of power decides that it isn't, which is unlikely. I may hate that Voyager episode where they go warp 10 and turn into newts, but I don't have the power to declare that it isn't canon.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.