Meh, I'll take David Gerrold over After Trek when it comes to Trouble with Tribbles.Honestly, since when has "word of God" mattered in this discussion?
Meh, I'll take David Gerrold over After Trek when it comes to Trouble with Tribbles.Honestly, since when has "word of God" mattered in this discussion?
And I'll take DISCO's production staff comments on whether or not this is "Prime" over the Internet's. This sword cuts both ways.Meh, I'll take David Gerrold over After Trek when it comes to Trouble with Tribbles.
Despite them being wrong?And I'll take DISCO's production staff comments on whether or not this is "Prime"
Despite them being wrong?
So, "word of God" and authorial intent are only right if we agree with them? That's not how this works.Despite them being wrong?
Yes.So, "word of God" and authorial intent are only right if we agree with them?
It is now, thanks to my retcon.That's not how this works.
Apparently cheap, lazy and "Walmart" have a different meaning depending on the fan. And the Vulcans are just fine as-is along with the Orions. Even DSC's producers didn't touch their physical appearances and if even these spastic change fetishists think that the original designs are fine then they're fine just the way they are.
I doubt elongated skulls, glowing eyes or a prehensile tail that shoots light rays are going to make a Trek species more "believable" as aliens.
Not really. The Klingons are the only ones who undergo drastic changes in the franchise. The only other notable changes are the Romulans getting forehead ridges in Berman productions and the Borg getting a more detailed look in First Contact.But trek often remakes Aliens, otten 4 or 5 times.
"Just lazy"? The whole raison d'etre of the Augment storyline was to explain the canonical differences between TOS and TNG-era Klingons! Without those differences, the story is pointless. I seriously don't understand your thinking here.There are many ways they could do them without making them look human, which is IMO just lazy.
Exactly! This!Why? That was the whole point of the old explanations for why the TOS Klingons looked the way they did, so as to more closely resemble humans and other Federation member species and infiltrate their territory. ... If the whole point is that at least some of them are supposed to look more human in this timeframe how is that a bad thing? ... Does a human actor with facial hair and a gruff personality make some fans lose sleep at night? Not every alien species has to look like it comes from a Ridley Scott or James Cameron film. Besides, I thought the whole point was the storytelling? If visuals and aesthetic canon don't matter why does a Klingon HAVE to look more "alien"?
You know, it's really starting to get annoying the way you keep repeatedly taking gratuitous cheap shots at TOS, its creators, its fans, and pretty much anything and anyone that treats it respectfully. We've gone around in circles on all of these points before. Give it a rest, already.In the 60's Klingons were humans with racist brown face... [The Augment story] was lazy, stupid, and based off a joke. That is why. Trek gets mocked , rightly so, for its lazy alien design. ... I do not think you will be seeing the make up regress to lazy and cheap.
Thank god it wasn't you in charge.They should have did more with the Orions and honestly If it were me, I would modify the Vulans and leave Spock as is as he is half breed.
Why? Seriously, why should anyone who enjoys Trek give a flying fuck about the opinions of people who are so jejune as to "mock" it, much less let their own tastes be influenced by that mockery?You need to get outside the trek boards and see just what other sci-fi fans mock trek over...
And before anyone starts posting all the different variations we've had on Andorians, Tellarites and Caitians, the majority of which were background characters, and besides, those changes weren't really drastic. They were usually variations on the original look. Except for the Disco Tellarites.
"Just lazy"? The whole raison d'etre of the Augment storyline was to explain the canonical differences between TOS and TNG-era Klingons! Without those differences, the story is pointless. I seriously don't understand your thinking here.
You know, it's really starting to get annoying the way you keep repeatedly taking gratuitous cheap shots at TOS, its creators, its fans, and pretty much anything and anyone that treats it respectfully. We've gone around in circles on all of these points before. Give it a rest, already.
Honestly, I'm rather thankful that no fan is in charge.Thank god it wasn't you in charge.
Because this is supposed to be a free exchange of ideas, not accusing individuals of mockery for not liking the same things. It is ridiculous, on its face, to insist that just because someone doesn't like an aspect of Star Trek, such as how TOS looks in a contemporary world. Guess what? My wife enjoys DS9, Kelvin Trek and others, but cannot sit through TOS or the TOS films. Is she mocking them? No, she just notes the difference in production values.Why? Seriously, why should anyone who enjoys Trek give a flying fuck about the opinions of people who are so jejune as to "mock" it, much less let their own tastes be influenced by that mockery?
Speaking of Orions, I'm 93.586% positive that those featured in the season finale were in fact, not painted in green makeup, but altered in post production to look green.
Has anyone else noticed this? Are there any BTS photos out there? I haven't seen it mentioned.
Just saying man, there is nothing wrong with updating the look. They did with klingons and a dozen other races, silly retcon aside.
Just saying man, there is nothing wrong with updating the look. They did with klingons and a dozen other races, silly retcon aside.
No, but there's also nothing wrong with leaving some of the alien looks alone or just tweaking them around the edges. Few people demand no changes whatsoever to the franchise and those are justifiably regarded as the reactionary fans they are, but those who think we need to change just about everything because of a recent trend in what audiences seem to like are just pandering for the sake of being considered hip and cool.
And too much pandering and change for change's sake can ruin a product's reputation and drive away longtime customers.
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