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Do you like the Discovery Klingon look?

Do you like the discovery Klingon look?

  • Hate it

    Votes: 26 46.4%
  • Love it

    Votes: 18 32.1%
  • Couldn’t care less

    Votes: 12 21.4%

  • Total voters
    56
Required? Not always. But a show like Star Trek should always be moving forward and not get mired in the past.
Treks been over writing data points since day two. If it didn't work, it got dumped. The fans cherish the data points more than the creators ever did.

Indeed, a lot of online fans act as though ST episodes are supposed to be dramatizations of a Wikipedia entry rather than, y'know, works of art in their own right.
 
TOS establishes they didn't do a thing.
No it doesn’t. It only establishes that the few Klingons we see didn’t.
No it doesn't. It establishes that at some point in Klingon history the Augments were the majority in the Klingon military.
exactly. And not even that actually: only that the few Klingons we actually see were flatheads, but they’re not necessarily the majority anywhere.

Were they always just off camera?
perhaps.

DSC made a deliberate choice to ignore the smooth Klingons.
that’s clear.
 
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I still say there never needed to be any explanation for the Klingons looking different in TOS and 90s Trek. The make-up was updated. End of story.
The whole virus nonsense from ENT was terrible, as are (imo) the various explanations the novels put forward.

If anything needed an explanation it'd be the huge shift in culture from TOS to TNG. How did the Klingons shown in TOS become the space bikers from 90s Trek?
 
Required? Not always. But a show like Star Trek should always be moving forward and not get mired in the past.
Treks been over writing data points since day two. If it didn't work, it got dumped. The fans cherish the data points more than the creators ever did.
And yet they chose to not move forward and set it in the past. They didn't dump the established look in TNG, DS9, VOY, or ENT, when they went back to a previously shown ship or time.

If anything needed an explanation it'd be the huge shift in culture from TOS to TNG. How did the Klingons shown in TOS become the space bikers from 90s Trek?
Just look at our real world: Many cultures have drastically changed, even several times, just in the last 100 years
 
And yet they chose to not move forward and set it in the past. They didn't dump the established look in TNG, DS9, VOY, or ENT, when they went back to a previously shown ship or time.
Brief appearances are different than a full show being sold to non-fans. It's still art.
 
If anything needed an explanation it'd be the huge shift in culture from TOS to TNG. How did the Klingons shown in TOS become the space bikers from 90s Trek?
there wasn’t much shown about their culture in TOS, mostly that they were an expansionistic empire, an all-controlling dictatorship and that their ships were Spartan.

Also consider that on earth we’ve got a huge number of different cultures, each with a different approach to life, even without taking in consideration how much a culture can change in 100 years.
 
Just look at our real world: Many cultures have drastically changed, even several times, just in the last 100 years

Also consider that on earth we’ve got a huge number of different cultures, each with a different approach to life, even without taking in consideration how much a culture can change in 100 years.

I'm not saying they *can't* change. I'd just like to know *how* it happened.
Plus the "there might be many cultures" approach, in my opinion doesn't work very well in Star Trek, where most species, including the Klingons are very homogenous.
 
Plus the "there might be many cultures" approach, in my opinion doesn't work very well in Star Trek, where most species, including the Klingons are very homogenous.
This is probably Star Trek's greatest weakness and one that fans tend to perpetuate is the idea of homogenous cultures. I think the assumption that all Klingons, Romulans or even humans are all the same because of what is presented on screen is needlessly limited. "There might be many cultures" is the more reasonable idea, and allows for greater fan exploration outside the limits of a TV show which of course will be limited.
 
We do get
This is probably Star Trek's greatest weakness and one that fans tend to perpetuate is the idea of homogenous cultures. I think the assumption that all Klingons, Romulans or even humans are all the same because of what is presented on screen is needlessly limited. "There might be many cultures" is the more reasonable idea, and allows for greater fan exploration outside the limits of a TV show which of course will be limited.
We do get to see the old group who deviate from the norm but they are always purposely aligned against the standard culture like Romulan ninjas who always tell the truth cause all Romulans lie, ultra emotional Vulcans, hardcore non violent Klingons, very non slave/pirate Orion's so even then it's all about the dominant culture in it's set up
 
We do get to see the old group who deviate from the norm but they are always purposely aligned against the standard culture like Romulan ninjas who always tell the truth cause all Romulans lie, ultra emotional Vulcans, hardcore non violent Klingons, very non slave/pirate Orion's so even then it's all about the dominant culture in it's set up
Which is always appreciated and even Enterprise alluded to this with Antak's comments around the "warrior caste increasing in power" over the assumption that all Klingons are warriors. Again, Star Trek has limits in terms of what it can portray regarding cultures so expanding upon other ideas of cultures within the alien races presented is something that I find very natural. Humanity isn't monolithic at all so why should any of these aliens?
 
This is probably Star Trek's greatest weakness and one that fans tend to perpetuate is the idea of homogenous cultures. I think the assumption that all Klingons, Romulans or even humans are all the same because of what is presented on screen is needlessly limited. "There might be many cultures" is the more reasonable idea, and allows for greater fan exploration outside the limits of a TV show which of course will be limited.

I was just stating what the evidence from Canon suggests.
And it's particularly bad with the Klingons, because in 90s Trek we see so many Klingons and so much of their culture... and all is the same growly, "honour and glory" worm eating Space Viking stuff without any variation to it. And Enterprise just stereotyped them even more into that direction.
Yes it would be more realistic if the Klingons had many cultures, but suggesting that they exist, but just happen to be just off-screen each time we see the Klingons is like claiming that there's members of Klingon subject species in the a Klingon fleet, but they are just hiding of screen all the time.
Yes it can potentially lead to linteresting fanon, but there's not a shred of evidence for it on the shows, and the amount of Klingon stuff we have seen even contradicts such ideas to some extend.

Plus as TimeIsAPredator pointed out, Star Trek isn't even good at portraying human cultures other than American, so what chance do aliens have?
 
Yes it can potentially lead to tlinteresting fanon, but there's not a shred of evidence for it on the show, and the amount of Klingon stuff we have seen even contradicts such ideas to some extend.
To some, perhaps, but it also is something to explore and speculate upon. Limited evidence, but only based on the assumption that all encounters with the hero ships are the only possible interactions, which I find unlikely. Klingons have a caste system, and are an interstellar empire. It's unlikely we have seen all facets.
 
I still say there never needed to be any explanation for the Klingons looking different in TOS and 90s Trek. The make-up was updated. End of story.
The whole virus nonsense from ENT was terrible, as are (imo) the various explanations the novels put forward.

If anything needed an explanation it'd be the huge shift in culture from TOS to TNG. How did the Klingons shown in TOS become the space bikers from 90s Trek?

I don't remember anyone shitting bricks when ENT decided to redesign the Tellarites, Gorn, or Tholians.
 
I don't remember anyone shitting bricks when ENT decided to redesign the Tellarites, Gorn, or Tholians.

Exactly, no explanation was needed there either, so none was/is needed for the Klingons.

Though, did they really redesign the Tholians? All we had prior to Enterprise was a blurry head shot and the 3d-model from Enterprise looks similar enough imho.
 
Plus the "there might be many cultures" approach, in my opinion doesn't work very well in Star Trek, where most species, including the Klingons are very homogenous
Always found this extremely unrealistic and not favorable to the show.
Which is always appreciated and even Enterprise alluded to this with Antak's comments around the "warrior caste increasing in power" over the assumption that all Klingons are warriors.
Indeed, perhaps too little too late but at least a token step towards a more interesting direction.
I don't remember anyone shitting bricks when ENT decided to redesign the Tellarites, Gorn, or Tholians
well, they didn’t really redesign the tellarites that much, only updated on what was obviously a mask in tos. The gorn got A LOT of flack for how agile and CGI-looking it was, but it was in a otherwise great episode and mostly got a pass for that. They didn’t redesign the Tholians at all, as TOS didn’t show enough to be redesigned anyway.
 
And yet they chose to not move forward and set it in the past. They didn't dump the established look in TNG, DS9, VOY, or ENT, when they went back to a previously shown ship or time.
Forward doesn’t have to mean turning the page of a calendar. Forward in technology, ideas, design and format. No matter when in the fictional timeline a story takes places.

Trek fans are remarkably hidebound for a franchise that prides its self on being dedicated to progress and forward thinking.
 
Always found this extremely unrealistic and not favorable to the show.

So do I, but the universe presented in the shows is what it is.
Indeed, perhaps too little too late but at least a token step towards a more interesting direction.
Too little, too late AND too early in the timeline, in my opinion. That is still before the TOS Klingons which, to me at least, seemed more intellectual and balanced (and sneaky) than the warrrrrgh! Growl! 90s Trek Klingons.
A statement like that seems like it should come from the era of the TOS movies.
My personal pet theory was always that after the Khitomer Accords the Klingons got really uncomfortable about living in peace with the Federation, so they compensated by playing up the warrior aspect of their culture, slipping into something of a cultural regression as they revived rituals and practises from more primitive periods in their history.
Like for example a TOS era Klingon might have looked at Gagh the way many modern, city dwelling people in the west look at tripe. But in that cultural regression it gained new popularity and a high status as the "food of our awesome, war-like ancestors" and things like that.
Though that is, of course, just my fanon.
 
I think fan interpretation is fine because it shows engagement. We're to imagine these are cultures not monoliths.
 
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