True.Although I don't want to see a Gorn show up pre-Cetus III, I did like the more retro-Gorn in Lorca's menagerie. Nice!
True.Although I don't want to see a Gorn show up pre-Cetus III, I did like the more retro-Gorn in Lorca's menagerie. Nice!
I did a quick Gimp cut and paste mash up and yeah, the yellow eyes do add to the lizard rather than rodent quality.The Saurian looks great. I wish they had kept the original style eyes though, black shiny eyes are very 'generically alien'.
If you look the differences between the TOS Klingons and the TMP Klingons the Saurian make ups are practically the same.![]()
The Saurian is an advancement. Looks a lot better and more realistic did that dumb rubber face from TMP
LMAO, are you serious?don't get how G'Kar looked more lifelike 25 years ago than some of the stuff coming out of Trek today.
Sure. Look at the subtle life-like wrinkles and asymmetries of both the latex and the paint job. Saru can look too unnaturally perfect and too plasticky, in the mouth especially. Plus the high-def cameras/televisions now capture the fake-ness of the latex and contact lenses, so they really should shoot him a bit further away or under better lighting or slap some filters on him, at times. I love him, but I'm often wishing they shot him better, or they used more gelatinous masks that look closer to the way real skin absorbs light, for example.LMAO, are you serious?
we see the Rigellian in ENT
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That's the other Rigellian. A bit like the northern and southern Trill .
I thought it was just a redesign
Rigelians look like this
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That's a TOS Rigellian. We're supposed to imagine that he was a saber-toothed turtle all along.
Mr. Hengist is from Rigel IV. Lots of people are. It's not a crime.
Canonically, we know the Rigel system includes more than one inhabited planet. Therefore, it is perfectly reasonable that it would be home (whether indigenous or adopted) to multiple species called Rigel(l)ians.One could imagine that he wasn't born there, but moved there at some point in his life and stayed long enough to be considered "from there".
Incompatible how exactly? Have we been given any indication she is an artificial intelligence of any sort, let alone one that cannot be distinguished in any meaningful way from Soong's unique creations? I thought she was supposed to be a biological humanoid with synthetic augmentations, from what's been said behind the scenes.Airiam's existence being somewhat incompatible with Data immediately makes her more interesting. I'm sure they'll give us more info on her in S2.
I think you're thinking of David Gautreaux, who was originally to have played the Vulcan character Xon in Phase II and ended up playing Epsilon IX's Commander Branch in the film.That actor/character was originally going to be a new recurring character in the Phase-II TV show.
But got bumped to practically a background character when production switched to the movie.
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They seem like the type who just might have had some...work done, no? Full-body electrolysis (a.k.a. the Caitian "bikini wax"), nosejobs, and ears bobbed? Nothing that would trouble cosmetic surgery of the period in the least. Or perhaps these twin litter-mates that Kirk picked up after their modeling gig simply happen to be half (or even three-quarters) human? Or their lineage included some ancestors of a Sphynx-like breed? In any case, if Caitians were to reappear, I'd assume they wouldn't look like that, but rather would be tweaked and updated yet again, quite probably with more recognizably feline features.Except modern Caitians look like this:
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It's originally from the TAS writer's bible, which included a star map depicting Cait's location in the constellation of Lynx. (Thanks to @Therin of Andor for relaying that info here.)According to Memory-Alpha, the name 'Caitian' first appeared in merchandising. It was in a M'Ress biography published by 'Lincoln Enterprises'
Except the examples I used have come from people who worked on the show.
No one who worked on the show said Spock was the first.
I'm not sure where the "Spock's the first Vulcan" thing came from originally, but I could totally see it being background info made up for the first season that never made it on-screen. It would sure explain how McCoy reacted to "that green stuff in Spock's veins". Or it was just McCoy being douchy to Spock, but I always read it as meaning that McCoy had no idea about Vulcan physiology which would make more sense if Spock was the first to ever join Starfleet.
Besides the general treatment of Spock as something of an exotic novelty as mentioned by others, I'd wager that many of those who drew such an implication might have drawn it from "Journey To Babel" (TOS):Nothing in TOS implies Spock was the first Vulcan to join Starfleet; it is really a strange notion with no basis.
Kirk being the youngest captain is another such fanon thingy.
As someone else already pointed out, she wasn't said to be the youngest captain ever per se; rather, it was said that she made captain the fastest. But in any case, even if she were the youngest ever from the standpoint of 2364, this would in no way preclude Kirk from having been the youngest ever from that of a century earlier.Actually Tryla Scott was the youngest person to become captain. I didn't even know their was a theory of him being the youngest. I think he in canon gets his first command age tthe age of 30 but not sure.
Upperclassman yes, teacher no. You might be conflating him with Ben Finney from "Court Martial" (TOS), who was an instructor and Kirk's friend during the same period, with whom Kirk would some years later serve as an ensign aboard the Republic (and eventually also on the Enterprise). Later, as a Lieutentant, Kirk too was himself an instructor at the Academy, which seems to be when he developed a similar friendship with his own student Gary Mitchell from "Where No Man Has Gone Before" (TOS), although the two do seem to have had some prior acquaintance dating back to this time.Wasn't he [Finnegan] supposed to be an upper-classman teacher at that point?
If so, they'd better be careful, because it's outdated and clearly off on at least a few points. Dating of TOS-TMP is a particular issue, for example. Astounding and frustrating that even the most recent edition of the Encyclopedia fails to rectify it after all this time (or so I've been told).I imagine they are likely using the calendar from the Okuda Chronology.
Where are you getting that from? I see no reason to think they have any intention of committing to the tact that this is what the TOS Enterprise "always" looked like. Indeed the opposite; they elected to explicitly remind us onscreen that ships undergo refits in "Despite Yourself" (DSC), and behind the scenes specifically rationalized why the Defiant's configuration would differ from her previous appearance in ENT, and in overhauling the Enterprise gave at least passing thought as to how it might physically change over time into the original series version. So at a minimum, they're hedging on that one.No it doesn't. Well maybe it could, but at this moment it's a visual retcon.
Here you go, from Susan Sackett & Gene Roddenberry's The Making of Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1980):I could never make heads or tails of the color schemes of the TMP uniforms.
I think you're thinking of David Gautreaux, who was originally to have played the Vulcan character Xon in Phase II and ended up playing Epsilon IX's Commander Branch in the film.
Thank you for the reference. But, there is little intuitive about it from watching the film. A similar complaint could be levied against the Monster Maroons as the insignia is very difficult to read.Here you go, from Susan Sackett & Gene Roddenberry's The Making of Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1980):
Here's another thing about the colors. While the uniform color may indicate a character's role to some degree, the actual division colors are located on the insignia badge and shoulder marks.Thank you for the reference. But, there is little intuitive about it from watching the film. A similar complaint could be levied against the Monster Maroons as the insignia is very difficult to read.
Here's another thing about the colors. While the uniform color may indicate a character's role to some degree, the actual division colors are located on the insignia badge and shoulder marks.
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Right. But it is still confusing at first watch.Here's another thing about the colors. While the uniform color may indicate a character's role to some degree, the actual division colors are located on the insignia badge and shoulder marks.
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I am actually one of the few people who like TMP uniforms, but I agree that there was too much variation. They should have stuck with white and grey uniform variants, and three service colours for badges (preferably TOS colours.) This would have given more uniform look, while simultaneously being more clear.Right. But it is still confusing at first watch.
I have warmed to them over the years, to be sure. But, going from TOS to TMP was a struggle for my mind. I love uniforms, but it could have been done better.I am actually one of the few people who like TMP uniforms, but I agree that there was too much variation. They should have stuck with white and grey uniform variants, and three service colours for badges (preferably TOS colours.) This would have given more uniform look, while simultaneously being more clear.
Alien Steven Wright was in Security?Here's another thing about the colors. While the uniform color may indicate a character's role to some degree, the actual division colors are located on the insignia badge and shoulder marks.
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I am actually one of the few people who like TMP uniforms, but I agree that there was too much variation. They should have stuck with white and grey uniform variants, and three service colours for badges (preferably TOS colours.) This would have given more uniform look, while simultaneously being more clear.
Alien Steven Wright was in Security?
Science blue became science orange in TMP to avoid insignia patches and epaulettes disappearing in possible bluescreen scenes. For TNG, that standard blue got colour-shifted to teal for the same reason.
Kirk has been in command of the Enterprise for more than four years
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