I don't think contemporary pop culture fandom uses quite that academic of an approach to media analysis.Silly me, I thought it had something to do with comparing the Klingon people with the Flemish people.
Kor
I don't think contemporary pop culture fandom uses quite that academic of an approach to media analysis.Silly me, I thought it had something to do with comparing the Klingon people with the Flemish people.
To me, it seemed like the Klingons were indeed depicted initially as sneaky, untrustworthy, backstabbing, and even slightly cowardly at times
In one way yes and another way no. DS9 also showed that not all Cardassians were bad. Some even found the policies of the Cardassian government unacceptable.So, in a sense, DS9's Cardassians are closer to the original Klingon portrayal than the Klingons in that series ....C.E. Evans said:To me, it seemed like the Klingons were indeed depicted initially as sneaky, untrustworthy, backstabbing, and even slightly cowardly at times
Having only struggled through three and a half episodes of the first season of STD, I didn't spot any "The Final Reflection" references in the Klingon portrayal. Maybe if there had have been I might have stayed watching it longer?Give me John Ford’s Klingons over Ron Moore’s any day. I’m glad Discovery took inspiration from the former.
However I would love to hear about any real TFR references
I like TUC klingons myselfHaving only struggled through three and a half episodes of the first season of STD, I didn't spot any "The Final Reflection" references in the Klingon portrayal. Maybe if there had have been I might have stayed watching it longer?
But I can only agree that TFL is the finest, most believable and comprehensive portrayal of Klingons ever. No Flanderisation here, just a fully realised and sympathetic alien race and society. So much better than the one note "honour", headbut, viking bikergang thugs we got! They were so stupid and solely violence obsessed that they could not organise a drunken brawl in a brewery, let alone run an empire.
Greatest mistake TPTB ever made in rejecting Ford's vision for the morons we got.
However I would love to hear about any real TFR references in STD.
Ah, TV Tropes, AKA "Say goodbye to your productivity."https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/Flanderization
Yup. Looking it up and then an hour later realized I'd read through a remarkably small amount of their site...
Yes, exactly. The Romulans were the ones obsessed with honor in TOS, while the Klingons were the evil, shifty, duplicitous ones. The switch began when Star Trek III was rewritten to feature Klingons villains instead of the Romulans, which led to an unfortunate blending of their traits like the Klingons having a Bird of Prey and suddenly talking about honor all the time. And I guess TNG just ran with the "honorable foe" thing, because it was a convenient explanation for why the Klingons were now allied with the Federation.As Peter David points out several times in his novels, the Klingons and Romulans seemed to swap characterisation between TOS and TNG.
Me too! They're intelligent, literate, crafty, and duplicitous, and their makeup looks great. I love the TUC revision of the Klingon uniforms, too. I don't know why they never used those versions again, AFAIK.I like TUC klingons myself
Ah, TV Tropes, AKA "Say goodbye to your productivity."
Yes, exactly. The Romulans were the ones obsessed with honor in TOS, while the Klingons were the evil, shifty, duplicitous ones. The switch began when Star Trek III was rewritten to feature Klingons villains instead of the Romulans, which led to an unfortunate blending of their traits like the Klingons having a Bird of Prey and suddenly talking about honor all the time. And I guess TNG just ran with the "honorable foe" thing, because it was a convenient explanation for why the Klingons were now allied with the Federation.
Me too! They're intelligent, literate, crafty, and duplicitous, and their makeup looks great. I love the TUC revision of the Klingon uniforms, too. I don't know why they never used those versions again, AFAIK.
Its probably just me, I know its strengths and its Icon status is well earned but to me it can be a hard sit through an hour of most of the episodes. I much prefer The TOS movies over the TOS TV show
Well in Enterprise, they showed klingon lawyers and doctors, and showed they were like 2nd class citizens almost.. If your not a warrior.. Ur scum..
So the warriors were in charge.. So like.. If I didn't go to Harvard etc. Ur beneath me..
Early TNG Klingons are a bit of a mess. Worf is Klingon, yes, but the Klingons we see are working with the Federation, and it's not until the Duras storyline that Klingons take off in their 'modern' form, with K'mpec mixing the stately and honourly klingon against the sneaky and raider-ish klingon Duras. And that was what, Season 4? After that it became the same mold for the most part.
The early ones are desperate resource-starved Totalitarian types in an ongoing contest with the UFP. FASA Klingons are mostly based on these. They have an Empire, they fight for their empire and not for their own reasons (or for anyone else)
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.