These Klingons have funerals and use corpses to decorate the hulls of their ships. The Klingons I know scream for thirty seconds and toss away dead bodies because they are only an empty shell.They act and talk like the Klingons I know.
These Klingons have funerals and use corpses to decorate the hulls of their ships. The Klingons I know scream for thirty seconds and toss away dead bodies because they are only an empty shell.They act and talk like the Klingons I know.
These Klingons have funerals and use corpses to decorate the hulls of their ships. The Klingons I know scream for thirty seconds and toss away dead bodies because they are only an empty shell.
These Klingons have funerals and use corpses to decorate the hulls of their ships. The Klingons I know scream for thirty seconds and toss away dead bodies because they are only an empty shell.
Well, in this case, given the lead character of the show was raised by Vulcans making her more or less Vulcan by association, Romulan villains seem the logical course of action given their connection to the Vulcans, and given they have for some reason decided the Klingons haven't been seen for nearly a century, why not just go with the race that have canonically been away since the same timeframe? Just because Balance of Terror exists and what's established there isn't much of an excuse. Hell, that episode made it seem like the Federation was unaware of cloaking technology, Kirk and Spock discuss it as a theory only. And yet, many races seen on Enterprise had cloaking technology, including the Romulans themselves, and in this episode we see the Klingons have cloaking technology. And I'm not even getting started on the "simple impulse" line.They were in TOS for what, all of two episodes? Why are they the goldmine of antagonists for Trek?
Well, in this case, given the lead character of the show was raised by Vulcans making her more or less Vulcan by association, Romulan villains seem the logical course of action given their connection to the Vulcans,
and given they have for some reason decided the Klingons haven't been seen for nearly a century, why not just go with the race that have canonically been away since the same timeframe?
Hell, that episode made it seem like the Federation was unaware of cloaking technology, Kirk and Spock discuss it as a theory only. And yet, many races seen on Enterprise had cloaking technology,...
At them moment, having Discovery be part of the Prime Universe is creating too many unnecessary "round object in a square slot" problems that shouldn't even be a part of the show at all.
So, the backstory with the Klingons is that there's been limited contact for over a century, although there have been attacks made by Klingons, in which Michael Burnham's parents were killed, making them sort of a personal nemesis for her.
But what if instead of Klingons, they had gone with Romulans? They already work canonically in that we know they disappeared after the Romulan War and weren't seen again until Balance of Terror. We can retcon the attacks as that although the Federation itself never had contact with the Romulans for a century, they did still continue to antagonise the Vulcans (the Vulcans stayed quiet about this to cover the secret of their relation to the Romulans). With Michael's parents being killed in one of these attacks, we could perhaps go a step further and suggest the attack on the Vulcan school was also orchestrated by Romulans, thereby increasing Michael's vendetta against them.
The only drawbacks are that the whole religious extremist angle they're setting up doesn't seem consistent with Romulan behaviour, but then it isn't really consistent with Klingon behaviour either so that's irrelevant. Also, by having the Romulans attacking the Federation now it'd make it damn obvious this isn't the Prime Universe, but that pretense is going to have to be abandoned by the time the season's done anyway.
Thoughts?
Because they have a shared history.I don't see why. Because they look the same?
It seems to me the writers cherry-pick which can the choose to follow.
It's like "Well 'Balance of Terror' is a really popular episode, so let's not go there."
These Klingons have funerals and use corpses to decorate the hulls of their ships. The Klingons I know scream for thirty seconds and toss away dead bodies because they are only an empty shell.
Considering Turn About Intruder suggested women can't be captains in Kirk's era, ...
The line I think you're referencing from Turnabout Intruder is:
JANICE: Your world of starship captains doesn't admit women. It isn't fair.
To which the replies are:
KIRK: No, it isn't. And you punished and tortured me because of it.
JANICE: I loved you. We could've roamed among the stars.
KIRK: We'd have killed each other.
JANICE: It might have been better.
That doesn't say "Women can't be starship captains". It is a jab at Kirk from his ex-lover, saying that *HE* won't admit women into his world of being a starship captain, because to him the priority is clear. She would have taken second place, and it would have been disastrous for their relationship.
Fair enough, I stand by my idea that continuity should be a tool, not something you should be chained to at all costs. I rather have a good story then vapid attempts at continuity porn.
Star Trek has made great efforts to establish itself as the franchise that keeps to continuity as much as possible. Most fans love it for that. I don't understand the purely contrarian viewpoint espoused by many here that Star Trek must abandon continuity to save itself. As I said, good writers can work around such constraints. I wouldn't worry.
Most of this has arisen because they chose to use Klingons instead of Romulans as the adversaries. So I ask again: why are Romulans the golden ticket to great plots?
Except I am pretty sure there were continuity issues in past Star Trek shows and movies, with a canon this big you will have continuity issues and how many young people today care if this series adheres to the continuity of an episode from 50 years ago.
All these complaints about continuity seems like insular fanboy complaints then anything else. It seems akin to complaining about how a modern issue of Spider-Man doesn't exactly line up with an issue from 1965.
Most egregious continuity errors were introduced in Enterprise, which pretended to be a prequel but was really a 24th century show that followed Voyager. As for the young people -- I suspect they don't know what happened in TOS to be concerned about continuity.
Spiderman never made the "commitment" to stick to continuity. Star Trek did, and so did the creators of Discovery. Nothing at all about fan boys.
Really? So changing the look and culture of the Klingons in the TNG era wasn't a huge retcon?
There were threads on this site about continuity glitches:
https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/what-is-the-worst-continuity-error-in-trek-history.139195/
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