They were 3 dyemensional.
They were dyed three different colors?
They were 3 dyemensional.
They were dyed three different colors?
^^^
That's a BIG plus in my book (that they haven't watched TNG, DS9, VOY) as we already have too much of that for my taste. ST: D ISN'T set in the 24th century era of Star Trek.
The only difference this time was that they were near impossible to understand thanks to the poor choices from the make-up department.
Sometimes you have to leave clues to your dry humor.They were dyed three different colors?
I don't understand how you can say that. In terms of the Klingons in particular, watching the TNG/DS9 episodes involving them would have been a good thing, because many of these episodes touch on aspects of Klingon religion, diet, music, history, etc that should still be somewhat recognizable in the 23rd century.
Huh? The Klingons of the 23rd century era of Star Trek were VERY different from those depicted in the 24th century. I don't want those retcons brought to my favorite era of Star Trek, thanks.I don't understand how you can say that. In terms of the Klingons in particular, watching the TNG/DS9 episodes involving them would have been a good thing, because many of these episodes touch on aspects of Klingon religion, diet, music, history, etc that should still be somewhat recognizable in the 23rd century.
Huh? The Klingons of the 23rd century era of Star Trek were VERY different from those depicted in the 24th century. I don't want those retcons brought to my favorite era of Star Trek, thanks.
To be honest, it seems it is with ST: D. You're really going to try and say the the Enterprise (1701) had a refit after TOS - "The Cage" (top look the way it does on ST: D) then ANOTHER refit so that it looks EXACTLY like it did in TOS - "The Cage" for TOS - "Where No Man Has Gone Before" (circa 2265 in Universe)?As long as the different series are treated as part of the same continuous universe, then their writers will draw on elements from every prior series when making a new one. If you want series that are rigidly segregated from each other in the ideas they use, then you want a franchise where each series is set in a different reality. Star Trek is not that franchise.
I can't help but notice the lack of ENT episodes. "The Pegasus" is there though. That almost counts, right?Speaking of Discovery writers, I find the following article very interesting:
https://www.cbs.com/shows/star-trek...rs-pick-their-favorite-classic-trek-episodes/
Huh? The Klingons of the 23rd century era of Star Trek were VERY different from those depicted in the 24th century. I don't want those retcons brought to my favorite era of Star Trek, thanks.
To be honest, it seems it is with ST: D. You're really going to try and say the the Enterprise (1701) had a refit after TOS - "The Cage" (top look the way it does on ST: D) then ANOTHER refit so that it looks EXACTLY like it did in TOS - "The Cage" for TOS - "Where No Man Has Gone Before" (circa 2265 in Universe)?
Tbh, NONE of my favourite episodes are from ENT.I can't help but notice the lack of ENT episodes. "The Pegasus" is there though. That almost counts, right?
With regard to TMP - it was 5 - 10 years after the things depicted in the original series - a timeframe not depicted on screen prior to that time; and when TPTB DID do a change to the Klingons without explanation A LOT of fans called them on it to the point we GOT an explanation in Universe 23 years later with fans discussing it ad nauseam over all that time coming up with ways to 'make it fit.No, any more than you would try and say that Saavik got plastic surgery between The Wrath of Khan and The Search for Spock. Just as the same character played by different actors looks different, so the same starship or alien species designed by different artists will look different. New Star Trek productions have routinely redesigned things without in-universe explanation ever since TMP nearly 40 years ago. Klingons, Romulans, Andorians, and Tellarites have been designed differently by every distinct makeup artist. Warp and transporter effects are different every time. ShiKahr and future San Francisco look different every time we see them. Vulcan and Qo'noS and other planets look different from space in different series or movies. These things are artists' designs representing hypothetical, nonexistent entities, and the franchise has always allowed different artists to interpret them in different ways.
Why do you say "would have been," as if it hadn't already happened? A ton of Klingon stuff introduced in the 24th-century shows was used in Discovery: the High Council (which originated in "Sins of the Father" a year before it was used in The Undiscovered Country), Great Houses (including ones with names from the 24th-century shows, like D'Ghor and Mo'Kai), the death scream (from "Heart of Glory"), the bat'leth and mek'leth (albeit redesigned), the idea of Kahless as a religious figure, the legend of Molor, the idea of Klingons cannibalizing their victims (seen in the ritual heart-eating in DS9: "Blood Oath"), the idea that Klingon anatomy includes redundant organs and heavy skeletal reinforcements, even the Klingon currency called darseks.
It makes no sense to suggest the makers of DSC were ignorant of the 24th-century series. A lot of ideas, species, planets, terminology, etc. from the TNG-era shows and ENT showed up in DSC, and not just where Klingons were concerned. Naturally any new Trek series draws on ideas from everything that came before it.
I can't help but notice the lack of ENT episodes. "The Pegasus" is there though. That almost counts, right?
With regard to TMP - it was 5 - 10 years after the things depicted in the original series - a timeframe not depicted on screen prior to that time; and when TPTB DID do a change to the Klingons without explanation A LOT of fans called them on it to the point we GOT an explanation in Universe 23 years later with fans discussing it ad nauseam over all that time coming up with ways to 'make it fit.
I'm not going to quibble over actor replacements, but the look of the 1701 is WELL KNOWN for that timeframe, so a major change to that look (and it is a major change.) Also it's the FIRST TIME in the 50+ year history of the franchise that particular hero ship look has been so radically changed (it wasn't done for DS9 - "Trials and Tribbleations" nor ENT - "In a Mirror Darkly") so sorry, your claim that "it's always been done when new peopl,e take over" is just plain false/inaccurate to that point.
While I think ENT is underrated, there are no episodes which would qualify as among the best of the franchise. It has many good episodes, but no great ones.
That's changing the subject. Your point was "Everyone who's worked on Star Trek has changed the look with no explaination..." my response (with examples) shows that's not been the case. Also, keeping the exterior look of a known ship from a known era (as seen of TV) is NOT 'rehashing' anything story wise, it's called 'being consistent'.Of course anything can be explained by fans -- or sometimes a later generation of writers -- after the fact. But most of the design changes in Trek have not been explained. If you think about it, the "It's five years later" excuse for TMP is a really, really flimsy rationalization, because absolutely everything looks different. There's no way such a complete and utter replacement of every single design would take place in such a short span of time. Real-life change is a lot more incremental than that.
Roddenberry's intent, with the Klingons and the tech design, was that TMP was just a closer approximation of what the future "really" looked like, because it had more money and was able to simulate that future with greater detail. And that's what the designers of Enterprise, the Kelvin films, and Discovery have all taken to heart, giving us pre-TMP Starfleet ships with design features characteristic of TMP and after, like hull Aztecing, visible maneuvering thrusters, hangar bay force fields, etc.
There is no "right" way to be creative. Different artists are entitled to do it in different ways. Obviously the makers of "Trials" (and TNG: "Relics") had to replicate the look of the original ship because they built the episode around stock footage that they had to match. That's also why they finally admitted that TOS Klingons looked different after "Blood Oath" had implied they'd actually had ridges all along. The different productions required different approaches.
As for IAMD, that was straight-up nostalgia, which Enterprise season 4 was loaded with. But Star Trek should not be driven by nostalgia alone. The original series was cutting-edge and groundbreaking in every respect, from writing to casting to visual effects and production design. That's what made it exceptional in the first place. It needs to be groundbreaking again if it's to have a future. If Trek becomes nothing more than an exercise in rehashing what it was doing 50 years ago, then there's no point in continuing to make new Trek.
That's also why they finally admitted that TOS Klingons looked different after "Blood Oath" had implied they'd actually had ridges all along. The different productions required different approaches.
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