For the relatively low budget that TOS had to work with for special effects and costumes, I think that Wah Chang worked a minor miracle with the Gorn.
Yup, and while some may argue the voice was stereotypical with a lot of snake-like hissing, I loved the passion Cassidy put into the Gorn's rebuttal, "You were INVADERS!!!" which suddenly made the bridge crew wonder, "Were we in the wrong?" Suddenly, the Gorn was no longer a "monster", but a "person" fearing for his (her?) territory.IIRC, the voice of the Gorn was Ted Cassidy.
Part of my problem is that the CGI for the Gorn was really crappy. I'd rather have the guy in a rubber suit.
IIRC, the voice of the Gorn was Ted Cassidy.
The TOS Klingons made good villains. An asset that was diluted in later Trek.I much prefer the TOS Klingons to the turtle heads of the later eras! Their costumes for one were very good and they seemed more scary and sinister without having to scream and cry about honour and all that cobblers! They were also very sneaky and apart from Kang and Kor I wouldn't say honour meant anything to them at all!
JB
Yup. And Ruk.He was Lurch, right?
Oh the Gorn suit was well designed for 60s TV, it had some interesting musculature, and it was a good idea for the producers to take into account the suit limitations and make it super slow. It's just a little unfortunate the episode became a "chase scene" with Kirk evading the slow Gorn, because it becomes a little silly after time.For the relatively low budget that TOS had to work with for special effects and costumes, I think that Wah Chang worked a minor miracle with the Gorn.
Part of my problem is that the CGI for the Gorn was really crappy. I'd rather have the guy in a rubber suit.
Obviously there has been a change in perspective (concerning aliens and large reptiles) over fifty years. Back in the day the idea of a large reptile or dinosaur like creature was something somewhat slow and lumbering--hence that's how the Gorn was depicted. Since the advent of Jurassic Park the perception of large reptile like creatures has changed drastically. Now we expect them to be quick and agile.
The original Gorn is a conceptually interesting design. What looks so obviously reptillian to us is, of course, not because it's meant to be an alien spawned from a different environment. That idea is cemented by the fact it has insect like compound eyes. Or are they? Is it possible the Gorn was wearing some kind of lens to protect its eyesight on the planetoid the Metrons set them down on?
Another question (in universe) is why does the Gorn move rather slowly compared to Kirk and yet it obviously has superior physical strength? Kirk had the advantage of speed and agility while the Gorn had the advantage of physical strength and (possibly) stamina as well. Intellectually they appeared to be even. Is it possible the Gorn was disadvantaged given the environment the Metrons provided? Maybe it was too cool (or too warm) for the Gorn and thus it couldn't move as it normally could in its natural environment? Maybe the gravity wasn't optimum for it?
The Metrons claimed to have established a level playing field for the combatants. If the Gorn could function in the way we presently expect large reptile like creatures to function--like the velociraptors seen in Jurassic Park--then Kirk would likely have stood no chance whatsoever. So perhaps the only way to level the playing field was for the Metrons to hamper the Gorn in some manner and just enough for Kirk to have an even chance.
Yup. And Ruk.
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