I liked the way Kahn is linked to the lack of ridges by a kind a twisty route.
And did it far better that Chang.I enjoyed the Klingon arc. John Schuck gave us wonderful, Shakespearean Klingon characters.
Yeah screw GR, after all he was only the creatorYeah, screw Roddenberry - what did that guy ever do for me?![]()
Yes, what ENT did was fill in the discrepancy with a fascinating new bit of world-building. Developing and expanding on the Trek universe is (supposedly) one of the things the fans like about the franchise, after all.Having Enterprise explain the forehead changes didn't detract things for me- in fact it made what seemed to be a mistake for me. Fans had retconned the differences as different subspecies- Imperial Klingons had the ridges, ones without were stationed closest to Federation space mislead. It also fits well with Worf's "we do not discuss it with outsiders" line since the cause of it would not be considered one of the finer moments in Klingon history.
Yes. The explanation is a bit "small universe", but on the other hand once the connection is made it seems obvious, even inevitable.I liked the way Kahn is linked to the lack of ridges by a kind a twisty route.
I don't think they felt a "need" to explain anything. They just thought it would be interesting and entertaining.Has any of the writers of the "Affliction" and "Divergence" episodes ever explained (at a ST convention, in a ST magazine, or wherever) why they felt a need to explain away the TOS Klingons?
You answered your own question. They thought it would be amusing to point out the discrepancy, and have Worf be defensive about it. I don't think they had a specific explanation in mind. You could explain it in a number of ways, but that would undermine the joke, and distract from the plot of the episode.I often wonder why the writers ever did an episode that had anything to do with "The Trouble with Tribbles". Once you put a ridged Klingon (Worf) on the same screen and scene as smooth headed TOS Klingons, then you cannot avoid the discrepancy any more. The discrepancy was there for everyone to see. Why go there if it is going to bring up the Klingon forehead controversy?
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Instead they toyed with the audience by having Worf say, "We do not discuss it with outsiders". Did the writers write it the way that they did, in order to poke fun at this controversy?
That's interesting. I guess that kind of story is something you can't really do near the beginning of the series? OTOH, it would have helped bring ENT closer to TOS in appearance.I recall reading something where Burman says he turned down several Klingon forehead stories in ENT's early seasons before relenting when Manny Coto took over as showrunner in S4.
It was indeed interesting and entertaining.I don't think they felt a "need" to explain anything. They just thought it would be interesting and entertaining.
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