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Was Ricardo Montalban really the right actor to play Khan?

By this rationale, Patrick Stewart never should have played Jean Luc Picard. Stewart's Stratford upon Avon accent is obviously not French.

I always wished that Paramount could've gotten Jean Reno for the role instead.
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By this rationale, Patrick Stewart never should have played Jean Luc Picard. Stewart's Stratford upon Avon accent is obviously not French.
While I'm willing to overlook the incongruity of Picard's accent given that it's just a TV show, I do wonder why they didn't just change the character's backstory when Patrick Stewart was cast. The captain was originally supposed to be played by a French actor. When they decided upon the British Stewart, would it have been that hard to say he was from England instead of France?
 
^It's the 24th century. Why assume that present-day national and cultural boundaries even still exist? Heck, even today, Europe is becoming more unified by the year. By the 2300s, England and France may be merely states within a single nation and society called Europe.

Besides, with transporters in routine use, why couldn't Picard have lived in Labarre and gone to school in Yorkshire?

Of course, realistically, there is zero chance that the English or French accent 400 years from now will sound anything like the current version. I've heard reconstructions of the London accent from Shakespeare's day, and it sounded more like a cross between a heavy Irish brogue and a stereotypical pirate accent. For that matter, even the English language of the 24th century will probably be as alien to our ears as ours would be to Shakespeare. So having the characters speak English in modern accents is an artificial conceit to begin with. What difference does it make, therefore, which modern accent they use?
 
^ The only difference it makes it that the reality is they are producing these shows for a modern-day audience, and to have a character described as French but using a British accent seems confusing to a modern-day audience.

Also, I know that we've at least heard France referred to on several occasions, so I'm pretty sure there's no single "Europe" without a distinct France still in existence.
 
By this rationale, Patrick Stewart never should have played Jean Luc Picard. Stewart's Stratford upon Avon accent is obviously not French.
While I'm willing to overlook the incongruity of Picard's accent given that it's just a TV show, I do wonder why they didn't just change the character's backstory when Patrick Stewart was cast. The captain was originally supposed to be played by a French actor. When they decided upon the British Stewart, would it have been that hard to say he was from England instead of France?

Edward James Olmos said in a bsg interview that he was offered the role before Patrick was. Would any of you have bought Edward as a frenchman? :cool:

Bri :rommie:
 
Plus, who's to say Picard isn't actually speaking french and all that we're hearing is the universal's translator?
 
Edward James Olmos said in a bsg interview that he was offered the role before Patrick was. Would any of you have bought Edward as a frenchman? :cool:

Bri :rommie:

no...

but he'd have given them 'the look' and they would have stopped complaining.
 
As much as I love Edward James Olmos, I'm glad he passed on this; I wonder if he'd have been interested in the role of Adama after a decade of playing Picard?
 
^ The only difference it makes it that the reality is they are producing these shows for a modern-day audience, and to have a character described as French but using a British accent seems confusing to a modern-day audience.

Why? It's not as if modern-day people never leave their home countries or go to school in other places. Heck, I once knew a girl who had a gorgeous English accent even though she was from Baltimore (or somewhere around there). She'd been raised by an English nanny.

Then there's the fact that in a lot of historical or fantasy movies, an English accent is pretty much the default for anyone from any "exotic" country. In the universe according to Sam Raimi, Ancient Greece was populated entirely by people with New Zealand accents, American accents, or New Zealand-pretending-to-be-American accents.


Also, I know that we've at least heard France referred to on several occasions, so I'm pretty sure there's no single "Europe" without a distinct France still in existence.

There's a single United States, but Ohio, New York, Maryland, etc. are still in existence. I never said France had ceased to exist, merely that it had become a unit within a greater, more unified whole. Which has actually already happened with the emergence of the European Union. All I'm suggesting is a continuation of what's already occurred.
 
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But Khan is supposed to be of Indian descent, isn't he? So, shouldn't he have dark skin and some sort of Indian-ish accent?

- I've done far worse than kill you, Admiral. I've hurt you. And I wish to go on hurting you. I shall leave you as you left me, as you left her; marooned for all eternity in the center of a dead planet... buried alive! Buried alive...! Thank you, come again.

- No... You can't get away... From hell's heart I stab at thee... For hate's sake... I spit my last breath at thee! Silly customer, you cannot hurt a Twinkie!

Hmmm... Nah!
Thank you for steering right into stereotype central. :rolleyes:
 
As much as I love Edward James Olmos, I'm glad he passed on this; I wonder if he'd have been interested in the role of Adama after a decade of playing Picard?
But then maybe we would get Patrick Stewart as Adama.
If PS played Adama, that means they would have had to cast someone else as Colonel Tigh... can't have two bald white guys running the ship together. :p
 
So to solve the problem that "Stewart isn't frech' people would have rather had another actor play Picard?

Even though Stewarts acting chops and charisma were what basically saved the show during the first two years and made the series a hit overall.

Look at the history of Trek. Virtually all of the countires of Earth have assimilated into a 'one-world' type of culture. Almost all speak unaccented English.

I just saw a report about Vietnam---virtually every student in the country speaks good English--in 2009. In Indonesia, they are trying to get kids to speak their native language in school and they are rebelling because they want to speak english in class. They say it works better for modern computor classes, etc.
Add 4 more centuries of english becoming the universal earth language and it makes perfect sense that he might have an english accent. He could love french cuisine and french poetry and the lifestyle and heritage but speak with an english accent.
 
American-accented english IS becoming the norm.

When I hear most people speaking english as a second language they are speaking it with an 'American' accent. I think that trend will continue.

Most scandinavians speak english with an american accent and they are right next to Britain.
 
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