Physiologiska förändringar i Klingons mellan Star Trek TNG och Star Trek Discovery

6

Min fråga är extremt lik den här .

Jag växte upp med att titta på Star Trek: The Next Generation , så jag tog alltid det för givet att Klingons ser så här ut:

NutittarjagpådenheltnyaStarTrek:Discovery,ochjagserattKlingonssåhär:

Vadhände?Dettogmigenstundattförståattdevarklingonger.Desmåöronenochdenlillanäsan,somknapptgick"ur" ansiktet, verkade en förändring mycket onödigt.

Varför gjorde de inte Discovery klingonger ser ut som de från TNG? Jag tror inte att en universums förklaring existerar, men jag skulle gärna bli bevisad fel. Förklaringar utanför universum är välkomna.

Obs! Jag vet att datorgrafiktekniken idag är mycket mer avancerad, men jag kan inte se varför de skulle använda den för att ändra hur klingoner ser ut om de helt enkelt kan lämna dem på samma sätt.

    
uppsättning Pedro A 04.10.2017 02:09

1 svar

10

Som det visar sig finns det 24 Klingon-hus som finns på andra Klingonplaneter. Och förutsättningarna för varje planet skapade axiom för olika kulturer. Så Star Trek: Discovery vill utforska dem, eftersom de börjar bilda ett imperium ...

"The empire is very big. They don’t all grow up on Kronos. They don’t all live on the same planets and certainly those different planets would have different environments. So how would the cultures have evolved differently?…We tried to come up with cultural axioms for each house so each looks different and they bear a cultural patina like our cultures do here on Earth." https://trekmovie.com/2017/08/03/stlv17-designers-explain-why-star-trek-discovery-klingons-are-bald-and-more/

"What can you say to reassure us that we’re not losing the Klingons we know and love?” a furtive audience member asked during the Q&A portion. Mitchell assured the crowd that the recent publicity still image released was of one Klingon, from one house. “We will see all 24 houses and the leaders among them,” he revealed. The houses will be explored, and the physical and ideological differences between them. L’Rell is part of two houses, Chieffo explained, and the conflicts arising therein, as well as how she is viewed by the Federation versus her own people, will be explored in depth."http://www.treknews.net/2017/08/03/star-trek-discovery-cast-klingon-houses-stlv/

#UPDATE-YtterligareförklaringarfrånEP:erpå NYCC

ByggfrånenepisodavTNG:

“You might have noticed in the trailer, there is a bit of a new aesthetic going on,” Chieffo said, attributing the hair to Discovery ’s makeup effects department head Glenn Hetrick. “He was inspired by Season 6, episode 23 of The Next Generation, ‘Rightful Heir.’”

In “Rightful Heir,” Lieutenant Worf feels spiritually adrift and makes a pilgrimage to the Temple of Boreth, where witnesses a miracle: the return of Kahless, the first Klingon emperor and guardian of their afterlife, prophesied to return and lead the Empire once more. Worf eventually learns this Kahless a clone created by overzealous priests. It is the Kahless clone who tells the legend that inspired the Season 2 redesign:

“I went into the mountains, all the way to the Kri’stak Volcano. I cut off a lock of my hair and thrust it into the river of molten rock which poured from the summit. The hair began to burn, but then I plunged it into the Lake of Lusor and twisted it into a sword. And after I used it to kill the tyrant Molor, I gave it a name: bat’leth, the sword of honor.”

“In the spirit of Discovery, we took that one little beautiful seed that was planted from an earlier iteration and expanded on that. We see that in a time of war, the Klingons would shave their heads and, in a time of peace, we start to grow it back out,” Chieffo said. “I really love the symbolism of that.”

Ochominteföljakostymi Dominion War

“The Dominion War takes place more than 100 years after the events of Discovery,” she says. “Traditions change and are lost in time. Much of what T’Kuvma predicted about homogenization and assimilation of the Klingon race occurs after the explosion of Praxis & subsequent political shift.”

Chieffo is referring to the destruction of the Praxis, the moon of the Klingon homeworld of Qo’noS, as seen in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. The Klingons mined Praxis and it was a key source of energy for the Klingon Empire. The moon’s destruction caused a political shift that ultimately led to the signing of the Khitomer Accords, which turned the long antagonistic relationship between the Federation and the Klingons into a relationship between peaceful allies. Signed in the late 23rd century, the Khitomer Accords were still in place in the late 24th century and informed the relationship between the Klingons and the Federation in storylines featured in Star Trek: The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine.

Chieffo’s assertion that the peace treaty fundamentally changed Klingon culture is supported by episodes like Deep Space Nine’s “Blood Oath,” in which Klingon characters like Kor, Koloth, and Kang - each introduced in the pre-Khitomer Accords era of Star Trek: The Original Series - vaguely comment on how the old Klingon ways have fallen out of favor since making peace with the Federation.

    
svaret ges 04.10.2017 02:47