Granted, there's a bit of a gap between "to get Klingons to talk to you, yell at them," and "to get Klingon spaceships to talk at you,
chuck a nuke in their general direction."
I mean, if the Klingons really
do insist that you shoot at hem before talking... You have to wonder how the Klingons would cope with a
really violent or determined threat. One that doesn't just exchange a few blows and then laugh and start talking, but just straight-up murders you. Would they find that unnerving?
Tandrax218 wrote: ↑2017-09-25 02:02amBut the only thing that is still stupid is the Federations "we come in peace crap.
Would "shoot first ask questions later" be more appealing? If so, Star Trek might not be the show for you...
I aloso noted the whole Darwin award part with "uuu look Klingons, lets wait here and die" "Why run from danger when we can be goodie two shoes retards in space"
Having not yet seen the pilot (though not being spoiler-averse) I couldn't comment.
bilateralrope wrote: ↑2017-09-25 05:41am - ST:D is set 10 years before TOS. In TOS, the only non-human on the ship was Spock. Here we have species never heard of before.
The flip side of this is that within a decade or two after TOS (in the "movie era," the Federation contains a huge number of species; the Federation Council of the 2280s has a lot of diversity, including a number of species never seen before or since. Unless we assume the Federation was
literally just Earth in 2260 and ballooned to huge size by 2280 or so, which seems kind of unlikely...
Yeah, we basically have to acknowledge the Doylist issue here, which is that the makeup budget for TOS wouldn't stretch to having a large number of alien bridge crew appearing frequently. Which is why most of the aliens we actually saw were either indistinguishable from humans, or indistinguishable from humans with some kind of body paint on.
- We could create a new vulcan character for our story. But lets used an existing character. One that creates a lot of problems.
Now this one I agree with.
bilateralrope wrote: ↑2017-09-25 07:58amThose are TNG era Klingons. Discovery is set 10 years before TOS, so you should be comparing them to TOS Klingons.
FedRebel wrote: ↑2017-09-25 07:25ambilateralrope wrote: ↑2017-09-25 06:31amI'm looking forward to the Discovery writers completely ignoring the differences between their klingons and TOS klingons. Despite only 10 years in-universe separating them.
Apparently it's a lost house in hibernation for 200 years
What about the other Klingons that showed up when the beacon was lit ?[/quote]The artistic problem is that to make the Klingons of
Discovery similar to TOS Klingons, you have to basically ignore
all non-TOS characterization of Klingons. Ten or so seasons of Worf? Irrelevant. Multiple story arcs involving Klingon politics? Irrelevant. Multiple movies exploring interaction with some very memorable Klingon characters, like [i}Star Trek III[/i] and
VI? Gone.
It's unsurprising that the writers decided that TOS nostalgia just ain't worth it.