2018年1月6日土曜日

Alexander@Kingons is Dead@33


'Live long and prosper in the heavens': Star Trek child actor Jon Paul Steuer dies aged 33... as tributes flood in for 'talented' star

By Ciara Farmer For Mailonline

Published: 03:29 EST, 5 January 2018 | Updated: 09:26 EST, 5 January 2018
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-5238023/Star-Trek-child-actor-Jon-Paul-Steuer-passes-away-aged-33.html





In the original series (TOS), Star Trek modeled the conflict between the Federation and the Klingon Empire on the Cold War between the Western countries and the Soviet Union.[1] TOS Klingons were not given many cultural traits, either original or Soviet-like, beyond a generic need for domination and tyranny. However, they were typically portrayed with bronze skin and facial hair suggestive of North Asian peoples such as the Mongols (in fact, Gene L. Coon's only physical description of them in his Errand of Mercy script is "Oriental, hard-faced").[2] In Star Trek: The Motion Picture, the Klingons were "reimagined" or retconned, and were depicted with ridged foreheads, new uniforms, and a distinctive Klingon language. Gene Roddenberry said that the movie-era Klingons are closer to his original vision, but could not be realized in a low-budget television show.[3]

As originally developed by screenwriter Gene L. Coon, Klingons were swarthy humanoids characterized mainly by prideful ruthlessness and brutality. Totalitarian, and with a martial society relying on slave labor, they reflected analogies with both Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. Although Cold War tensions are apparent in the characterization, Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry did not intend any explicit political parallels.[citation needed] With a greatly expanded budget for makeup and effects, the Klingons were completely redesigned in Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979), acquiring ridged foreheads that created a continuity error[citation needed] not explained by Star Trek canon until 2005. In later films and in the spin-off series Star Trek: The Next Generation, the militaristic traits of the Klingons were bolstered by an increased sense of honor and strict warrior code similar to those of bushido.
Among the elements created for the revised Klingons was a complete Klingon language, developed by Marc Okrand from gibberish suggested by actor James Doohan. Spoken Klingon has entered popular culture, even to the extent that the works of William Shakespeare and parts of the Bible have been translated into it. A dictionary, a book of sayings, and a cultural guide to the language have been published. According to Guinness World Records, Klingon is the world's most popular fictional language as measured by number of speakers.











、、、(爆wwwwwwwwww

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匿名 さんのコメント...

三菱にも見えるしニンジャの手裏剣にも見える(笑)

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