Star Trek Writer Deep Dives Into Discovery Season 5’s Villains (screenrant.com)
from ValueSubtracted@startrek.website to startrek@startrek.website on 27 Apr 2024 00:45
https://startrek.website/post/9624061

#startrek

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halm@leminal.space on 27 Apr 2024 09:18 next collapse

Yeah, I’m not clicking a Screen Rants link but “Jelly Breens” is a quality pun!

ValueSubtracted@startrek.website on 27 Apr 2024 15:41 next collapse

Understandable, but this is better than your average screenrant content.

Stormygeddon@startrek.website on 28 Apr 2024 01:44 collapse

I can’t stop thinking about it now.

UESPA_Sputnik@lemmy.world on 28 Apr 2024 07:00 next collapse

Our thinking was the Breen as sort of a natural species were bifurcated in the sense that they can be both gelatinous and solid in that sense. But the solid state takes an intense amount of focus and concentration in order to maintain. […] And then as they developed the refrigeration suits, they lost the need for that both evolutionarily and culturally, and it became a sort of cultural anathema. You don’t show people your solid face because that means you’re weak. It means you’re stupid. It means you’re slow.

I still don’t get it. It doesn’t really make sense to me. If it takes a lot of focus and concentration to maintain the solid form, why is one considered weak for doing so?

Breen ship! We’ve never seen the inside

Technically we’ve seen a holding cell inside a Breen ship in DS9.

askryan@startrek.website on 28 Apr 2024 14:50 collapse

I still don’t get it. It doesn’t really make sense to me. If it takes a lot of focus and concentration to maintain the solid form, why is one considered weak for doing so?

They seem to be saying that the solid form is a sort of defense mechanism, like a snail shell or an opossum playing dead (or maybe an environmental one, like that it prevents the jelly form from losing too much moisture in a warm environment). It’s difficult to maintain, and implies you’re in a position of retreat or weakness. Now that the Breen presumably have no predators and no environmental necessity for the solid form, it’s seen as a cultural taboo.

While I’m a little bummed the Breen aren’t the space-arctic-wolves I imagined them as during DS9, I think it’s an interesting idea. I do always like when they describe how cultural practices in a particular species comes from how they exist in the ecosystem of their home planet, like the Kelpiens (Saru and the Kelpiens being for me, Disco’s most successful addition to Trek canon).

Kolanaki@yiffit.net on 28 Apr 2024 07:09 collapse

Whoa the pictured alien is a Breen?

No wonder they wear those masks.