- Mor-Taxan
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Mor-Taxans are the extraterresrial inhabitants of the fictional planet Mor-Tax, in the first season of the War of the Worlds television series. They are loosely based on the Martians from H.G. Wells' novel The War of the Worlds.Contents
Social classes
Mor-Taxan society is divided into three functional castes: ruling class, military, and scientists. The ruling class is represented on Earth by a triad called the Advocacy who oversee the invasion while their leaders known as the Council (never seen on screen) remain on Mor-Tax to supervise evacuation from their dying planet. The lower class belong mainly to so-called 'field units' who are undercover in human society while most of the scientists stay in Advocacy headquarters at Nevada desert to provide medical and engineering service.
A quote from the show which illustrates this class system is: There are thousands of us...but we are ruled by the three. (Quinn to Blackwood)
Culture
Apparently, Mor-Taxans love art, as evidence by renegade Quinn, whose works are very valuable among humans.
Technology
The Mor-Taxans possess some advanced technology; including old remains from previous invasions, and some devices which they created from parts found on Earth. Examples include:
- Healing device
- Spaceships
- Hand Beam Weapon
- Environmental Anti-radiation Suits
Language and communication
The Mor-Taxans employ two known means of communication. One is verbal or phonetic, and is mainly a spoken language, though occasionally they emit more bestial and guttural sounds. The nature of their language is distinctly alien, but at times the observant listener can hear pieces of a human language. For example, in one episode, as the aliens are talking about our sun (via subtitles), the word sol or solar can be heard in correspondence. In other, craft is audible when discussing a ship. While this fictional language sounds inspired in part of African origin, what real human languages were amalgamated in it are unknown. It is of note, that when the aliens talk in human host bodies, there seems to be little distinction between their voices, both among each other and from those in their natural state. However, whereas their voices are mostly heard in more a high pitch, there are times when an aliens' voice is lower. The reasons for this, either within the show or behind-the-scenes, are unknown.
Another method often used is the use of radio transmissions. To the human ear, they are heard simply as a pulsating noise. An explained aspect to this is that this is the same sounds heard when they are seen standing back-to-back in threes in what seems to be a trance. The show never explains what exactly they are doing, but the novelization refers to it as a "communion of consciousness." Though it's unclear if the book is canon, the show itself reflects little to refute this. The reference of their collective nature and mindset, and even their crude telepathic abilities support this theory. However, the strongest case is in their means of operating their ships. Dr. Clayton Forrester speculated that they use brainwave impulses and in one scene we see three aliens operating a ship, without apparent physical guidance, sitting in their common triangle formation, emitting the same pulsating sounds. To further the possible organic nature, there is evidence the aliens can understand the broadcasts as if they were a simple language. To this extent, in one episode, they are used in some way for the benefit of their unhatched young. Norton Drake, the member of the Blackwood Project who receives and studies the signals, even goes as far as to refer to them as "baby talk."
Physical characteristics
- Mor-Taxans have a total of three arms. Two of these are attached to their body much like those on the human body, but their third arm is largely unseen as it appears to be hidden in their chest. It appears to be rarely employed in any of their activity, though it proves useful when one has taken over a human body, its sudden burst through the chest of their host catching targets off guard.
- Structurally aliens are like jellyfish rather than mammals. They are able to "melt" into human body via a combination of osmosis and cell phase-matching. This process effectively kills the human cells but allows the alien access to their memories. Once one such alien is killed, an exothermic reaction causes the cells to boil, leaving a decaying radioactive puddle of human & alien biomatter. Once an alien leaves its host body, the same reaction occurs to the discarded tissue.
The melting into humans seems to be reversible. The Advocacy is seen in human bodies, then after discovery of environmental suits they somehow returned to their original form and in the episode "The Angel of Death" they again melted into humans. This ability is somehow connected with immunology or alien genetics. Quinn, who is immune to Earth bacteria, is also imprisoned in a human body.
See also
External links
The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells Martians Radio Films The War of the Worlds (Haskin, 1953) • The War of the Worlds: Next Century (Szulkin, 1981) • H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds (Hines, 2005) • H. G. Wells' War of the Worlds (Latt, 2005) War of the Worlds 2: The Next Wave (Howell, 2008) •
War of the Worlds (Spielberg, 2005) • War of the Worlds The True Story (Hines, 2011)Jeff Wayne TV series Sequels Edison's Conquest of Mars • Killraven (Earth-691) • Sherlock Holmes's War of the Worlds •
War of the Worlds: Global Dispatches • Rainbow Mars • The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volume II •
War of the Worlds: New Millennium • Scarlet Traces • The Martian WarMiscellaneous Adaptations and sequels • HMS Thunder Child • Doctor Clayton Forrester • "The Crystal Egg" • Comic •
The Space Machine • Superman • Arcade game • Star-Begotten • Scary Movie 4 • George HerbertCategories:- Fictional extraterrestrial life forms
- Science fiction television characters
- The War of the Worlds
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