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The prequel series ''[[Legends of the Dark Crystal]]'' introduced four more Skekis:
 
The prequel series ''[[Legends of the Dark Crystal]]'' introduced four more Skekis:
 
<gallery widths="150" orientation="landscape" spacing="small">
 
<gallery widths="150" orientation="landscape" spacing="small">
SkekCru.jpg|SkekCru the Mariner
+
SkekCru.jpg|SkekCru the Mariner (later renamed SkekSa)
 
SkekEer.jpg|SkekEer the Spy-Master
 
SkekEer.jpg|SkekEer the Spy-Master
 
SkekLach.jpg|[[SkekLach]] the Collector
 
SkekLach.jpg|[[SkekLach]] the Collector
SkekVar.jpg|SkekVar the General
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SkekVar.jpg|[[SkekVar]] the General
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
   

Revision as of 03:39, 9 September 2019

Skeksis at death bed

Surviving Skeksis at the Emperor's death bed.

Skeksis in ritual

The Skeksis gather around the Dark Crystal.

The Skeksis are the villainous race in The Dark Crystal, one of two species to emerge when the Crystal cracked and divided the urSkeks.

The creatures are described in detail in the book The Making of the Dark Crystal: "For every Mystic there was a corresponding Skeksis... The Skeksis had control of the castle where the Crystal was kept; in its chamber they practiced their evil arts, hating each other as much as they hated the rest of the world."

Possessing all of the negative attributes of society, and none of the positive ones, the Skeksis live out a superficial existence of intrigue and plots against each other while struggling to retain their grip on Thra. They keep essence-drained Podlings as slaves, have their own personal army in the Garthim, and absolutely despise Gelflings, a race they think they have completely exterminated. There were originally eighteen Skeksis, but by the time of the Great Conjunction when they rejoined the Mystics, only eight remained. Skeksis is both singular and plural, but the plural form is pronounced 'Skek-sees'.  They say "Hmm" when they are thinking, when they are confused, and when they are fascinated (for example, when SkekSo dies).

Skeksis

As mentioned above, eighteen Skeksis existed to begin with; being formed from the evil sides of the Urskeks. Eight had died by the events of The Dark Crystal, with another two perishing during the events of the film.

The following ten Skeksis were alive during the events of the film:

The prequel series Legends of the Dark Crystal introduced four more Skekis:

The remaining Skeksis that appear in other media such as novels and graphic novels are: SkekMal the Hunter, SkekGra the Conqueror, SkekHak, SkekYi, and SkekLi the Satirist.

Creating the Skeksis

Jim Henson, Wendy Midener, Frank Oz, Irvin Kershner, Stuart Freeborn, Robert Watts, Norma Reynolds

Jim Henson and Wendy Midener demonstrate an early prototype for a Skeksis with Frank Oz, Irvin Kershner, Stuart Freeborn (who designed Yoda), Robert Watts, and Norma Reynolds during production on The Empire Strikes Back.

In The World of the Dark Crystal, Jim Henson commented that the Skeksis were based on the Seven Deadly Sins, but that since there were ten Skeksis in the movie and only seven deadly sins, they used some sins twice or simply made some sins up.

Originally the Skeksis spoke an alien language based on ancient Greek and Egyptian, specially created for them by linguist Alan Garner. Jim Henson stated, "My whole approach to this film is visual. I wanted as little dialogue as possible because I believe the story is stronger that way. Dialogue becomes a crutch. If you have all these alien-looking creatures, why should they be talking in English? An early concept was to have the Skeksis just making noises, but in a way you knew what they were saying." Gary Kurtz responded to the non-English version stating, "The audience thought that they were missing something. Actually, they didn't need to understand the Skeksis' dialogue at those points. The translation of what was being said is really quite banal. The strength of those scenes was instinctively knowing what's going on...But the Skeksis scenes were quite long. You had to concentrate. The audience wasn't prepared to do that." The response of the test audiences led to the replacement of the Skeksis language with English dialogue.

The Skeksis were full body puppets, operated in a very similar way to Big Bird: the puppeteer's secondary arm was in the arm of the skeksis, and the puppeteer's primary arm was held up over the puppeteer's head and the hand operates the jaw. A monitor inside the suit allowed the puppeteer to see what he or she was doing.

Cultural references

  • A verse of the Scissor Sisters' song "Return to Oz" makes reference to the Skeksis as a metaphor for drug-abusing rave-goers.
  • A season ten episode of South Park features a "Nanny Skexis" who sounds like the Chamberlain.
  • There is a rival god in Pocket God Facebook called SkekDodo who is very similar to Skeksis but has a dodo head.
  • The Skeksis is referenced in the Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode Wizards of the Lost Kingdom 2. It is also referenced in the Rifftrax riffs on Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, Mr. Moto Takes a Walk, Rediscovery: Puppets, and Santa Claus and the Ice Cream Bunny.