Engineered languages such as the one Chalamet speaks [in Dune, n.d.r] represent a new
benchmark in imaginative fiction. Twenty years ago, viewers would have
struggled to name franchises other than “Star Trek” or “The Lord of the
Rings” that bothered to invent new languages. Today, with the budgets of
the biggest films and series rivalling the G.D.P.s of small island
nations, constructed languages, or conlangs, are becoming a norm, if not
an implicit requirement. Breeze through entertainment from the past
decade or so, and you’ll find lingos designed for Paleolithic peoples
(“Alpha”), spell-casting witches (“Penny Dreadful”), post-apocalyptic
survivors (“Into the Badlands”), Superman’s home planet of Krypton (“Man of Steel”),
a cross-species alien alliance (“Halo”), time-travelling preteens
(“Paper Girls”), the Munja’kin tribe of Oz (“Emerald City”), and Santa
Claus and his elves (“The Christmas Chronicles” and its sequel).
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