Yep. One of the Klingons said it was after too many soldiers were maimed and killed during a training under an emperor centuries earlier. It was in the Voyager episode where they proclaimed B'Elanna baby a savior.
1. It may not have been the Enterprise,but just a "model" galaxy class starship, as the lab had a logo of the class as a whole.
I don't care if that was a practical answer from Worf or not. That exchange of lines is pricelessThis was the episode where they talked about ships in bottles, right? The capt. and O'Brien knew about them. Worf and Geordi didn't. They had these lines.
Worf: I did not play with toys.
Data: I was never a boy.
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I don't care if that was a practical answer from Worf or not. That exchange of lines is priceless![]()
Klingons had a version with dull edges.
"Number One, make sure that booby trap doesn't bother anyone again."
Can't say that I can intelligently comment on the desk model used in the ep except to say that IIRC it was an early test shot of the Ent-D from AMT/Ertl without the final surface engraving. Got nuthin' on the individual parts or proportions. - RCalling Mr. Sternbach!
I think the nacelle supports were a bit taller on that model.
Things I liked about this episode:
The title.
Ron Jones score, particularly the parts homaging Jerry Goldsmith's score for Patton.
Picard says booby.
Another amusing thing was the way Picard pronounced aeroplane as if it was something truly alien and otherworldly to them.
True. I accepted that such a thing could exist because I equated it with something like the piezoelectric effect. But you bring up a good point.The one thing that bugged me about this episode, were the "assimilators". When an asteroid is hit with a phaser blast, it gets stronger, what? That kind of assimilator tech would be nice to have covering any ship, enemy fires at you and you say: "Thank you for the extra power. We stored that energy and now we'll use it to destroy you."
Odd things.
Picard says that the Promelian ship they find should be in a museum and sets up something for that at the start of the episode. Then destroys the whole ship at the end of the episode. Did he have a brain meltdown? The problem was the generators scattered in the asteroid and debris field not that ship. Why the bloody hell blow it up?
I always hated it that Picard ordered the ship destroyed. I understand why he did it but there were other options. Warning buoys, for example. Once Starfleet was notified, that information could have bee sent to every known alpha quadrant planet. To blow up the ship really irritates the archaeology buff in me. Completely wasteful
And by "tosses aside" you mean gently places it on the carpeted floor next to him?First Picard destroys that artifact he wants to put in a museum, then he tosses aisde the pricesless artifact his dead friend gave him.
I find it weird that a phaser blast increases the power of the assimilators. If that kind of tech is possible, why don't everybody use assimilators in their shields, when enemy fires, you would just get a power boost...
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