GARROVICK: Just think, Captain, less than one ounce of antimatter here is more powerful than ten thousand cobalt bombs.
Is that the actual quote? Implying that elsewhere (on another planet with different conditions), it wouldn't be that powerful?
GARROVICK: Just think, Captain, less than one ounce of antimatter here is more powerful than ten thousand cobalt bombs.
Sadly, that's one script I don't have access to at the moment. But if the line is accurate it's colloquial English enough to not require scrutiny. "This here antimatter sure is powerful!"Is that the actual quote? Implying that elsewhere (on another planet with different conditions), it wouldn't be that powerful?
GARROVICK: Just think, Captain, less than one ounce of antimatter here is more powerful than ten thousand cobalt bombs.
Is that the actual quote? Implying that elsewhere (on another planet with different conditions), it wouldn't be that powerful?
Sadly, that's one script I don't have access to at the moment. But if the line is accurate it's colloquial English enough to not require scrutiny. "This here antimatter sure is powerful!"
The phrase certainly gets two different meanings, depening on whether we view "Obsession" alone or as part of Star Trek.
If antimatter were a known quantity and a regular ingredient in photon torpedoes and all, there would be no sense in Garrovick telling his skipper "Just think". It would be akin to him all of a sudden saying "Just think, Sir, this howlizer here is a thousand times stronger than this rifle I'm carrying" in the middle of WWII - grounds for sending him off the front lines due to debilitating insanity. How could something like that be news, or food for thought?
If the idea of using antimatter as a weapon were all-new here, and Kirk the first-ever skipper to think of it, then Garrovick's awe would make perfect sense, of course. But only if.
So if "Obsession" is to be part of Star Trek, then out-of-the-box ideas like yours are not only welcome but absolutely necessary!
Timo Saloniemi
MCCOY: It's a disease, like a virus invading the body of our galaxy.
KIRK: Yes, it is, isn't it? How many cells does the human body have?
MCCOY: Millions.
KIRK: This thing, this cell, this virus. It's eleven thousand miles long, and it's one cell. When it grows into millions, we'll be the virus invading its body.
MCCOY: Now, isn't that a thought? Here we are, antibodies of our own galaxy, attacking an invading germ. It would be ironic indeed if that were our sole destiny, wouldn't it?
KIRK: Antibodies. Antibodies. (goes to desk monitor) Bridge.
KIRK: Mister Spock was trying to tell us what to do when we lost voice contact.
SCOTT: We can't use the power to destroy it.
KIRK: Anti-power.
MCCOY: What?
KIRK: This thing has a negative energy charge. Everything seems to work in reverse. We'll use anti-matter.
SCOTT: Aye, it couldn't swallow that.
KIRK: Mister Chekov, prepare a probe. Scotty, we'll need a magnetic bottle for the charge. How soon?
SCOTT: It's on its way, sir.
Well forgetting about Kirk's encounters with mysterious energy clouds and black entities for the moment, what about all the other starship commanders who fought and survived such battles and submitted their logs too?
JB
This is what's in Nimoy's revised final draft script dated October 4, 1967:Sadly, that's one script I don't have access to at the moment. But if the line is accurate it's colloquial English enough to not require scrutiny. "This here antimatter sure is powerful!"
I wonder if the episode quote is accurate, and was there a change or did the actor just flub it and the script supe missed it.The ultimate, sir. Less thanGARROVICK
an ounce of anti-matter here...
and yet more power than ten
thousand cobalt bombs.
I'm glad that line was rewritten - it turns antimatter into something magical in scope!
I took a quick look (listen?) at that scene and it sounds like it was looped in post.I wonder if the episode quote is accurate, and was there a change or did the actor just flub it and the script supe missed it.
I took a quick look (listen?) at that scene and it sounds like it was looped in post.
I'm glad that line was rewritten - it turns antimatter into something magical in scope!
Incidentally, does that mean they plan to destroy 1/16 of the solar system?
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