My personal 'in-continuity' explanation for the pink Klingon blood is radiation from Praxis. Normal Klingon blood is the dark, almost black blood like we see on the knife blade when Gowron restores Worf's honor in 'Redemption' part one.
McCoy not knowing Klingon physiology; it was nice for the drama, but I think he would've known a little more about Klingon anatomy. He scanned Darvin in the tribble episode. Also, I'm sure there was data from Phlox from the Klingon arc to draw from.
Paper? When was that?-If this was the future, why is paper still being used to demonstrate things during a conference? Huh?
Oooooh, you must have the old Collectors version or something- I have the newly remastered THEATRICAL version! It doesn't contain that scene or the Scooby ending with the rubber mask.
And the transfer is STELLAR!!!![]()
I could not stand Valeris. I didn't like her character, I didn't like the actress, I didn't like the actress' voice or body language, and I especially didn't like her stupid hair style or her REALLY stupid metal hairband!As was stated before Valeris did have that neon sign above her smarmy head blinking suspicious! possibly traitor! I don't know if Saavik would have been less suspicious in that script. Possibly.
That scene was strictly for comic relief. If it was meant to be serious, why would Uhura be using old books that looked they'd been dug up from a 20th century archaeological site?I thought Uhura was the linguist specialist. Why did she have trouble speaking and understanding Klingon? Did I miss something? Man, that scene could have been revamped. It seemed out of place.
It was about bloody damn TIME they showed Sulu on his own ship. I also liked the interaction between Sulu and the crewman played by Christian Slater. Slater seemed to fit in very well in a Star Trek movie.Good for Sulu finally making captain and getting his own ship, though I was a little sad that he wasn't on the Enterprise with the rest of the crew.
-Is that Christian Slater?? So young!
Michael Dorn, the actor who ate both TNG, DS9, AND part of this movie! Sheesh, if they'd been able to think of a way to get Worf into the Delta Quadrant, he would have eaten Voyager, too!Michael Dorn! You can recognize that voice anywhere.
That was a nice touch.Oh and the sign off at the end was really neat, and sad![]()
I have a theory as to why Nanclus was present for the Operation Retrieve briefing; he's part of the conspiracy, as is Colonel West, and was in on the development of Operation Retrieve from the beginning. He stuck around because it was in his best interests as a conspirator to do so, and Colonel West, already knowing him from the conspiracy, let him stay. West might have even suggested as much to Admiral Stillie offscreen(although that part is non-canon).
I have a theory as to why Nanclus was present for the Operation Retrieve briefing; he's part of the conspiracy, as is Colonel West, and was in on the development of Operation Retrieve from the beginning. He stuck around because it was in his best interests as a conspirator to do so, and Colonel West, already knowing him from the conspiracy, let him stay. West might have even suggested as much to Admiral Stillie offscreen(although that part is non-canon).
The problem with this is, the Federation President is not in on the conspiracy (what with him being amongst their targets), and if nothing else, he would not rationally allow the ambassador of a hostile foreign power to sit in on a classified discussion of the option of invading the Klingon Empire. If West and Nanclus wanted him to be able to stay, they would have needed a plausible excuse -- but there simply is none.
It would be like the United States allowing the East German Ambassador to sit in on a briefing in the Oval Office on a plan to invade the Soviet Union.
Humans, Vulcans, Klingons, & Romulans conspiring together to ensure that they remain enemies. I know that war makes strange bedfellows but seriously?
If the Starfleet conspirators wanted to keep up the war with the Klingons, then they didn't need Klingon help. There are a million things Admiral Joe Sisko could have done to incite hatred of the Klingons in the public opinion--and it's important to remember that the conspirators should have been doing this to enflame public opinion, not to generate evidence that would stand up in a court of law.
I mean, look at the actual conspiracy. Chang doesn't need Valeris or Starfleet personnel or altered data banks. People on Kronos are going to see that their chancellor's battlecruiser was attacked brutally and without provocation by a Starfleet vessel. It doesn't even need to be the Enterprise. Any Starfleet ship will do. No one in the Klingon Empire is going to believe Starfleet when they say the paper trail doesn't match! No one knows about the cloaked bird of prey. Using Starfleet conspirators is just a waste of time and an operational security liability.
Alternatively, Chang could just blow up Earth or Vulcan or both, because he was a ship armed with antimatter bombs and a cloaking device. But whatever.
On Starfleet's side, a bomb on the Enterprise might have sufficed to encite public opinion against the Klingons. The Enterprise is destroyed next to the Kronos One. No records survive from the Enterprise, and all the Klingons have are records from Kronos One, which no one in the Federation will believe in, any more than Klingons would believe records from the Enterprise or Starfleet. The only problem here is one of motive. If they wanted to utilize Kirk's antipathy toward Klingons, and didn't want to lose a starship, I suspect they could have found a way to fire from the Enterprise, bypassing bridge controls. In either case, Klingon involvement is neither needed nor desireable.
Sounds like they should have had a consultant from Ferenginar on call...Klingons want war, and Starfleet didn't want to be dismantled. And both sides probably made a big profit from the long period of cold war they were in. It's not so much about wanting the war as a price, it's about the war being the price for their profit. Someone in the Klingon empire profits from Gorkon's and Azetbur's death, someone in the Federation profits from the President's death.Humans, Vulcans, Klingons, & Romulans conspiring together to ensure that they remain enemies. I know that war makes strange bedfellows but seriously?
It was funny when Spock said it. With Data, it was just a Spock-wannabe line (to me, that is).One of my favorite things about TUC is at the end when Spock says "If I were human, I believe my response would be "Go to hell",... if I were human". It actually made me think of that line when, in First Contact, Data says "I think I speak for everyone, sir, when I say, to hell with our orders."
It was funny when Spock said it. With Data, it was just a Spock-wannabe line (to me, that is).
Spock playing Sherlock Holmes. (This becomes especially evident if you've read Nicholas Meyer's Holmes novels--and you should read them--"The Seven Percent Solution" & "The West End Horror.")
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