when crusher said if there is nothing wrong with me, then there is something wrong with the universe.
I can't see how anyone can take seriously a clothing critique from a grey-haired man that works in an oversized pair of gymjams. (Patrick Stewart's word).
Sins of the Father, the episode that introduced us to Kurn, Duras, K'mPec and the Klingon High Council. And yes, the line is cringe-worthy. Still redundant, but better sounding, would have been "The Imperial Klingon Empire."There was a TNG episode - can't remember which one - where Picard said something like "set a course for the Klingon Imperial Empire". I wouldn't necessarily call it the worst line in Trek history, but its glaring redundancy is cringe worthy. It eludes me why a classically trained Patrick Stewart agreed to say it this way - it should have sounded weird to him too.
One of my favorite moments is where Worf suddenly strikes Duras to the ground, the shot cut to Kmpec and he is quietly nodding.(OT: I've grown to dislike the Klingons-as-Warrior-Race trope but I have to admit I do have a big ol' soft spot for K'mPec. Well-played as a pragmatic statesman working expertly in a decidedly un-pragmatic culture.
It sounds like the kind of thing that they put in movies today just so they can then put it in the trailers.I have to agree with the self-referential (bordering on cringeworthy) "and you're astronauts on some kind of...star trek!" from ST:FC.
In TMP, (a movie I love BTW) we get this exchange when Spock returns to the ship and is lying in sickbay:
Shatner: Spock
Kelley: Jim
Shatner: Bones!
That's dialogue?
There's no point in blaming Kim when it was already a cliché that had been well-established by TNG. Whenever somebody stole a shuttle, Data would report it, push a few buttons to try to stop it, and fail. Makes you wonder why they even had the option to stop it if it never, ever worked, even when performed by what had to be the fastest Ops officer in the fleet.Also more combination of a situation and dialogue. Whenever an alien manages to bypass security controls get a shuttle and mask their warp trail. The responses to the captains various orders are 'i can't', 'i've been locked out', 'they're gone'. No one ever seems astonished that trained crewmembers who were able to secure a post on an advanced starship would fuck up so royally.
It happend so frequently on Voyager and is just such horrible, lazy writing. Janeway was never like 'what the fuck Harry, you're incompetent in every fucking episode'. 'Here's a formal warning to get your shit together or you get demoted to janitor'.
There's no point in blaming Kim when it was already a cliché that had been well-established by TNG. Whenever somebody stole a shuttle, Data would report it, push a few buttons to try to stop it, and fail. Makes you wonder why they even had the option to stop it if it never, ever worked, even when performed by what had to be the fastest Ops officer in the fleet.Also more combination of a situation and dialogue. Whenever an alien manages to bypass security controls get a shuttle and mask their warp trail. The responses to the captains various orders are 'i can't', 'i've been locked out', 'they're gone'. No one ever seems astonished that trained crewmembers who were able to secure a post on an advanced starship would fuck up so royally.
It happend so frequently on Voyager and is just such horrible, lazy writing. Janeway was never like 'what the fuck Harry, you're incompetent in every fucking episode'. 'Here's a formal warning to get your shit together or you get demoted to janitor'.
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