Of course, Kruge was a kill happy psychopath, but he did seem a little sad at killing his wife, but only a little.
He seemed more upset about his dog. This probably says more about his relationship than killing her does.
Of course, Kruge was a kill happy psychopath, but he did seem a little sad at killing his wife, but only a little.
WTF was Kruge expecting?![]()
It's more accurate for Klaa. Kruge was more a feudal lord, it explains why he had enough impunity to be this tyrannic loose cannon.Kruge was only a commander of some tiny Bird of Prey vessel - he obviously wanted a promotion and a K'tinga class ship. Bringing back something like Genesis to the Klingon empire would assure this.
The Federation can be really zealous about secret matters. If Spock risked death penalty for going to Talos, there's surely no shame for a Klingon or Romulan officer to execute his/her own lover.For starters, he kills his very lovely, statuesque lover for looking at Kirk's report. When Kruge watches it, himself, we find that the report is unrevealing, though he doesn't actually say so. The report offers no coordinates to the Genesis Planet, no indication of how it was arrived at ... Nothing worth killing his piece of crumpet over, surely. Oopsie!
Kirk talked about prisoners, not hostages. It was Worf who made a statement about hostages. Kirk was surely only talking for space battles, otherwise it would contradict Errand of Mercy. It explains why Kruge's gunner destroyed the Grissom, he was not used to simply neutralize a ship.Kruge takes hostages, which according to STAR TREK II, never happens and what does he start doing?
Ha! Ha! Ha! I love the trademark action!STIII was awesome. Kruge was awesome. ... He made Kirk mad enough to blow up the f*ing Starship Enterprise®.
WTF was Kruge expecting?![]()
He was playing a game of strategy, thinking that Kirk would act to preserve his life and would therefore be forced to reveal what he knew.
I did think Kruge killing his wife seemed like, well, overkill. Did he not trust her? Could he not have taken her into protective custody until his mission was complete?
Of course, Kruge was a kill happy psychopath, but he did seem a little sad at killing his wife, but only a little.
As for killing Valkris....the merchant vessel would've gotten suspicious if she transported out, and would've had time to raise shields or send a message out. So I think that's why she had to die (from Kruge's perspective).
WTF was Kruge expecting?![]()
He was playing a game of strategy, thinking that Kirk would act to preserve his life and would therefore be forced to reveal what he knew.
And how did Kruge plan to store the information revealed by Kirk?!?!
Take out an organizer and start writing?
(Kirk: "Protomatter" Kruge: "Hold on, that's too fast. How you spell that?" [writes down] "P-R-O-T-O-M-A-T-T-E-R, correct?)
Before the time he'd be done the whole planet would have exploded. The way Kruge was acting, it's no wonder Q referred to a member of the Klingon race as "microbrain"
Bob
I always thought Kruge killed Valkris so that he could take all the credit himself for finding Genesis. If Valkris had managed to make it back home before he did, she could have used Genesis to enhance her own power and standing within the Empire.
Only if you don't count Klingons as "people", since V'ger wiped out three shiploads of them, plus Epsilon Nine....Kruge was awesome. He wanted to kill everybody and everything and all the time it seemed he could do it...He killed more people than VGer, Khan, the whale probe, Klaa and Chang's gang put together.
Only if you don't count Klingons as "people", since V'ger wiped out three shiploads of them, plus Epsilon Nine....Kruge was awesome. He wanted to kill everybody and everything and all the time it seemed he could do it...He killed more people than VGer, Khan, the whale probe, Klaa and Chang's gang put together.
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