Subjective & unsupported.It's a bad movie, Dude.
But thanks just the same.

Subjective & unsupported.It's a bad movie, Dude.
I recall a TNG episode which contradicted this. Data and Georgi talked about how Data sunk to the bottom of a lake or river because he didn't have the buoyancy to float to the surface.- Data as a floatation device?They have since fixed that, didn't you get the memo?
Subjective & unsupported.It's a bad movie, Dude.
But thanks just the same.![]()
Subjective & unsupported.It's a bad movie, Dude.
But thanks just the same.![]()
Since you seem to ignore the concrete, subjective and unsupported is all that's left...
I don't ignore the concrete; I use it to smash sense into you.Since you seem to ignore the concrete, subjective and unsupported is all that's left...
I want our crew to have a major stake in the events of their story.
You'll have to forgive Chrisisall. He's quite ...how shall I say ... young![]()
I appreciate its slower pacing, something that there needs to be more of in films as everything is so crash bang whollop.
Maybe. I, for one, was happy they were going to get away from the slam-bang action, and with Piller writing the script I expected a deeper character piece, but I was disappointed.I know they were going for a more toned down civil film but after the excitement of FC I can imagine it was a big let down for many cinemagoers.
I'm still not getting how you folks figure FC is slam bang action. There is practically no action in the movie. Frakes took a page from how much of Cameron's ALIENS went unseen or barely glimpsed, but he didn't balance that with the big showy stuff, like Ripley's rescue of the trapped marines. What passes for a big sequence in FC is that slow spacewalk on the hull, with Patrick Stewart turning into Mary Martin for that pathetic spin jump over the dish.
"Slam-bang" is the way Rick Berman described it.I'm still not getting how you folks figure FC is slam bang action.
we Americans had every right to move the "Native" Americans off their land because their ancestors actually came across the land bridge from Asia.
we Americans had every right to move the "Native" Americans off their land because their ancestors actually came across the land bridge from Asia.![]()
We cool then.Look, I'm not condoning that point of view
The lack of clarity on this issue is rather disturbing to me.
The lack of clarity on this issue is rather disturbing to me.
Lack of Clarity?
- This is really just simple math and eminent domain at work.
Insurrection fails because it is a silly moral dilemma at the heart of the story and the Ba'ku are really unlikeable. And there are just holes all over the story... I mean it's like swiss cheese.
Why hide a cloaked ship on the ground (within walking distance of the Ba'ku villiage) that has fourteen transporters? Since you have to beam them aboard anyway, do it from orbit. You can beam up eighty-four people at a time, at roughly a minute to transport... you can beam up six hundred people in under eight minutes. Sensors should have been able to re-create the Ba'ku villiage, so no real need for a duck-blind to observe. You're not planning on studying them, not planning a 'First Contact' mission.
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