it's actually quite impressive....
My doctor can't even program a clock radio.
Neither can mine, he's never been on time in his life.
it's actually quite impressive....
My doctor can't even program a clock radio.
90 percent of Star Trek Dialog was ridiculous if it involved physics, anything technical or otherwise scientific. It was largely written by writers skilled in writing (debatable at times), not science. The beauty of Star Trek is that whenever you got in trouble with the laws of science or otherwise, you could correct with a good time travel episode.![]()
As Janeway and B'Nanna were trying to figure out what was wrong with the engines (or something like that - who cares?), they suddenly leapt up in the air in delight and shouted "War particles! WARP particles!" like two little girls discovering they both liked Bobby Sherman.
Not only a ridiculous line, but embarassing, and yet another addition to the "particle of the week" trend.
Or like when make up new elements as they go like: "Hey, it's not trilithium it's paralihtium, but that can me modified to make trilithium...
Or when they make up new ways of moving through space for the sake of one episode and never talk about this ever again!!
PARIS: Captain, it looks like that ship is being powered by a coaxial warp drive.
CHAKOTAY: Coaxial what?
PARIS: It's a hypothetical propulsion system. Starfleet engineers have been dreaming about it for years. In theory, it can literally fold the fabric of space allowing a ship to travel instantaneously across huge distances.
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My favorite bit of ridiculous dialogue was a clunky line from Wrath of Khan:
"I CANNOT and WILL NOT subscribe to your interpretation of this event."
No one talks like that. Come on, Nick.![]()
My favorite bit of ridiculous dialogue was a clunky line from Wrath of Khan:
"I CANNOT and WILL NOT subscribe to your interpretation of this event."
No one talks like that. Come on, Nick.![]()
LORE
Suggest moving fast to confirm what I told it, sir. Permission to use the large transporter in Cargo Room Three? There I can beam out some living pattern, perhaps a large tree...
RIKER
Which you'll beam over next to the entity...
LORE
You are correct, Riker.
(to Picard)
Our ship's phasers will then blast and disintegrate it... proving we're dangerous.
PICARD
Make it so!
Basically.My favorite bit of ridiculous dialogue was a clunky line from Wrath of Khan:
"I CANNOT and WILL NOT subscribe to your interpretation of this event."
No one talks like that. Come on, Nick.![]()
"Why, why it's Mister..."
Who talks like that?
Picard: I know Hamlet. And what he might said with irony, I say with conviction. What a piece of work is man. How noble in reason. How infinite in faculty. In form, in moving, how express and admirable. In action, how like an angel. In apprehension, how like a god.
Q: Surely you don't really see your species like that, do you?
PICARD: I see us one day becoming that, Q. Is it that what concerns you?
Not only the most ridiculous, but also incredibly insensitive. It's one thing to stand by your own species and proclaim that we're not as bad as others make us out to be, but this exchange is completely at odds with the 'pro unity' nature of Starfleet's mission. Picard is running a ship that has full blooded alien crew members onboard and here he is declaring to an omnipotent being that humanity, and only humanity will become like angels and gods that they would scare the whole Q continuum.
It's exchanges like this that makes the whole "humanity has solved all of it's problems" premise irritating and uncomfortable. For a show that tries to depict a humanity that's pro-unity with the rest of the galaxy, this was the worst way to go about it.
No actual aliens' feelings were hurt in the making of this episode.Not only the most ridiculous, but also incredibly insensitive.
and where does Picard say other species might not also achieve that?
Wow. We're being PC to cater to entities that don't actually exist?
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