especially when they started going around in their own ships.But then future writers and producers had this hardon for it, and decided to make it an actual thing. And that's when it lost any kind of legit credibility to me
Because it was a dream, not the real Sulu. Also George Takei is old now, his voice has changed.Sulu didn't sound like Sulu.
Nothing says it wasn't at some point. It was wiped out at the End of Season 2, everyone forgot about it and it existed completely in the shadows after.No reason to rename it if nobody knows it. That was the case until Disco made it a regular branch of SI![]()
The horsey is going to bite you now.Really didn't enjoy this, plot felt flat, Sulu didn't sound like Sulu, 4/10.
That is correct!Something something the Orville?
George Takei had a guest role on a few episodes of Resident Alien which only just aired last month. His voice sounded normal there.Also George Takei is old now, his voice has changed.
lower decks has the ability to make guest actors not sound like themselves somehow.George Takei had a guest role on a few episodes of Resident Alien which only just aired last month. His voice sounded normal there.
If this is the last time George Takei appears in Star Trek, his final line will end up being "The horsey is going to bite you now."![]()
as far as we know, it was completely hidden twice (ENT, DS9), and well known twice (DIS, LDS).Nothing says it wasn't at some point. It was wiped out at the End of Season 2, everyone forgot about it and it existed completely in the shadows after.
His last line in Flashback was rather bland, IIRC.I feel like he'd be cool with that. XD
Probably whatever room they're recording in.lower decks has the ability to make guest actors not sound like themselves somehow.
Who says it's well known in LDS? The characters are always mentioning shit that no-one should technically know. I wouldn't take that as being well known, just meta/4th Wall writing.and well known twice (DIS, LDS).
Did anyone else catch the SUPER deep cut joke about "going back in time and assassinating Kennedy"? That was a HUGE reference to Gene Roddenberry's pitch for Star Trek II. In his pitch, shortly after TMP the Klingons use the Guardian of Forever to prevent Kennedy's assassination, which like with Edith Keeler, results in the world ending and the Federation never forming for...reasons? Anywho, the crew of the refit Enterprise follow the Klingons back to prevent any changes in the timeline, and Spock ends up being the guy who shot Kennedy. I'm sure the studio looked at him after that pitch and said, "...naw, we're gonna probably not gonna do that." BUT STILL, the fact that this movie pitch is referenced 40 years later is actually insanely cool, and shows just how big of fans the writers are.![]()
Interesting! I wonder if the writers of the episode were aware of this? At any rate, thanks for clearing it up!![]()
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