avclub-11cde240a0ac12ba67d8b24c0ac0d875--disqus
bahamut1987
avclub-11cde240a0ac12ba67d8b24c0ac0d875--disqus

Huh, I had always heard it as the antagonists were originally going to be Romulan, and they just changed it to Klingons later, but kept the ship name and cloaking ability. Learned something new today.

DON'T DATE ROBOTS!

I guess Bill Ross was good for that too.

For all his obvious evilness, everything that Fischer (Hodgman) says to Patterson appears to be true. I thought, as @Kumagoro:disqus did, that the lab scene was a chance to show he did have some heart and rescind the suspension while remaining an antagonist, but he surprised me by doubling down on the dickishness. I

What I didn't remember was that Jane also shot the screamy leader, so she took down three of them, Weller got one, and Reade and Zapata tag-teamed the last guy, all while still tied up. Reade just slammed the guard with his entire body, then Zapata kicked him in the face and then kneeled directly on his neck. If you

Having already seen both, and Marnie in Japanese even, I am completely fine with that outcome. It would've been different if Princess Kaguya had been up last year.

From what I could see, Jane slipped her zipties, pulled a pistol from one guard's holster, and shot the executioner with the big-ass knife. Weller than stood up, still tied to the chair, and used the combined weight to smash another guard into the wall. Having neutralized the first guard, Jane picked up the big-ass

Not true. Zapata got to wear that nice shirt in the field (while I would be worried about hot brass falling down the front of it), and Reade was in a particularly spiffy suit when he was leaving work for the day.

As happy as I was to see Statler and Waldorf again, I was immediately disappointed to see they were just there to make another joke about being old, instead of saying something mean about anybody else at all.

Aw, don't forget that small town landlady's daughter who was only there to sleep with Hiddleston following their third brief encounter, then discover evidence of the "murder" at the rented house.

Rewatched that one recently. On the disc extras, it mentions how hard the actor found his lines to recite precisely because of how repugnant they were to him.

Not just any white guy, that was Admiral Robocop!

Poor Lt. Carey; everyone always forgets about him. Especially Janeway.

Hey, the Kahless Doctrine just encapsulated their natural right to impose order on all societies within their sphere of influence. It was necessary to hold the line against the spread of Federationism throughout the quadrant.

Federation station, yes, but likely in free space, as traders and Klingon battlecruisers were allowed to come and go as they pleased. I get the sense that the Federation would have been awarded the system under the Organian Treaty if they had won the development competition.

Enterprise just did a cute, though pretty-scary epilogue to First Contact, and IIRC, at the end of the episode Starfleet was unsure if the signal the weird cybernetic aliens sent into deep space would reach its destination. Nowhere near the clusterfuck that Voyager made of the Borg story.

You do realize that it came into fashion and left again about fourteen times between 1987 and 2364?

Living beings require quantum-level digitization in the transporter, while replicators build objects only at the molecular level. I assume that would require exponentially less storage for the patterns.

Now there's a hoopy frood who knows where his towel is.

Spelled correctly, and even the "ramscoop" variation is acceptable parlance. Good memory.