Data: Spot! Troi: Data? Are you all right? Data: I am happy to see Spot, yet I am crying! Perhaps the chip is malfunctioning. Troi: I think it's working perfectly.
出自電影《星空奇遇 7 : 星空奇兵》 的經典對白。
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Kirk: Congratulations, Ensign. It wouldn't be the Enterprise without a Sulu at the helm.
Kirk: Risk is part of the game if you want to sit in that chair.
Dr. Soran: Actually, I am familiar with history, Captain. And if I'm not too much mistaken, you're dead.
B'Etor: I hope, for your sake, that you were initiating a mating ritual.
Dr. Soran: Now, if you'll have to excuse me, Captain. I have an appointment with eternity and I don't want to be late.
Picard: Sometimes it takes courage to try, Data. And courage can be an emotion too.
Dr. Soran: Now if you don't mind, I'm rather busy.
B'Etor: Ugh! Human females are so repulsive.
Picard: If there is one thing I have learned over the years is never underestimate a Klingon.
Picard: The best thing about life at sea, Will, was that no one could reach you. This was freedom, Will.
Kirk: Congratulations, Ensign. It wouldn't be the Enterprise without a Sulu at the helm.
Kirk: Risk is part of the game if you want to sit in that chair.
Data: Oh, shit.
Dr. Soran: Actually, I am familiar with history, Captain. And if I'm not too much mistaken, you're dead.
Dr. Soran: Now, if you'll have to excuse me, Captain. I have an appointment with eternity and I don't want to be late.
Dr. Soran: Now if you don't mind, I'm rather busy.
B'Etor: I hope, for your sake, that you were initiating a mating ritual.
Picard: Sometimes it takes courage to try, Data. And courage can be an emotion too.
B'Etor: Ugh! Human females are so repulsive.
Picard: If there is one thing I have learned over the years is never underestimate a Klingon.
Picard: The best thing about life at sea, Will, was that no one could reach you. This was freedom, Will.
Kirk: You left spacedock without a tractor beam? Harriman: It won't be installed until Tuesday.
Picard: What you're about to do, Soran, is no different from when the Borg destroyed your world. They killed millions too. Including your wife, your children. Dr. Soran: Nice try. You know there was a time that I wouldn't hurt a fly. Then the Borg came, and they showed me that if there is one constant in this whole universe, it's death. Afterwards, I began to realize that it didn't really matter. We're all going to die sometime. It's just a question of how and when. You will too, Captain. Aren't you beginning to feel time gaining on you? Dr. Soran: It's like a predator; it's stalking you. Oh, you can try and outrun it with doctors, medicines, new technologies. But in the end, time is going to hunt you down... and make the kill. Picard: It's our mortality that defines us, Soran. It's part of the truth of our existence. Dr. Soran: What if I told you I found a new truth? Picard: The Nexus? Dr. Soran: Time has no meaning there. The predator has no teeth.
Riker: I'm going to miss this ship; she went before her time. Picard: Someone once told me that time was a predator that stalked us all our lives. But I rather believe than time is a companion who goes with us on the journey, and reminds us to cherish every moment because they'll never come again. What we leave behind is not as important how we lived. After all, Number One, we're only mortal. Riker: Speak for yourself, sir. I plan to live forever.
Riker: I always thought I'd get a shot at this chair one day. Picard: Perhaps you still will... somehow I doubt this will be the last ship to carry the name "Enterprise". Picard: Picard to Farragut, two to beam up.
Dr. Soran: Have you ever considered a prosthesis that would make you look a little more... how can I say... more normal? Geordi: What's normal? Dr. Soran: "What's normal?" Well, that's a good question. Normal is what everyone else is and you are not.
Data: I get it! I get it! When you said "The clown can stay, but the Ferengi in the gorilla suit has to go!" Geordi: Data, what are you talking about? Data: During the Farpoint mission; we were on the bridge, you told a joke, that was the punchline! Geordi: The Farpoint mission? Data, that was seven years ago. Data: I know! I just got it! Very funny!
Scotty: Finding retirement a little lonely, are we? Kirk: You know, I'm glad you're an engineer. With tact like that, you'd make a lousy psychiatrist.
Data: Spot! Troi: Data? Are you all right? Data: I am happy to see Spot, yet I am crying! Perhaps the chip is malfunctioning. Troi: I think it's working perfectly.
Kirk: I thought you were headed for the launcher. Picard: I changed my mind; Captain's prerogative!
Dr. Soran: Welcome, Captain. You must think I'm quite the madman. Picard: The thought had crossed my mind.
Dr. Soran: Just who the hell are you? Picard: He's James T. Kirk. Don't you read history?
Data: I would be happy to, sir. I just *love* scanning for lifeforms! Data: Lifeforms! You tiny little lifeforms! You precious little lifeforms! Where are you?
Chekov: How big is your medical staff? Harriman: The medical staff?... Doesn't arrive until Tuesday. Chekov: Udivitel'no! Chekov: You and you, you've just become nurses. Let's go.
Picard: You never met my brother and his wife, did you? Troi: No. Picard: Robert. So opinionated. So pompous and arrogant. He always had to have the last word. But he-he mellowed a little bit in the last few years. I was going to get together with them all next month on Earth. I thought we'd go to San Francisco. Rene's always wanted to see Starfleet Academy. Troi: Rene? Troi: Oh! Your nephew. Picard: Yes. He's, uh... he's so unlike his father. He's a dreamer, imaginative. Picard: He's so very gentle. Troi: What's happened? Picard: Robert and Rene, they're... burned to death in a fire. Troi: I'm sorry. Picard: It's all right. It's all right. These things happen. Troi: Captain, it's not all right. Picard: I can't help thinking about... about all the experiences that Rene's not gonna have, about going to the Academy, reading books and listening to music and falling in love, building a life. Picard: Well, that's not going to happen now. Troi: I didn't realize he meant so much to you. Picard: I'd come to feel that Rene was as close as I would get to having a child of my own. Troi: Your family history is very important to you, isn't it? Picard: What? Oh. From being a small child, I can remember being told about the family line. The Picard who fought at Trafalgar. The Picard who won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry. The Picards who settled the first Martian colonies. And when Robert married and he had a son, I... Troi: You felt it was no longer your responsibility to carry on the family line.
Picard: You don't have to do this, Soran. I'm sure we can find another way of getting you into this Nexus. Dr. Soran: I've spent 80 years looking for another way. Believe me, this is the only one.
Picard: Now, can you project the course of the ribbon? Data: I believe so. Picard: Enhance grid 9-A. Where was the Amargosa star? Picard: Now, you said that when the Amargosa star was destroyed, it affected the gravitational forces in this sector. Now, did the computer take that into account when it projected the course of the ribbon? Data: No, sir. I will make the appropriate adjustments. Picard: That's what Soran's doing. He's changing the course of the ribbon. But why? Why would... why would he try to change its path? Why doesn't he just fly into it with a ship? Data: Our records show that every ship which has approached the ribbon has either been destroyed or severely damaged. Picard: He can't get to the ribbon, so he's trying to make the ribbon come to him. Data, does it pass near to any Class-M planets? Data: Yes, sir. There are two in the Veridian system. Picard: Well, it gets close to Veridian III, but not close enough. Data, what would happen to the ribbon's course if Soran destroyed the Veridian star itself? Picard: That's where he's going. Data: It should be noted, sir, that the collapse of the Veridian star would produce a shock wave similar to the one we observed at Amargosa. Picard: Destroying all the planets in this system. Data: Veridian III is uninhabited. However, Veridian IV supports a pre-industrial humanoid society. Picard: Population? Data: 230 million, sir. Picard: Picard to bridge. Worf: Worf here, sir. Picard: Set a course for the Veridian system, maximum warp.
Picard: Just imagine what it was like. No engines, no computers, just the wind and the sea and the stars to guide you. Riker: Bad food, brutal discipline. No women.
Picard's Kid: Papa, help me build my castle. Picard: Yes, I will in a few minutes. Picard's Kid: Papa, thank you for the dolly. Picard's Kid: She's very beautiful. Picard: These are my children. Picard: These are my children. Guinan: Of course. Time has no meaning here, so you can go back and see them born or go forward and see your grandchildren.
Data: I am sorry I let you down. I have not been behaving like myself lately. Geordi: No, Data, you haven't. You've been behaving like a human.


