Botany is plants right? She wouldn’t be allowed to have knowledge of animals.
That’s classified.
For whatever reason, I’m noticing how young Patrick Stewart looks here. I just saw him in Hamlet.
If this was such an emergency, why were they only going warp 4 until now?
This episode marks the first appearance of kanar, a Cardassian alcoholic beverage.
Indeed.
Capers are pickled flower buds. Yum, flowers.
She wouldn’t be allowed to have knowledge of animals.
That’s classified.
I wonder how biology works in this time. If they don’t kill animals for food, I doubt they do for scientific study, either.
“It’s not you I hate, Cardassian. I hate what I became because of you.”
First time I watched this I was really impressed with Meaney’s performance. I remember being so excited when he was cast on DS9.
The David Tennant Hamlet you mean? Wasn’t that incredible?
“I deeply regret what my aide has done.”
Yeah. I bet you do. :rolleyes:
Me too!
Speaking of Shakespeare, Meany worked with Stewart in King of Texas which was the King Lear story set in Texas. Great movie.
Yep.
It was great.
“When I was a kid, I worried about swatting a mosquito.”
What’s a mosquito, earthling? :rolleyes:
I’ve got to check that out.
Why did I think Capers were fish? Maybe I was thinking of the british breakfast fish: kippers (sp?)
Riker just gave Miles a look. Dang! Everyone is giving Miles the business.
“You might think I’m crazy.”
Nnnnaaaaaahhhhh.
“I can smell it.”
Good for a Frak party — either that or wait for a GWC Shakespeare arc (maybe I’ll go bumped that suggestion thread).
Good practice for being married to that shrew Keiko. :rolleyes:
Not to jump ahead (spoilers) but I just remembered how I loved the bit at the end where Picard spins his chair and turns his back on Gul Dukat.
Oh snap. A great subtle diss.
Miles telling what Maxwell will do when cornered.
No wonder Deanna shot him that look.
He’s stealing her job!
[i]The scene where O’Brien and Captain Benjamin Maxwell sing The Minstrel Boy was suggested by Michael Piller. The song tune would be used in one of O’Brien’s final scenes in Star Trek, near the end of DS9: “What You Leave Behind”.
For the production staff, the scene became one of the highlights of the episode. Rick Berman remarked, “That was a wonderful English hymn that was used in The Man Who Would Be King. I always loved it and we worked it in where O’Brien and Gunton’s character sing it together.” Likewise, Jeri Taylor commented, “There is the wonderful device of the song at the end of the episode, in which Colm Meaney really came into his own and did a wonderful job. When he and Maxwell sing that song at the end, I really just loved that moment.”[/i]