This is topic Your Favourite Episode... in forum General Trek at Flare Sci-Fi Forums.


To visit this topic, use this URL:
https://flare.solareclipse.net/ultimatebb.php/topic/3/1185.html

Posted by AndrewR (Member # 44) on :
 
out of these two...

"Move Along Home"
"The Muse"

------------------
"For flavor value, chocolate. But I prefer the Cult
of Curry." - Frank G, April 1999
"(strange mouth jerks)" - Krenim, April 1999

 


Posted by Sol System (Member # 30) on :
 
"Move Along Home" of course.

That rhyme will be with me for a long, long time.

------------------
"Fishing promotes a clean mind, healthy body and leaves no time for succumbing to Communistic or Socialistic propaganda."
--
Ivar Hemmings, chairman, South Bend Bait Company
 


Posted by Federation Shipmaster (Member # 15) on :
 
What was the second plot of "The Muse" again? For some reason, I have "The Muse" recorded.

------------------
What bloke invented signatures?
 


Posted by bryce (Member # 42) on :
 
Someway FOR THE UNIFORM jumps out at me or maybe that last ep. that had great moments

------------------
All Sisko needs is ANOTHER tall ship and a star to steer her by.



 


Posted by Mattrek on :
 
The Muse was about Odo and Lwaxana Troi the B plot was about Jake and some woman who was stealling is life force, but giving him good stories.

My Fav. "THE SACRIFICE OF ANGELS"/"THE SEARCH"

------------------
Star Trek RULES!
~Live Long and Prosper~
~Long Life and Happiness~
 


Posted by Mattrek on :
 
but out of those two:
"MOVE ALONG HOME"

I love that rhyme too Sol!!!

------------------
Star Trek RULES!
~Live Long and Prosper~
~Long Life and Happiness~
 


Posted by spawnie on :
 
but seriously folks...

In the Pale Moonlight was brilliant, as well as the Visitor.
 


Posted by Michael Dracon (Member # 4) on :
 
'Yesterday's Enterprise'

I just can't stop myself watching this episode again and again.

------------------
"What you leave behind is not as important as how you've lived."

- Jean Luc Picard, 'Star Trek: Generations'
 


Posted by Saltah'na (Member # 33) on :
 
Altair: Wrong series.

And yes, my favourite eps are In the Pale Moonlight, and The Visitor.

------------------
I can resist anything.......
Except Temptation
 


Posted by The359 (Member # 37) on :
 
"Far Beyond The Stars" I swear, I nearly cried, and it is HARD to get me to cry

VERY hard...

------------------
"The one, the only, THE 359!"


 


Posted by Montgomery (Member # 23) on :
 
I liked "The Muse".
Well, the bit with Jake anyway.

"Move Along Home" was rubbish.

"Far Beyond The Stars" is too good to trust the BBC for a copy of.

------------------
"Plagues extinguished, the world becomes smaller.
For a long time there is peace in empty lands.
People will walk safely by air, land, sea, waves.
Then again wars will be stirred up..."

- Nostradamus, 1568

 


Posted by Simon on :
 
Out of the two almost equally unapealling choices I would have to pick "Move Along Home" as better.

My favourite overall must be the "Improbable Cause"\"The Die is Cast" two parter.
 


Posted by Montgomery (Member # 23) on :
 
I dunno, I felt Part 1 dragged a bit.
"in the Pale Moonlight" definitely rocked.
"The Visitor", "Past Tense", "Trials & Tribble-ations" and "Sacrfice of Angels" are all cool too.

------------------
"Plagues extinguished, the world becomes smaller.
For a long time there is peace in empty lands.
People will walk safely by air, land, sea, waves.
Then again wars will be stirred up..."

- Nostradamus, 1568

 


Posted by Federation Shipmaster (Member # 15) on :
 
"Out of these two." Hear that? "Move Along Home."

------------------
What bloke invented signatures?
 


Posted by David Sands (Member # 132) on :
 
"In the Pale Moonlight" if I'm not mistaken (that's the one where Sisko gets the Romulans in the war, right?)

I like it because it exemplifies the heart of what DS9 has done for Trek. It has introduced moral ambivalence to a series that needs it to stay fresh and capable of inducing us to look at our own behavior. An issue at the heart of DS9 is the first quote in my signature. Do we take the position of pacifists and "out-of-box" thinkers and proclaim pure peace and non-violent, innovative action as the best alternative to conflict? Or do we acknowledge the obvious, and be equally humane by pulling others into a war before their naturally progressing position would have put them in? Have we saved more lives one way? Do we violate our norms of lawful protocol so much we disrupt precedent and tradition by these actions? Are either sides of this question really right or wrong? The point is that there is merit to both sides, and watching this episode forces us out of comfort to confront something we might not want to learn about ourselves, but perhaps should. Yes, I feel strongly about this, but I felt this an appropriate place to speak.

------------------
"Warfare is the greatest affair of state, the basis of life and death, the Tao to survivial or extinction. It must be thoroughly pondered and analyzed."

"...attaining one hundred victories in one hundred battles is not the pinnacle of excellence. Subjugating the enemy's army without fighting is the true pinnacle of excellence."

-Sun Tzu, The Art of War, 6th century B.C.E.

 


Posted by Michael Dracon (Member # 4) on :
 
It was worth a shot...

Seriously: 'For The Uniform' is one of my favorites too.

------------------
"Isn't Y2K year 2048?? I mean last time I checked 1K was 1024.
Now that Y1.953125K, that's where the real problem lies..."


 


Posted by Orion Syndicate (Member # 25) on :
 
1)In the Pale Moonlight
2)Far Beyond the Stars
3)The Way of the Warrior

------------------
The public is wonderfully tolerant - it forgives everything except Genius.


 


Posted by Orion Syndicate (Member # 25) on :
 
1) In the Pale Moonlight
2) Far Beyond the Stars
3) The Way of the Warrior

------------------
The public is wonderfully tolerant - it forgives everything except Genius.


 




© 1999-2024 Charles Capps

Powered by UBB.classic™ 6.7.3