Friday, 5 November 2021

The Duke Paul


The Duke Paul
of House Atreides of Caledan




ATREIDES!

ATREIDES!

ATREIDES!

ATREIDES!

ATREIDES!

i







 





"In MY Version, The Duke Leto... he is a castrato --- castrated

[ from Bull-Fighting, having been gored by The Beast of The Labyrinth of The King Minos. ] ​

And Then -- 

HOW He Will Do, A Son?

And Then, His Wife...

a MARVELOUS Woman, 

a WISE Woman... 

and The Guy have A Love, A Cosmic Love when He see This Woman. 

And how He will make A Child? 


And she take a drop of His Blood... 

and She CHANGE The Blood into Semen... 

and then we see The Drop of Blood going inside The Vagina, The Uterus... 

and we will follow The Blood... 

The Blood coming and go inside The Ovum and explodes there. 


She get pregnant with 

A Drop of Blood. 

That's What I Did. 


What will have if You are NOT The Son of a Sexual Pleasure, but of A SPIRITUAL Pleasure? 

And from This Spiritual Love, 

He Will create PAUL. 


Paul was A Young Boy... 

but is not 

A NORMAL Boy. 

Was A Mutant. 

With A Big Soul and Strength. 

Where I will find That Boy....? 

My Son



El Topo

"Today You are 7 Years Old -- 

Now You are A Man  : 

Bury Your First Toy 

and Your Mother's Picture." 


I work with him in El Topo, 

now he have 12 year old. 

I say, "You Will make Paul, 

but You need to prepare as A Warrior.

 

Brontis Jodorowsky :

"So he said one day, we're going to make Dune, and you're going to play The Part of Paul, and....

You're Going to Have to Prepare."


I prepare My Son, to do The Role exactly as The Duke Leto prepare His Son. 

 

Brontis Jodorowsky :

So here, he is going to have to learn Karate, and make acrobatics, and....

Your Mind has to develop, a LOT --

You know, he wanted me to 

BE The Character.

 

I find A Teacher for Him. 

I have A Very STRONG person... 

Jean-Pierre Vignau. 


Jean-Pierre

"When We started, He was 12. 

There I trained Him in Karate, Karate Jujitsu, Japanese style. 

That's all the fist-foot techniques, joint locks, floor pins, standing pins,  

a combination of Karate, Judo, Aikido and Atemi-Jitsu."


He learn How to Fight with : 

His Hands; with Knife; 

with Swords -- 

He learn ALL that. 

And he was READY to do Paul 

as A Real "Paul." 



Jean-Pierre :

"I trained Brontis six hours a day, seven days a week for two years. "

 

Brontis Jodorowsky :

 That was PAINFUL

and Jean-Pierre, he has No Mercy. 

No, really -- we worked to get ahead, no mercy.


And all the person say to me, 

"But What You Did?

But WHY You are Trying 

to Change The Mind of [A] Child and to make 

A Superior Person?


I say, "No, I was only awakening The Creativity." 

I open His Mind. 

That's What I Was Doing. 


I don't know if I change His Life..... 

NOW, I am Thinking, 

"Why I DID That? Sacrifice My Son." 


But in that time, I say, "If I Need to Cut My Arms [off] in order to make That Picture, I Will Cut My Arms -- I Will DO It.

I was believing that to make A Picture, who will Give A Mutation to The Young Minds... was Sacred. 

You NEED to Sacrifice Yourself. 

I was even ready to die doing that.




“ Gerard Way, the lead singer of the band My Chemical Romance, was a very different kind of entertainer, a New Jersey art-punk rocker who’d been an intern at Vertigo back in the days of The Invisibles and a fan of my Doom Patrol run, although we’d never crossed paths.



In mid-2006, with Final Crisis on my mind, I caught the video for his band’s song “Welcome to the Black Parade,” a searing slice of punk psychedelia I was primed to like anyway. What really made me sit up were the outfits the band was wearing.

 

  Dressed in black-and-white marching band uniforms as they led a procession of sexy walking dead through a bombed-out city, My Chemical Romance looked like a glamorous postmortem Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. They had fused the images of two opposites — the tough soldier and the frail emo kid — to create an image of what was to come. Nor was the sound morbid or dark; it was triumphal, chiming, imperial rock. The new psychedelia would learn to make friends with Darkness. It would come from the Goth and alternative frontiers of the last twenty years into the mainstream, laughing at cancer as it put a beat to the Dance of the Dead and began to have fun again, however dark that fun might seem to grown-ups.

 

  That fall, I listened to The Black Parade over and over and over again, to inspire cosmic mortuary scenes for Final Crisis and Batman’s mental breakdown. MCR had shown me a picture of the new superhero, posttraumatic, postwar, the hero with nothing left to believe in. The supersoldier was home from the front, jumping every time a car backfired, staring at his hands.

 

  Neil Gaiman put me in touch with Gerard, and we met in Glasgow before a gig, forming an instant connection. He led a new young generation of musicians who had grown up with superhero comics and had no qualms about saying so. He walked the walk too, with Umbrella Academy, his own award-winning re-creation of the superhero formula with artist Gabriel Ba. It was a kaleidoscopic tour de force. There was no shaky start, no cramming of balloons with words (a common tyro error), and none of the familiar missteps that dogged so many other celebrity-fan forays into the comics biz. Umbrella Academy was the end result of years of reading and thinking about superheroes and science fiction: Funny, scary, cerebral, arty, and violent all at the same time, it harvested all the fruits of Gerard’s own “iconography tree.” The heroes of Umbrella Academy were a group of outsider kids who grew up to be the world’s greatest superheroes. It was the story of his band. It was my story too. It was a premonition of where we were all headed.

 

  These days, it’s no longer enough to be a star or even a superstar. Today even the most slender and ephemeral talents are routinely described as “legends.” There’s no need to slay ten-story sea beasts, endure complex and life-threatening quests or epic military campaigns: Simply release a couple of dodgy records or do some stand-up, and you too will be elevated to the ranks of the mythical King Arthur, heroic Lemminkainen, or mighty Odysseus. You too will become legend.

 

  With our superlatives and honorifics devalued so that star, legend, and genius will suffice as descriptors for any old cod with half a good idea he stole from someone else, what lies next on the upward trajectory of human self-regard from star to superstar to legend?  

 

Once upon a time, a star was an individual of exceptional sporting, musical, or acting talent. 

 

Then it became every child who could grip a crayon and scrawl a daisy for Mother’s Day. 

 

When we all became stars, stars became superstars to keep things straight, but they were swimming against the tide. In a time of Facebook and Twitter, where everyone has a fan page, when the concept of “genius” has been extended to include anyone who can produce a half-competent piece of art or writing, where is there left to go but all the way? 

 

We may as well crown ourselves kings of creation. Why not become superheroes? Supergods, in fact. Isn’t it what we’ve always known we’d have to do in the end? Nobody was ever going to come from the sky to save us. No Justice League; Just Us League.

 

  Back in 1940, Ma Hunkel, the Red Tornado, was the first attempt to depict a “real-life” superhero in comics. Not a spaceman from Krypton, not a billionaire playboy with a grudge, Ma had no powers except for her formidable washerwoman build. She wore a homemade costume to dish out local justice in the stairwells and alleyways of the Lower East Side in some aboriginal memory of the early DC universe.

 

  She was joined by characters like Wildcat, the Black Canary, the Mighty Atom, the Sandman, and other tough but good-hearted vigilante crime fighters who took to the mean streets in nothing but their underwear. They had no special powers, just fists, and an attitude — at best, a gun that shot darts or gas or bees.

 

  Seventy years after Ma Hunkel, sixteen-year-old Dave Lizewski, the hero of Mark Millar and John Romita Jr.’s Kick-Ass, asked the question “WHY DOES EVERYONE WANT TO BE PARIS HILTON BUT NOBODY WANTS TO BE A SUPERHERO?” Leaving aside the cynical response that nobody in their right minds wanted to be Paris Hilton, Dave’s question had already been answered by a handful of brave souls, real people in the real world who dress up in capes and masks to patrol the streets and keep people safe. You can read all about them online if you type “real world superheroes” into a search engine. They even have their own registry, like Civil War veterans who fought on Iron Man’s side.

 

  The TV and film hopefuls, the half-baked actors, are easy to spot. But to the others, fierce behind homemade masks and hoods and helmets, the superhero’s calling is as important as religion, or at least as important as the youth cult demographic you conformed to at school. They are The Future.

 

Bill Burr Therapy

H3's Ethan Klein & Theo Von Reflect on Their Bill Burr Interviews

How many different ways are they going to try to find to NOT listen to what he was telling the both of them...?


“My Brother, he's a lot more compassionate than I am, you know — 
We were looking at Rick getting in the limo, and as it drove off, Eddie says, “Man... Rick really needs Help.

I was like, “Hey man, we just GAVE him some help. 
We busted his motha fuckin' legs. 
I bet he won't come back and disrespect again.”

WRONG, WRONG...
We're talkin' bout Rick JAMES, man…”

Maladaptive Perfectionism








“You know, the whole thing about perfectionism. That perfectionism is very dangerous, because of course if your fidelity to perfectionism is too high, you never do anything. Because doing anything results in — It’s actually kind of tragic because it means you sacrifice how gorgeous and perfect it is in your head for what it really is. And there were a couple of years where I really struggled with that.

I played serious tennis when I was a child. I played it enough to start to feel like it was beautiful.

You were 17th in the United States Tennis Association Western Section when you were 14 years old…

That sounds very impressive. That’s a regional ranking and it means that I was probably 4,000th in the nation for my age group.

But could you have been better? Was it a matter of choice that you didn’t pursue it?

I perhaps could have been somewhat better. One of the interesting things about playing competitive sports as a child is that you confront your own limitations rather starkly at a certain point. For the first couple of years I was very good and was regarded as promising. And then after I developed for two or three years it became very clear exactly how good I was going to be, which is I could probably be a good college player but that I was never going to have professional potential or anything.

And so you passed up on it?

I didn’t pass up on it. I kept playing. But there’s a difference between training. I mean the people who seriously, seriously play devote their lives to it sort of the way monks do. I mean you don’t date, you go to bed at a certain time, you eat certain ways, you practice 10-12 hours a day. And I mean, the difference between practicing three hours a day and practicing 12 hours a day is everything. And I certainly never— I never trained seriously after the age of 16.

Were you also, at that point, attracted to other things, like writing?

I wasn’t all that attracted to writing originally. I read a great deal. My parents read a great deal. I do know that as my interest in tennis waned, my interest in academics increased. I mean, I started doing my homework in high school and discovering that it was somewhat fun. And then in college I barely even played on the team because just classes were much more interesting.

But then there’s also the drug factor here, which plays a major role in this book…

Yeah.

You know, it’s real interesting. I was a very difficult person to teach when I was a student and I thought I was smarter than my teachers and they told me a lot of things that I thought were retrograde or outdated or B.S.
I’ve learned more teaching in the last three years than I ever learned as a student. And a lot of it is that when you see students work where the point, whether it’s stated or not, is basically that they’re clever, and to try and articulate to the student how empty and frustrating it is for a reader to invest their time and attention in something and to feel that the agenda is basically to show you that the writer is clever.

All the kind of stuff, right, when I’m doing my little onanistic, clever stuff in grad school, that when my professors would talk to me about it, I would go, “Well, they don’t understand. I’m a genius, blah, blah, blah, blah.” Now that I’m the teacher, I’m starting to learn — it’s like the older you get, the smarter your parents get — now I’m starting to learn that they had some smart stuff to tell me.

You’re probably further victimized by all of this because certain kinds of students will gravitate to your class. And those are people who think that they’re kindred spirits.

Yeah, in a certain way. Although the only way that I’m well known at Illinois State is that I am the “grammar Nazi.” 

And so any student whose deployment of a semi-colon is not absolutely Mozart-esque knows that they’re going to get a C in my class, and so my classes tend to have like four students in them. It’s really a lot of fun.




The crew reports to a giant room full of simulator holopods, and are greeted by a Pandronian named Shari yn Yem, and gives them a brief motivational speech, before telling them that the crew will enter the pods and be tested in situations that previous Starfleet crews have experienced, and that each test has an amount of points that can be earned. Yem, tells them that to better evaluate the readiness of the crew, the ranks of the crew will be switched around, with the ensigns being tested as high ranked officers, and the senior officers being tested as ensigns. The crew start to enter the pods in excitement, eager to experience what it's like to be in command, as Freeman and her senior officers believe that they will pass their tests easily, since the duties of the lower decks will be very simple.

"Mirror" Mariner
Mariner enters her pod, and is given a scenario in which she finds herself in the mirror universe, and must find her way back home. At first, Mariner gets immersed in her part, but decides to try and deviate from her objectives, hoping to infiltrate the Terran Empire, and dismantle it from the inside. However, as she tries this, the test docks points from her score for deviating 

Tendi enters her pod, and is told to assist a paralyzed Klingon in a ritual suicide. Tendi tells the Klingon that she is not allowed to cause any harm, which results in a docking of her score. Seeing this, Tendi pulls out a hypospray, ready to give him a quick and painless death. The Klingon demands for her to use his ceremonial blade, and when she objects, her score is further lowered. The Klingon, furious that she is refusing to honor his culture, tries to take his blade back, but falls off the bed. Two nurses run into sickbay, and ask why the Klingon isn't dead yet, and begin to try and assist him in his death, but the Klingon's backup organs begin to heal him, and they give up, much to the Klingon's dismay. Tendi apologizes as the test ends in failure.

Mariner finds herself in an old west town in her next test, and immediately gets points deducted as she tries to go to the saloon. She looks over and sees her group mounting horses, and she goes over to one. Confident that she can ride it, as she took lessons in the past, she climbs up, but the horse gets agitated and bucks her off, and tramples her, resulting in another failure.

Rutherford's test puts him in the engineering section of a refit Constitution-class starship, where the warp core is in the process of a breach. Rutherford moves to try and enter the core to stop the breach, but the handle of the door burns his hand due to the radiation. Rutherford gets an idea to take his boots off to cover his hands, and open the door that way, and is successful, but unfortunately, he takes too long, and the ship explodes, resulting in his test failing.




Boimler is put in a test in which he must fight off the Borg, and escape a Borg cube. Boimler successfully fights off the Borg drones, and makes his way through the cube, before coming upon a chamber of Borg babies, however he chooses to enter a shaft above the chamber, which leads to a room with a Borg sphere that he uses to escape the cube. The Test ends with him passing, but Boimler is unhappy that he only scored a 79%. Eager to do better, he asks if he can take The Test again, and The Computer warns him that if he gets a failing score, he will be locked out of The Test. Undeterred, Boimler restarts The Test. He fights off the drones, but upon finding the Borg babies, he takes them with him before escaping on the sphere. He once again passes, but scores only 83%, making him want to try again. He retakes the test, and rescues even more babies, along with a couple drones, before escaping on the sphere, resulting in a score of 84%. Boimler, getting frustrated, tells the computer to restart the test.

Mariner is about to start her final test in which the entire crew has been afflicted with polywater intoxication. While she is not enthusiastic about the nature of the mission, she tries to pump herself up, and enters the mess hall to see the crew completely naked, and involved in a huge orgy. Rutherford can be seen, possibly with ensign Castro. Mariner tries to ignore it all, and talk everyone out of their outrageous behavior, but is unsuccessful. She sees Boimler showing off his genitals, causing her to run out of the mess hall to see Steve Stevens spanking Ransom, while holding him on a leash. Shaxs then runs up to her, while T'Ana clings to him. Unable to take the lewd nature of The Test anymore, Mariner runs to an airlock and blows herself and the crew into space, no longer caring about passing the test.

As The Test ends, the ship's average score falls to 37%.


Mariner wonders where Boimler is, and Rutherford replies that he heard he was still taking his test. Mariner speculates that he probably failed like them, and is just too embarrassed to admit it. 

(Boimler is still in his drill with the Borg, retaking the test again and again, altering his approach each time, managing to score as high as 94%, placing him in the top 10%, but he's still unsatisfied with the score, and continues to retake the test.) 

For the crew's final test, a joint exercise between the senior officers and the lower decks crew will be simulated on the bridge. They are instructed to steal the Cerritos from Spacedock to save Spock from the Genesis planet. Mariner takes the command chair, and has Ransom get them some coffee before instructing Freeman to take them out of spacedock. As they approach the doors, Shaxs gets up and starts to stretch, as his back hurts from sleeping in the cramped quarters of the lower decks. However, as he continues to stretch, Mariner is reminded of how he looked fully naked in her final test, and is visibly disturbed. Freeman speculates that she's remembering her bad experience with the horse, which angers Mariner, and she tries to send Freeman to the brig. The two start to quarrel, and pay no attention to the test, resulting in their ship colliding with the space doors, and ending the test in failure in a record time.

Freeman tries to get the crew to do more drills and improve their score, but since the entire crew has been locked out of the tests due to their failing scores, there is nothing they can do to improve them. She is about to submit the finalized scores, when Mariner notes that one test is still active. Boimler is still in the drill with the Borg, trying to score higher than 98%, and Yem wonders what he's still doing in there, but notes that one passing grade will not save their scores. 

Realizing that if the drills aren't finished, the scores cannot be finalized, Mariner contacts Boimler in the holopod.

Boimler is about to finish the drill, having finally achieved a perfect 100% after saving most of the Borg crew, beating the Borg Queen in chess and teaching her empathy. Freeman orders him not to finish the drill, and Mariner tells him that Yem is trying to deliberately fail them, and that as long as he's in The as rill, she cannot finish until he finishes. Understanding, Boimler continues to interact with the drill, despite it lowering his score to 99%, much to his disappointment.

Freeman and Mariner rush to the bridge, as Yem wonders what they're trying to do since they're just delaying her finalized scores, and torturing Boimler in the process. Freeman expresses faith in her crew, noting that despite them being on a smaller and more insignificant ship, the crew is tougher than most. Yem boasts that she's read all about life on a starship and the work in space, and doubts that they are anymore reliable than any other crew she's tested. Freeman notes that Yem has read about it all, but has never really experienced it in person. 



Mariner
Boimler, can you hear me? 

FINAL SCORE : 100%

Boimler
Hey, Mariner, I was just about to close out this drill. 
I finally got A Perfect... 

Capt. Freeman
DON’T you finish that drill, Ensign. That's an order! 

Boimler
Captain, but I beat the Borg Queen at chess
and I taught her Empathy

Capt. Freeman
Just stay in that drill!
 The crew is counting on you. 

Mariner
Yeah, Shari Bing Bang is trying to screw us, 
but she CAN’T until your drill is over. 

Just keep Borging! 

Boimler
I'm on it. 

DRONE :
Resistance is Futile. 

FINAL SCORE : 99%

Boimler
Aw, man.


Boimler
Come on, Mariner, 
whatever you're doing up there, hurry! 

AAH! Borg Queen! 
Uh, how-how's The Empathy

The Borg
We were able to assimilate it. 
 

FINAL SCORE : 76%

Boimler :
No, no, no, no, no, my SCORE! 

Thursday, 4 November 2021

Kazon Trophy Room




[Shuttlecraft]
(Kar wakes to find his hands tied behind his back.) 

KAR
What am I doing here?

CHAKOTAY
You're Welcome.

KAR
What?

CHAKOTAY
It's a human expression. 
You Thank Me 
for Saving Your Life
I say, “You're Welcome.” 
I accept your surrender. 

Look, I promise you, as soon as we get back to Voyager, 
we'll find a Kazon ship and hand you over to them.

KAR
You should've let me die.

CHAKOTAY
I'm not in the habit of 
Killing Children.

COMPUTER
Warning. 
Alien vessel approaching at 
zero two two mark eight.

CHAKOTAY
What's Your Name, son?

KAR
What?

CHAKOTAY
Your Name.

KAR
Why do you want to 
know My Name?

CHAKOTAY
I want to let them know 
you're on board.

KAR
I'm called Kar.

CHAKOTAY
Computer, open a channel. 

Kazon vessel, I have A Young Man on board you might know. 
He goes by the name of Kar
I'd say he's about thirteen. 

I'd like to arrange for his transfer before I return to My Ship. 

Computer, confirm channel is open.

COMPUTER
Confirmed. 
Transmission has been received.

CHAKOTAY
Talk to them. 
Tell them you're okay.

COMPUTER
Warning. 
Kazon vessel has engaged 
a tractor beam.

CHAKOTAY
Full reverse.

COMPUTER
Unable to comply. 
Tractor force exceeds available engine power.

CHAKOTAY
They're pulling us in.


KAR
Kill me. Please.

CHAKOTAY
Why are you so eager for me to kill you?


KAR
Because there are worse things 
than being killed by Your Enemy. 

(The tiny shuttlecraft is dragged into the massive Kazon ship.)

[Kazon trophy room]

(Chakotay and Kar are thrown into an area hung with skins and trophies.) 

CHAKOTAY
Look. If you check your long-range sensors, you'll find a big ship out there. 
It's called Voyager, and by now it's on its way to find me.

HALIZ
Kar, I told Razik you weren't ready.

CHAKOTAY
I have a fair idea why I'm here, 
but why are they doing this to you?

KAR
I was ready, Haliz, ready to Kill or Die. 
I felt the flames touch my skin.

HALIZ
Go back in, Kar.

KAR
It was this fool, this Federation, 
who doesn't even have the courage to kill his enemies. 

He pulled me out with that transporter we've heard about. 

Like the Nistrim and the Relora before you, you come into Our Space, 
showing off your uniforms and displaying the markings of your Federation with no respect, 
as if you own this part of space. 

But it belongs to us! 

I tried to kill him, Haliz. 

(Haliz knocks Kar down.) 

KAR
I want to see Razik. 
Tell Razik I demand to see him.

CHAKOTAY
Who's Razik? 
You tell this Razik that 
Federation Commander Chakotay 
demands to see him.

KAR
What are you doing?

CHAKOTAY
Razik is obviously Your Leader. 
I'm hoping if he's strong enough to be in command, 
he's wise enough to listen to reason.

(Kar shows Chakotay a piece of metal on display.

KAR
You see this? 
This is debris from a Nistrim frigate. 
The Man you are demanding to see destroyed it
killing more than one hundred in a single shot. 

Before that, His Name was only Ra
Now he is called Jal Razik. 

And this tunic belonged to a Relora warrior. 
He was killed by the bare hands of another Ogla, 
called only Hali

Now that man is called Jal Haliz
one of our greatest fighters. 

And this bracelet belonged to the man 
who killed My Brother, 
My Brother, Jal Kanal, 
who earned his Ogla name 
by dying bravely in battle. 

But I, I will never earn My Name 
in Life or in Death,
 and I have you to thank for that.

[Kazon trophy room]

RAZIK
Hello, Kar. I never thought I would see you like this.

KAR
It was not my fault. 
It was his technology! 

RAZIK
Don't make excuses, Kar. 
An Ogla has no room for excuses.

KAR: 
No. No excuses.

RAZIK
I forgive you. 
Know that in your heart.

KAR: 
No. Please.

(Razik kisses Kar, who bursts into tears.

RAZIK
You will eat at my right hand tonight. 
Why did you save him? 
It's a very ineffective way of waging war.

CHAKOTAY
I'm not at war with you.

RAZIK
I wish I could say the same.

CHAKOTAY
We're not familiar with this part of space. 
If I'd seen a map identifying this as Kazon-Ogla territory, 
I wouldn't have been anywhere near it.

RAZIK
Unfortunately, our territorial claims change every day
Maps do not serve us well. 
You did him a great disservice, you know.

CHAKOTAY
I guess if he had killed me, my uniform 
would've made you all a fine trophy.

RAZIK
Your uniform may yet decorate our wall. 

You may not think you're at war with us, 
Federation Commander Chakotay, 
but everything you are is a threat to us

The Kazon fought long and hard 
for their independence 
from uniforms like yours.

CHAKOTAY
Uniforms maybe, 
but not like mine.

RAZIK
Your uniforms, your laws, your technology. 
You are not welcome here. Get him something to eat. 
The execution is tonight.

[Kazon trophy room]
(Haliz brings other young Kazon with him.) 

CHAKOTAY
You get them involved young, Haliz.

HALIZ
As soon as they're old enough to protect 
their younger siblings.

CHAKOTAY
So they brought you here to see your first human. 
Take a good look. You won't see any hate in my eyes. 
I'm a gentle man from a gentle people 
who wish you no harm.

RAZIK
That's enough!

CHAKOTAY
I know you'd like them to hate me, Razik, 
but I want their first impression of humans to be a good one.

RAZIK
You've been brought here to learn 
what it means to be a Kazon male. 

You all know Kar. 
You've learned to fight together, haven't you? 

Kar was sent to kill this man 
to earn His Ogla Name. 

But Kar failed, 
and will not earn his name 
even in Death

Who would be willing to kill the human? 

(All the boys reach for the proffered weapon.

RAZIK: 
So much for first impressions, Federation. 
I'm proud of you. Each will get your chance someday. 

But that's not what we're here for today. 
We are here to learn 
the price of failure in battle. 

(Razik holds the weapon out to Chakotay.

RAZIK
Take it.

CHAKOTAY: 
What for?

RAZIK
So that you can kill Kar, 
as you should have done in battle.

CHAKOTAY
You want me to Kill A Child 
in front of other children? 

What would it accomplish?

RAZIK
It will teach these little boys an important lesson. 
And after you do that, you'll be free to go. 

You may think I want your friend Kar to die 
but you'd be wrong

I've seen too many Ogla die 
at the hands of Our Enemies. 

That is why they must learn 
there are no second chances in battle. 

That is why Kar must die.

CHAKOTAY
If I refuse? 

(No answer. The weapon drops to the floor. Chakotay bends to pick it up, attacks Razik and gets him on his knees with arms pinned behind his back. He holds the weapon to the leader's head.

CHAKOTAY
I'll be needing my shuttle back.

HALIZ
Do you really think you can escape us in that little vessel of yours?

CHAKOTAY
That's a chance I'm willing to take. 
What about you?

RAZIK
Let The Coward run. Prepare his shuttle.

CHAKOTAY
Want to come? There doesn't seem to be 
much of A Future for you here.

HALIZ
He'd rather die than run like a Calogan dog 
with you, Federation.

(So Kar hits him and takes his gun.)

KAR
If I stay here, 
I'll die without A Name. 

And Razik taught me 
only cowards die without A Name.

RAZIK
You won't find Your Name running after The Federation, Kar.

KAR
Maybe not, but that's a chance I'm willing to take. 
I'll show you how to disable the weapons systems.

It’s More Than Impossible




William was An Experiment, Mulder.


He was An Idea — 

Born in a laboratory.


















Mulder :

He's gone.

He's gone, Scully.

He shot him.

…..he shot me.


Scully :

Mulder...

He...

He wanted us to let him go.

He wasn't meant to be.


Mulder :

William was Our Son.


Scully :

No.


Mulder :

Scully, He was Our Son



No.

William was An Experiment, Mulder.


Mulder :

What are you talking about?


Scully :

Mulder...

He was An Idea — 

Born in a laboratory.


Mulder :

But you were His Mother.


Scully :

No, I... I carried him.

And I bore him.


But I was never A Mother to him.

I wasn't.

William... William was...


Mulder :

For so long, I Believed.

What am I now 

if I'm not A Father?


Scully :

You are….

You are A Father.


Mulder :

What are you talking about?


….That's impossible.


Scully :

I know.

I know it is.

It's more than impossible.



Call Me Ishmael






Old Smokey :

You really don't give up, do you?

But then you have so much to lose.

It's what we have in common.


William-as-Mulder :

We have nothing in common.


Old Smokey :

I need The Boy.

The Boy is mine.


William-as-Mulder :

The Boy would rather die first,

now that he knows The Truth.


Old Smokey :

That I'm the one who made him?

That I'm William's creator?

i

William-as-Mulder :

You'd shoot your own 

firstborn son?


Old Smokey :

Shot my second-born son, once.

But I need you to know, Fox,

when I gave you Life,

I never fathomed the moment would come

when I would need to end it.


William-as-Mulder :

I don't think you can do it.


Old Smokey :

Then you don't know me very well.


He shoots William-as-Mulder in The Head — He falls, backwards into The Water.


Mulder comes out of a side door just in time to see what Old Smokey has done.


Mulder :

Hey!



He shoots Old Smokey — 
6 times, in The Chest,
but not in The Head.
And he PUSHES him into The Water.