Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • 2 days ago
Star Trek Strange New Worlds Season 1 Episode 2

#StarTrekStrangeNewWorlds
#StarTrekStrangeNewWorldsSeason1
#ShowMoviesTV
🎞 Please join
https://t.me/CinemaSeriesUSFilm
Transcript
00:00Previously on Star Trek Strange New World
00:27Send someone else. You don't want me in command of that ship. You saw the future. I saw my own death. Your first officer doesn't do downtime well, Chris. Captain. Samuel Kirk. Well, you're posted to life sciences and he's your new boss. Captain Pike, Lieutenant La'arne Nguyen Singh, Chief of Security. Ah, the prodigy. Cadet Uhura? What's the mission? We explore. We seek out new life and new civilizations. We boldly go where no one has gone before.
00:57Cadet's Log. Stardate 2912.4.
01:02Cadet's Log. Stardate 2912.4. The Enterprise is surveying the Persephone system, where the crew is studying the behavior of an ancient comet. See 2260 Quentin.
01:30I, however, am doing rotation and landing party readiness protocols, which doesn't really involve comets, ancient or otherwise, so duties are pretty slow at the moment.
01:41Except, of course, for a recent invitation to dinner at the Captain's Cabin, for which I have been encouraged by Lieutenant Ortegas to dust off my dress uniform.
01:50You said it was formal. Actually, what I said was you might want to wear your dress uniform. Are you kidding? This is your idea of a practical joke. Kind of.
02:05I'm about to change. You do not want to be laid to the Captain's table.
02:09Relax, Cadet. It's tradition.
02:14Hazing the newbie?
02:16Well, good fun. We get bored. It's a small ship.
02:19You know, it's really not.
02:21Come on. Consider it your first complete square in Enterprise Bingo.
02:27You know about that.
02:28I was a cadet once, too, cadet.
02:30So, what are these things like?
02:33Well, first off, they're not just the command crew.
02:36Captain wants, you know, regular people to hear what's actually happening on the ship, so he'll probably ask you questions.
02:43Great.
02:45Is that a problem?
02:47How do I put this? My father liked to say that I was unburdened by conversational boundaries.
02:54So this will be fun for you, then.
02:56Okay.
03:00Lieutenant Ortegas, cadet Uhura, welcome.
03:06Best uniform, huh?
03:08Grab a drink. I've got to deal with the ribs.
03:11Ortegas, come help refill drinks.
03:13Cadet Uhura, good to see you.
03:15You, too.
03:27Oh, uh, can I help?
03:30No.
03:34You have offended Hammer, our new chief engineer.
03:37No offense intended. I was raised to offer help to anyone with a sensory impaired...
03:42Got the word again.
03:43Sir?
03:44Impaired. A human in my condition might consider themselves impaired.
03:49Hammer may not be able to see, but his other senses compensate.
03:52Compensate? They are superior.
03:54Uh, I've read that, among many things, the Enar have a form of precognitive ability.
04:01I knew you were going to ask that.
04:03Because you sensed my question before I asked it?
04:05Because everyone always asks that.
04:08Right.
04:08You telegraphed your throat telepathically.
04:14As was my intention.
04:16To illustrate.
04:17This is a hazing thing, isn't it?
04:22You guys are screwing around?
04:24Uh, I-teh, a-javeh, h-thuneth kai-meh.
04:29Sildeshekoop.
04:31I think I need a drink.
04:32I like her.
04:37Indeed.
04:38So I have my phaser out, and sure enough, down the street, there's the Nausicaan we're after, running away.
04:44No pants on.
04:47I move after him, only a trip.
04:49Flat on my face, I shout, freeze!
04:51But the Nausicaan keeps running.
04:54I try to stand up, but my feet are caught in something, and then I realize...
04:59I've tripped on his pants.
05:00So anyway, after, my lieutenant pulls me aside and says,
05:06maybe security isn't the best fit for you.
05:13I've never understood the human inclination to laugh at others' misfortune.
05:18It feels impolite.
05:21That's why it's funny.
05:22Because it breaks his social expectation.
05:25Sometimes, Mr. Spock, things go so badly, you just have to laugh.
05:30What's that you're humming, cadet?
05:42Sorry, bad habit.
05:43Uh, it's an old folk song from my village in Kenya.
05:50I've visited Lake Simbinaima several times.
05:53It is achingly beautiful there.
05:55I grew up just a few miles away.
05:57Really?
05:58You know, the Enterprise only gets a handful of cadets a year from Starfleet.
06:01You've got to be pretty impressive to make the cut.
06:03Thank you, sir.
06:05I hear you speak 12 languages.
06:07Uh, 37.
06:08Okay, wow.
06:12Uh, in Kenya, we have 22 native languages.
06:16I found early that if I wanted to be understood, it's best to communicate in someone's own tongue.
06:22So I learned them.
06:24Easy as that.
06:25For me, sir, yes.
06:26I noticed here on the next landing party rotation, I know it can be confusing jumping from department to department, right, number one?
06:33That was one time.
06:36I'm sure you've chosen a special that you'd like.
06:38Where do you see yourself in ten...
06:40Ten years.
06:42Where do you see yourself?
06:44Are you asking me what I want to be when I grow up, Captain?
06:48Sure.
06:54I guess the truth is I'm not sure I'm actually all that Starfleet.
07:05That's not something I've ever heard from a cadet.
07:09You worked pretty hard to get here.
07:11Beat out how many?
07:12A thousand applicants?
07:14Several thousand.
07:15Now you're not sure if you want to be here?
07:16I always wanted to study alien languages.
07:20I have an ear for them.
07:22And a gift for an understatement.
07:24I was going to attend the university in Nairobi.
07:27Both my parents taught there.
07:30About a week before I was due to start, they were killed in a shuttle accident.
07:37My older brother, too.
07:40I'm so sorry.
07:41After I just couldn't go to campus, their absence was everywhere.
07:53I moved in with my grandmother, but I just didn't feel like I fit anywhere.
08:00Anyway, she was in Starfleet when she was young, and she always used to talk about it, and, well, I didn't know what else to do.
08:09So you ran away to Starfleet?
08:12Yes.
08:12That is an impressive and heartbreaking story, cadet.
08:19That's me.
08:22Well, cadet, I appreciate your honesty, and I sincerely hope you discover a place where you feel you do fit.
08:28Wherever that may be.
08:29I guess I kind of blew it in there, huh?
08:40Not at all, cadet.
08:42You captain values honesty, as do I.
08:45But?
08:48But I would say to you that Starfleet has been a lifelong dream for many.
08:52Myself included.
08:53If it is not your path, you might consider making way for someone else who wants to walk it.
09:07I've seen you ask that cadet question a hundred times.
09:11Tonight it felt different.
09:13It's because of what you told me.
09:16About what you saw on Boris.
09:19Turns out, knowing your future kind of takes the fun out of imagining it.
09:23Chris, have you considered that maybe your fate isn't written?
09:29Dusty Swender.
09:31Tequila Dawn.
09:32Malik Al-Alcazar.
09:33Yuito Hoshida.
09:35Andrea Lopez.
09:35I could keep going.
09:36These are the kids I save when it happens.
09:38You know their names.
09:43Lately I've been saying them over and over again.
09:46Like a reminder.
09:47Stay the course.
09:48Save their lives.
09:49I refuse to believe there isn't another way.
09:56Captain Pike to the bridge.
09:58There is a problem with the comet.
09:59The computer simulation suggests that when the comet strikes the planet in two days, there will be no survivors.
10:20Persephone 3 is an M-class world.
10:21Previous surveys suggest it is home to an intelligent, pre-warp species that call themselves the Dileb.
10:29Given their current state of technological advancement, it is highly unlikely that they are aware of the danger they are in.
10:34Options.
10:34The Dileb can't move the comet.
10:38So we move it for them?
10:39Mr. Spock.
10:41An ion engine.
10:42To be precise, four.
10:44Program to fire in sequence to account for the comet's rotation.
10:47Got it.
10:47Number one, thoughts.
10:49It could work.
10:50We could use photon torpedoes as launch vehicles.
10:54Take about an hour for the retrofit.
10:56A rosy assessment, considering I'll be the one doing the retrofitting.
10:59Then let's get it done, people.
11:00We've got a planet to save before breakfast.
11:02I love this job.
11:22Anyone want to tell me how a comet puts up a force field?
11:32Space.
11:34The final frontier.
11:39These are the voyages of the Starship Enterprise.
11:44It's five-year mission.
11:46To explore strange new worlds.
11:51To seek out new life.
11:55And new civilizations.
11:56To boldly go where no one has gone before.
12:02To boldly go where no one has gone before.
12:26To be continued...
12:27To be continued...
12:50To be continued...
13:23If there's life on the comet, we can't find it.
13:26But we did find a structure.
13:30It's enormous and mostly subterranean.
13:33The structure suggests alien intelligence.
13:35Which is why I've asked Sam Kirk of Xenoanthropology here to join us.
13:38So let's start with the obvious.
13:39It looks like a comet.
13:40It has shields like a starship and a building on its surface like a planet.
13:44But no life signs.
13:46Maybe it's not a comet at all, but some kind of derelict spacecraft.
13:51Okay.
13:51So how do we shut down its shields?
13:53Logic suggests the structure is likely where we'll have to go.
13:56Except Scott Shields.
13:58These shields are not constant.
14:00They only appear in response to a threat.
14:02It should be possible to beam to the surface without triggering them.
14:05Sam, are you aware of any civilization that developed on the surface of a comet?
14:09First I've heard of one.
14:12Starting to like the mustache.
14:13Maybe you should try one for yourself.
14:18Well, Alan, you, Spock, and Sam get suited up.
14:21And this is the cadet's first away mission.
14:24You wanted to learn to speak alien languages.
14:27Go where the aliens are.
14:28The surface of the comet is bombarded by ridiculously high levels of cosmic rays.
14:35This will buy you two hours.
14:37Any more and your insides will turn to liquid.
14:39You could have warned me.
14:44I didn't even know what was going to hurt.
14:46I've had people run on me.
14:48Weapon up, people.
14:57Kirk, Aurora.
14:58When you recovered with me.
15:02You ready for this?
15:04I'm more than capable of managing any pain you can't lose.
15:07This is your Spock.
15:09Now you're just toying with me.
15:12That was not my intention.
15:13I've noticed.
15:15Heads up.
15:17Thank you, Lieutenant.
15:18Lieutenant.
15:43Remember when we arrive?
15:45Gravity is a fraction of Earth normal.
15:48Don't want anyone flying off into space.
15:55Energize, Mr. Kyle.
15:56You good?
16:25Yeah.
16:26I'm standing on the surface of a comet.
16:29I'm standing on the surface of a comet.
16:56Here it is.
17:18According to my readings, there is breathable atmosphere inside the chamber.
17:21We should make sure it's secure.
17:24Lieutenant Spock, can you scan the room?
17:26I'll do perimeter sweep.
17:35These markings.
17:37What do you think?
17:37Decorative or linguistic?
17:42You're asking me?
17:43Don't study linguistics if you don't want people to ask you questions about it.
17:48Okay.
17:49Fine.
17:51It's just that...
17:53You're a cadet.
17:54It's your first away mission.
17:55I get it.
17:57But you're here for a reason.
17:58These markings.
18:11They repeat in the sequence.
18:15Sequence, huh?
18:16Maybe a code?
18:17I don't know.
18:21Just...
18:21Everything seems to point to this egg.
18:25It's important.
18:27Just I don't know how.
18:29Do you think these markings indicate some kind of control?
18:32If they do, then perhaps this is how we can affect the comet's shields.
18:38Perimeter's clear.
18:39No one here but us.
18:48Lieutenant, I don't think that's a...
18:51A good idea.
18:56Yahtzee.
18:57Huh?
18:59It's an old Earth game.
19:02I'm familiar with Yahtzee, Lieutenant.
19:03But I am reading a dangerous buildup of energy.
19:05Please step away from the egg.
19:09Turn him over.
19:10Get his helmet off.
19:20It's hard to stop.
19:21We need to get him to the ship.
19:25Enterprise, we need to...
19:26Murd...
19:26Murd me now.
19:28Lahan, your signal's spotty.
19:29We can't quite hear you.
19:30Lieutenant Kirk has been injured.
19:33Bima's out.
19:35Having trouble getting a lock?
19:43Clear.
19:51Energizing?
19:52Captain, the force field.
19:57It's back up.
20:02Signal's being blocked.
20:04I can't get them back.
20:06Clear.
20:07He's stable.
20:20We're cut off from the ship.
20:24We're on our own.
20:25He's sustained massive trauma from electrical shock.
20:41I've sedated him.
20:43Uh, maybe we don't touch anything else.
20:48Just a suggestion.
20:49He will not survive without prompt medical attention.
20:51It seems that force field is back.
20:56It appears the comet wishes to keep us here.
20:58What kind of comet knows someone's walking on it?
21:01A salient question, cadet.
21:02One that I'm afraid you may have to answer in order for us to escape.
21:06Sir, I'm reminding you this is my first away mission.
21:09That may be.
21:10But the key to our escape may well be in these markings all around us.
21:13And you are the only linguistics expert here.
21:15I'm afraid you're the only linguistics expert here.
21:45Right now, I need ideas.
21:58We've got a planet full of people who would die without our help.
22:01And our crew members are trapped on that comet.
22:04We need to get through that force field how?
22:08Phaser harmonics?
22:10A phaser at a higher frequency could cause resonance.
22:13The right frequency could shatter it.
22:18I like this planet.
22:19It's a good planet.
22:20Or take us, bring us around.
22:25How are we doing, cadet?
22:36At the moment, pretending not to be in way over my head.
22:43Too honest?
22:45I am a Vulcan.
22:47We are too honest by nature.
22:49Your girlfriend must love that, huh?
22:53Nurse Chapel.
22:55Nurse Chapel is not my girlfriend.
22:56I know.
22:58But she was flirting with you.
23:04It was a joke.
23:06You know, to break the tension.
23:10Do you not think this is an inappropriate time for jokes?
23:12It's like the captain said.
23:14It's like the captain said.
23:16Sometimes things go so badly, you just have to laugh.
23:23I find the best way to defuse tension is to apply rigorous logic.
23:29Okay.
23:31That's always an option, too.
23:33Baser is locked and ready, Captain.
23:51On your command, number one.
23:56Incoming weapons fire.
23:57Damage report.
23:58Minimal damage to port in a cell.
24:00Shields holding at 70%.
24:01Who hit us?
24:06Uh, they did.
24:22Hail them.
24:23On screen.
24:24This is Captain Christopher Pike with the Federation Starship Enterprise.
24:33Who are you and why are you attacking our vessel?
24:35We are the Shepherds.
24:38Really?
24:39It's how the Universal Translator is processing it.
24:41We escort Mahanit.
24:46The comet?
24:47Mahanit is far more than a comet.
24:51Mahanit is one of the ancient arbiters of life.
24:56Okay.
24:57If you temper with it again,
24:59we will not hesitate to destroy you.
25:02We will not hesitate to destroy you.
25:13Scan the ship.
25:14What kind of weapons are we dealing with?
25:15Our intentions were not hostile.
25:20Mahanit is on a collision course with an inhabited planet.
25:24We were simply trying to divert its trajectory.
25:27Absurd.
25:28Would you adjust the height of the waves or the position of the stars?
25:32Mahanit's course is preordained.
25:35There are millions of people on that planet.
25:38The impact will kill them all
25:39and likely blow your comet,
25:41blow your Mahanit into just as many pieces.
25:46Are you a reasonable man, Captain?
25:50I'd like to think so, yes.
25:52Then please entertain the proposition
25:53that Mahanit is not,
25:56as you continue to call him,
25:58a comet.
26:00It is an instrument,
26:02an ancient arbiter,
26:04one of the few remaining in the galaxy.
26:07If it is his will to move,
26:09he will move.
26:11If it is his will to bring life,
26:13he will bring life.
26:15If Mahanit wills the planet to die,
26:18even chooses to die with it,
26:20then that is what will happen.
26:23As I said,
26:24it is preordained.
26:26Blowing up a planet full of people
26:27is not preordained.
26:29You said you were a reasonable man, Captain.
26:32So how can you know?
26:33Since before our distant ancestors
26:35touched the sky and the stars beyond,
26:38my people have been charged
26:40with the protection of the Arbiters.
26:42None of us even remember
26:43when the charge first came to us,
26:46but we accepted the mantle
26:47with honor.
26:48For centuries,
26:50we have protected the Arbiters
26:53as they follow courses
26:54set long before our suns
26:56first burned in the sky,
26:58bringing life across the galaxy.
27:01It is not our prerogative
27:03to interfere, Captain.
27:04Nor is it yours.
27:07Please, excuse me.
27:08Pause communications.
27:10Shepherds?
27:12Zealots is more like it.
27:13What did you find?
27:13The systems are incredibly advanced.
27:15Their ship's faster than ours,
27:17and their weapon systems.
27:18Let's just say
27:19we don't want to piss them off.
27:21How exactly are we supposed
27:23to move the comet
27:23without doing that?
27:24We have to buy time
27:26for the landing party
27:26to get the force field down.
27:28I hope these Shepherds
27:29don't find out
27:29that they're down there.
27:30I'm guessing they'd be
27:30kind of touchy about that.
27:33Hanson,
27:34resume communications.
27:35You have your sacred duty.
27:39We have ours.
27:40The Federation doesn't interfere
27:42in the development of species,
27:43but we also don't just let them die.
27:46We don't mean to disrespect
27:47Maha Neet.
27:49We'd do the same for you
27:50if you were in danger.
27:51You say you don't interfere,
27:53that you mean no disrespect.
27:55But your crew
27:55has desecrated the temple
27:57on his surface.
27:59Best they know
28:00about the landing party.
28:02We were simply
28:03trying to ascertain...
28:04Their presence
28:05is blasphemy.
28:07Maha Neet
28:08will be their tomb.
28:10Any further action
28:11to rescue them
28:12will be considered
28:13an act of war.
28:17Find a way
28:17to get through
28:18to the landing party
28:18right now.
28:19Break the laws of physics
28:20if you have to.
28:20How is he?
28:34How is he?
28:36Stable.
28:37And holding.
28:39What about you, cadet?
28:41You gonna get us out of here
28:42or get us killed?
28:45Right now, I'd say
28:46it's pretty much
28:47a toss-up.
28:56Your humming suggests
28:58you may be experiencing
28:59distress.
29:00May I remind you
29:01that circumstances
29:01are less dire
29:02than they were.
29:04Mr. Kirk identified
29:05one error you can avoid.
29:07By eliminating that option,
29:08he has improved your odds.
29:12Was that actually
29:13your version
29:14of a pep talk?
29:16Yes.
29:17I've been working on them.
29:19How was it,
29:19would you say?
29:21Maybe don't take your foot
29:22off the gas on that one.
29:24Well, you are achieving
29:25your stated objective
29:26of studying alien languages.
29:28Like you said,
29:29I'm not even supposed
29:30to be here.
29:31That's not precisely what I said.
29:32You all should be relying
29:33on someone who's prepared.
29:34Someone actually Starfleet,
29:36not someone who's gonna
29:37get us all fried to a crisp.
29:44As this is your
29:44first-way mission,
29:46may I assume it is also
29:47the first time
29:48your life has been in danger?
29:50Yes.
29:52Kind of.
29:53No, just yes.
29:58Confrontations
29:58with our mortality
29:59often cause us
30:00to see ourselves
30:01as if from the outside.
30:03Such perspective
30:04can be
30:04a unique opportunity.
30:08You did not intend
30:09on being here,
30:11but you are here.
30:12Hypotheticals
30:13are irrelevant.
30:14Today,
30:15you are quite simply
30:16the only person
30:17for the job.
30:19Will you rise
30:19to see it through?
30:23That one was better.
30:27Your pep talk,
30:28I mean.
30:28Kedet,
30:45the case seems to be
30:48reacting to your voice.
30:49music.
31:09It responds to music.
31:13Anything?
31:20Nothing from the landing
31:22party,
31:22but I found a possible
31:23signal coming
31:24from the comet itself.
31:25What kind of signal?
31:26computer,
31:37identify the song.
31:39Vamo Vamba,
31:40a traditional song
31:41from Earth
31:41originating in Kenya.
31:45That cannot be a coincidence.
31:47different pitches
32:05elicit different responses.
32:07What's the light show?
32:08Is it good?
32:09The comet system
32:10seemed to be controlled
32:11by music.
32:12Lieutenant Kirk
32:13thought these symbols
32:14were a code.
32:15Music is just sound waves,
32:18which can be represented
32:18by numbers.
32:20What if the code
32:21is harmonics?
32:23Someone help me out here.
32:24I skipped music, boss.
32:26Harmonics are just
32:27the ratios
32:27between frequencies.
32:28Every note vibrates
32:30at a specific frequency,
32:31double that frequency,
32:32and you get the same pitch
32:33an octave higher.
32:35That's the two
32:37in our code.
32:38Triple the frequency,
32:39and you get
32:39a perfect fifth.
32:41Five times the frequency
32:42is a major third.
32:43The code is a major chord.
32:47Why would an alien species
32:49write music
32:49the way we do?
32:51Musical notes
32:51are usually derived
32:52from math.
32:54Walkers theorize
32:54it as their fundamental nature
32:55which makes them
32:56pleasing to the ear.
32:59Someone match my pitch.
33:04What?
33:06Don't I help her?
33:07I'll break the thing.
33:07I'll break the thing.
33:07I'll break the thing.
33:08I'll break the thing.
33:11Okay, try and follow my lead.
33:28Bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam boom bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam
33:58We're definitely getting closer to resolving the hold.
34:28Genius. We're about to get us killed conundrum.
34:31So the right time for genius.
34:52If we are correct and the comet communicates through music,
34:55it would be logical to assume that it is speaking to us right now.
34:59Okay.
35:01So how do we convince it to lower the force field?
35:13Hold on. Let me try something.
35:15The comet's force field just disappeared.
35:38Bridge to transporter room. Energize.
35:40We've got him.
35:47Shield's up. Red alert.
35:52Captain. Shepherds are hailing us.
35:57Open a channel on screen.
36:00You continue to interfere.
36:02Well, technically...
36:04You were warned.
36:05Look, let's talk about this. Find some common ground.
36:12I think that went well.
36:15They're launching torpedoes, Captain. I'm reading three inbound.
36:18Well, we definitely pissed them off.
36:23Brace for impact.
36:24Shield's up 50%.
36:35We'll take us evasive maneuvers.
36:37On it.
36:49They are pursuing.
36:50We're time fire?
36:51Negative. Escape pattern April Omega-3.
36:53Captain, recommend we withdraw.
36:55We're already on the run.
36:56We need to warp out and regroup.
36:58Facing off with them is suicide. We're outgummed here.
37:00She's right. Their ship is too advanced for us to take on.
37:04Shield's up 40%.
37:05Sir, when we were on the surface, I believe the comet was trying to communicate with us.
37:09Right. The music you recorded.
37:10Any idea what it was trying to say?
37:11I haven't been able to translate it yet. It might take days.
37:14We have less than one hour before the comet will impact Persephone-3.
37:17You do a lot of reminding people of deadlines, sir.
37:20She does have a point, Bob.
37:20Captain, unless we want them to blow us out of the sky.
37:25Give me phasers.
37:26Target their weapons and propulsion systems. We don't want to hurt them.
37:30Wish they felt the same.
37:32Shield's at 25%.
37:33Phase is locked.
37:34Take us bring us around to Bering 150 Mark 9.
37:37Aye, sir.
37:37And fire.
37:46Direct hit.
37:47They're pulling away to regroup.
37:48I'd say we have less than a minute.
37:50We have to save that planet.
37:52We brought down the force field, so how do we move the comet?
37:54Let's face it.
37:55The crazy space monks will blow us out of the sky if we try anything to move that comet.
37:59What if we didn't?
38:05What if the comet moved itself?
38:15Everyone ready?
38:18We only get one shot at this.
38:22Maximum impulse.
38:23They're gaining on us.
38:26When they get close enough, they'll take a kill shot.
38:29Ortegas.
38:30You know how you used to brag you were going to be the best pilot ever to graduate the academy?
38:35Word gets around.
38:37What's your point, sir?
38:39Time to prove it, Lieutenant.
38:41Get us in front of that comet.
38:45Initiating evasive pattern Ortegas Gamma 1.
38:47Evasive pattern Ortegas.
39:12Shepherds are in pursuit.
39:17They've stopped firing.
39:43They don't want to hit the comet.
39:44I think they're hailing us.
39:50Yeah, they are, Captain?
39:51Not yet.
39:52Not yet.
40:14Ortegas, time to come about.
40:18Rerouting to Bearing 180 Mark 5.
40:20Reverse thrusters full stop.
40:22Reversing thrusters.
40:24And...
40:24Stop.
40:27Ops, shut down all systems except for the last report.
40:33All right, Ensign Christina, I'm ready for the Shepherds now.
40:37On screen, please.
40:38We surrender.
40:45The damage we've sustained has caused complete systems failure.
40:48And what if we choose not to accept your surrender?
40:52Well, if you don't help us, we'll collide with the comet which will destroy our ship.
40:57And the Trilithian Resin in our warp core will ignite, destroying the comet.
41:02Which will also happen if you try to blow us up.
41:08Please, help us.
41:11I give you my word, we will not touch Mahaneet again.
41:15You're taking a big gamble.
41:24I recognize that, number one.
41:32The Shepherdship is activating a tractor beam.
41:37Mr. Spock?
41:39You're up.
41:44Acknowledged, Captain.
41:45Approaching the nucleus of the comet.
42:14And diverting power through the shuttle's shields.
42:22Shields radiating heat at maximum intensity.
42:29The surface appears to be responding.
42:30Maintaining position.
42:47Preparing to engage heat shields.
42:50Oh, God.
42:52So…
42:56I don't know.
42:57Oh, God.
42:58Not many horses are our way.
42:58Can't solve your
43:09my own ventilator?
43:13Where'd you be?
43:14Oh, why are you doing this?
43:40It's moving.
43:41The sublimation is nudging the comet off course.
43:46And for the record, we're not actually touching it.
43:54But where's Lieutenant Spock?
43:59Spock?
44:03Is everything okay?
44:04Fine, Captain.
44:05Sometimes things go so badly, you just have to laugh.
44:10Fascinating.
44:11A large quantity of water vapor from the comet is entering the comet.
44:14If I'm not mistaken, this will permanently change the planet.
44:21This will permanently change the atmospheric composition of Persephone 3.
44:28Change it how?
44:29Reducing the planet's aridity will make it more amenable to plant growth, agriculture, and
44:35one might surmise societal development.
44:36So, did it actually bring life?
44:42Well, tell me the space monks were actually right.
44:43Captain, shepherds are hailing us.
44:44Captain, shepherds are hailing us.
44:45Open a channel on screen, please.
44:46Open a channel.
44:47On screen, please.
44:48End scene.
44:49You have seen the glory.
44:50And the mercy that is most.
44:51You have seen the glory.
44:52And the mercy that is most.
44:53You have seen the glory.
44:54You have seen the glory.
44:55And the mercy that is mechaneet.
44:56You're right.
44:57We witnessed a miracle.
44:58What's the problem?
44:59I really want to hear that.
45:00What's the problem?
45:01A lot of time, I'm very confident.
45:02Who's it?
45:03What's the problem?
45:04What's the problem?
45:05How is the problem?
45:06What's the problem?
45:07How is the problem?
45:08How is the problem?
45:09You're a strong and valuable partner, then?
45:10How is it?
45:12How is it?
45:13How is all you rolling on that?
45:14Cool.
45:15What's the problem?
45:16What's the problem?
45:17How is that?
45:18How is it?
45:19and the mercy that is Muhadid.
45:22You're right. We witnessed a miracle.
45:26Perhaps in the future,
45:28you will not be so quick to judge the faith of others.
45:34And so we shall not part as enemies.
45:49Come on, good girl.
45:51Come here. Come here.
45:53Come here. Come here.
46:19Captain's log. Supplemental.
46:23I am left to wonder...
46:26Who made the comet?
46:29How many more like it are out there?
46:36Was it coincidence that fostered the chance for more life on Per 73?
46:41Or something more?
46:44Look, we already knew how to turn musical notes into numbers, right?
46:51But the computer helped me turn those numbers into numerical coordinates.
46:55You're saying the numbers painted a picture?
46:58Yes, but not just any picture. The music contained this image.
47:03This is a star chart showing the comet's course.
47:06Course that includes it moving past Per 73.
47:09You were suggesting the comet was telling us it did not intend to hit Per 73?
47:13Yes. It meant no harm. That was the message.
47:18But if I had not interfered, it would have destroyed the planet.
47:22Okay, here's where things get weirder.
47:26When we zoom in on the image, we find this shape.
47:30And this is an image of a chunk of ice that broke off from the comet as Lieutenant Spock flew his mission.
47:36They're identical.
47:38You're saying the comet sent this message before Spock was able to correct the comet's course?
47:43You recorded it hours earlier.
47:45It is highly improbable the comet could have randomly guessed the shape the ice the Falafel would take with such accuracy.
47:51Unless your flight was foretold.
47:53You're suggesting the comet had foreknowledge of future events?
47:58The comet's flight path and its, I don't know, mission to seed that planet was predicated on you flying that shuttle to move it.
48:06It knew its fate, you might say.
48:09Thank you for your report, Cadet.
48:16Good day to Earl.
48:22As I said, many dream of being worthy of Starfleet, of representing its values of selflessness, courage, sacrifice.
48:32I know it shouldn't have been me down there.
48:34I have not finished Cadet.
48:39The odds of us surviving were, in fact, quite low.
48:43No pep talk could have increased them.
48:46I understand you did not come to Starfleet the way many of us have.
48:49That you were not sure you wished to stay.
48:52But, having observed your actions on the comet, I'm certain, should you choose to,
48:57Starfleet would be fortunate to have an officer like you.
49:02Thank you, sir.
49:20A little piece of ice and dust roaming through space brings life.
49:23I bet you not one of us could have predicted how.
49:30I'll give you that.
49:33So, just because you receive a message from the future, doesn't mean you understand it.
49:39We're not talking about the comet anymore, are we?
49:42Don't throw your life away, Chris.
49:49Number one...
49:50I know you had a vision of the future, but...
49:53I made a choice.
49:55I accepted my fate.
49:57It goes beyond my own life.
49:59What if you're wrong?
50:01What if you got that message so you could save those kids and that's it?
50:05What if you don't have to ruin your life too?
50:08How do you know you can't make a different choice?
50:11One that saves all of you?
50:14What if your fate is what you make it?
50:20Computer.
50:21Call up all available information for the following Federation citizens.
50:39You do what if your Bachelor.
50:40Datad paper.
50:41Dusty Swender.
50:46To kill dawn.
50:48Uliq al-Acazar.
50:53U-uto Hoshida.
50:57Andrea Lopez.

Recommended