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Clips from Star Trek (1966) - Return to Tomorrow (S02E02)
"Thalassa and I must now also depart into oblivion."
Star Trek (1966)
"A last moment together."
Star Trek (1966)
"I promise, beloved."
Star Trek (1966)
"Together forever."
Star Trek (1966)
"...forever."
Star Trek (1966)
"The reading's growing stronger, Captain."
Star Trek (1966)
"Coming from a star system directly ahead."
Star Trek (1966)
"It's not a signal, sir."
Star Trek (1966)
"Well?"
Star Trek (1966)
"Someone or something is attempting to attract our attention."
Star Trek (1966)
"Someone or something has succeeded."
Star Trek (1966)
"Our distress signal relays have been activated."
Star Trek (1966)
"Not even a Vulcan can know the unknown, Captain."
Star Trek (1966)
"With two very important exceptions. It is much older than Earth,"
Star Trek (1966)
"and about a half million years ago,"
Star Trek (1966)
"its atmosphere was totally ripped away by some sort of cataclysm."
Star Trek (1966)
"Sensors detect no life of any kind."
Star Trek (1966)
"It is the energy of my thoughts which has touched your instruments"
Star Trek (1966)
"Now, at this closer distance, I can speak to you at last."
Star Trek (1966)
"Who are you, Sargon?"
Star Trek (1966)
"Is that a request or demand?"
Star Trek (1966)
"The choice is yours."
Star Trek (1966)
"There's no possibility of life there as we understand life."
Star Trek (1966)
"And I am as dead as my planet."
Star Trek (1966)
"Does that frighten you, James Kirk? For if it does,"
Star Trek (1966)
"if you let what is left of me perish,"
Star Trek (1966)
"then all of you, my children,"
Star Trek (1966)
"all of mankind must perish too."
Star Trek (1966)
"These are the voyages of the Starship Enterprise."
Star Trek (1966)
"Its five-year mission: To explore strange, new worlds,"
Star Trek (1966)
"to boldly go where no man has gone before."
Star Trek (1966)
"Captain's Log. Stardate 4768.3."
Star Trek (1966)
"The Enterprise is in orbit above a planet"
Star Trek (1966)
"whose surface, our sensors tell us, is devoid of all life."
Star Trek (1966)
"A world destroyed and dead for at least a half million years,"
Star Trek (1966)
"yet from it comes a voice, the energy of pure thought,"
Star Trek (1966)
"telling us something has survived here for those thousands of centuries."
Star Trek (1966)
"Since exploration and contact with alien intelligence is our primary mission,"
Star Trek (1966)
"I've decided to risk the potential dangers and resume contact."
Star Trek (1966)
"Over three weeks at this distance, sir."
Star Trek (1966)
"Got something?"
Star Trek (1966)
"Sensors registering some form of energy deep inside the planet."
Star Trek (1966)
"Coming from deep under the planet surface, Captain..."
Star Trek (1966)
"...under at least 100 miles of solid rock."
Star Trek (1966)
"I will make it possible for your transporter"
Star Trek (1966)
"Reading a chamber now."
Star Trek (1966)
"Oxygen-nitrogen atmosphere, suitable for human life support."
Star Trek (1966)
"Lieutenant Uhura, have Dr. McCoy report to the Transporter Room"
Star Trek (1966)
"in 10 minutes with standard landing-party equipment."
Star Trek (1966)
"Yes, sir."
Star Trek (1966)
"- Spock. - Captain. Captain,"
Star Trek (1966)
"I do wish to inspect whatever this is that lived that long ago."
Star Trek (1966)
"And I'd want my Science Officer with me on something as unusual as this,"
Star Trek (1966)
"but it is full of unknowns, and we can't risk both of us being off the ship."
Star Trek (1966)
"On the other hand, perhaps this Sargon would like you to come with us."
Star Trek (1966)
"Will you transport down with us, Mr. Spock?"
Star Trek (1966)
"- Evidently, Captain. - Mr. Sulu, you have the conn."
Star Trek (1966)
"Easy. As long as you know there's something down there"
Star Trek (1966)
"you know as much as we do. The rest is only guesses."
Star Trek (1966)
"I don't like it, sir."
Star Trek (1966)
"The transporter coordinates preset by an alien of some sort."
Star Trek (1966)
"You could materialize inside solid rock."
Star Trek (1966)
"- Inside solid rock? - Unlikely."
Star Trek (1966)
"These coordinates correspond with the location of the subterranean chamber."
Star Trek (1966)
"I have a feeling that they, or it,"
Star Trek (1966)
"could destroy us just standing here if they or it wanted to."
Star Trek (1966)
""They or it"?"
Star Trek (1966)
"- Who are you? - Dr. Ann Mulhall, Astrobiology."
Star Trek (1966)
"I did receive an order to report here for duty."
Star Trek (1966)
"I'm sure she did, Captain, just as you received an order to bring me along."
Star Trek (1966)
"Let's get back to this solid rock business."
Star Trek (1966)
"Approximately 112.37 miles, doctor."
Star Trek (1966)
"Miles?"
Star Trek (1966)
"Are you joking?"
Star Trek (1966)
"Doctor, if you prefer to stay behind..."
Star Trek (1966)
"No."
Star Trek (1966)
"No, if I'd be useful. As long as you're going down,"
Star Trek (1966)
"I might as well take a medical look at whatever this is."
Star Trek (1966)
"Captain, the security guards."
Star Trek (1966)
"- Kirk here. - Can you read me, Captain?"
Star Trek (1966)
"Yes, Scotty. And I shouldn't be able to this deep inside the planet."
Star Trek (1966)
"But perhaps that's been arranged for us too."
Star Trek (1966)
"Is the security guard up there?"
Star Trek (1966)
"They're fine, Captain. They just didn't dematerialize."
Star Trek (1966)
"I don't like it, sir."
Star Trek (1966)
"No problem yet. Maintain alert. Kirk out."
Star Trek (1966)
"This vault was constructed about a half million years ago."
Star Trek (1966)
"About the same time the planet surface was destroyed,"
Star Trek (1966)
"- if our sensor readings are accurate. - Composition of walls?"
Star Trek (1966)
"They're an alloy or substance completely unknown to me,"
Star Trek (1966)
"much stronger and harder than anything I've measured before."
Star Trek (1966)
"All readings are off the scale, Captain."
Star Trek (1966)
"Welcome."
Star Trek (1966)
"I am Sargon."
Star Trek (1966)
"Sargon, would it harm you if I..."
Star Trek (1966)
"You may use your tricorder, Mr. Spock."
Star Trek (1966)
"But you once had a body of some type?"
Star Trek (1966)
"although our minds were infinitely greater."
Star Trek (1966)
"That's twice you've referred to us as "my children.""
Star Trek (1966)
"Because it is possible you are our descendants, Captain Kirk."
Star Trek (1966)
"Six thousand centuries ago our vessels were colonizing this galaxy"
Star Trek (1966)
"Perhaps your own legends of an Adam and an Eve"
Star Trek (1966)
"Our beliefs and our studies indicate"
Star Trek (1966)
"that life on our planet Earth evolved independently."
Star Trek (1966)
"That would tend, however, to explain certain elements of Vulcan pre-history."
Star Trek (1966)
"In either case, I do not know."
Star Trek (1966)
"A struggle for such goals and the unleashing of such power"
Star Trek (1966)
"that you could not comprehend."
Star Trek (1966)
"Then perhaps your intelligence wasn't so great, Sargon."
Star Trek (1966)
"We faced a similar crisis in our earlier nuclear age."
Star Trek (1966)
"We found the wisdom not to destroy ourselves."
Star Trek (1966)
"And we survived our primitive nuclear era, my son."
Star Trek (1966)
"But there comes to all races, an ultimate crisis"
Star Trek (1966)
"One day our minds became so powerful"
Star Trek (1966)
"we dared think of ourselves as gods."
Star Trek (1966)
"You said you wanted our help. What is it you wish?"
Star Trek (1966)
"Just a moment, doctor."
Star Trek (1966)
"I am Sargon."
Star Trek (1966)
"Where's Jim Kirk?"
Star Trek (1966)
"He is unharmed."
Star Trek (1966)
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