It's why most avoid moustaches. The temptation is too great.Oh, for pity's sake, they're Romulans, not Dick Dastardly, Snidely Whiplash, or Hedley Lamarr! They wouldn't be self-identifying as evil.
It's why most avoid moustaches. The temptation is too great.Oh, for pity's sake, they're Romulans, not Dick Dastardly, Snidely Whiplash, or Hedley Lamarr! They wouldn't be self-identifying as evil.
Gul Dukat joins the thread and gives a long speech about him being a hero misunderstood by those ungrateful bajoransOh, for pity's sake, they're Romulans, not Dick Dastardly, Snidely Whiplash, or Hedley Lamarr! They wouldn't be self-identifying as evil.
Gul Dukat joins the thread and gives a long speech about him being a hero misunderstood by those ungrateful bajorans
To this day there's not a single statue of him in this thread...
Galaxy Quest. Star Wars and the Ewoks.By the way, I seem to recall seeing the "vicious predator that's deceptively cute and deceptively meek" trope before. And before the "attack tribble" turned up on PIC. Anybody else have any other recollections of this trope showing up in ST? Or SW? Or someplace else I might have seen it?
~ As well as the examples that @fireproof78 mentioned, there's also Nibbler from Futurama, Flerken from the MCU, and the Killer Rabbit of Caerbannog from Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975) as mentioned in that Kill Kitten link.By the way, I seem to recall seeing the "vicious predator that's deceptively cute and deceptively meek" trope before. And before the "attack tribble" turned up on PIC. Anybody else have any other recollections of this trope showing up in ST? Or SW? Or someplace else I might have seen it?
The earliest recollection I have of the trope is from my sophomore year of high school, from the fellow who introduced me to D&D. His campaign included an awful lot of stuff imported from the competing Arduin game system (common enough, back before D&D became so proprietary), including the "kill kitten."
It's been a few years since I saw GQ, but I don't recall seeing anything that fits the trope. And Ewoks aren't "vicious predators"; they're sentient beings. Sentient beings whose homeworld is threatened.
~ As well as the examples that @fireproof78 mentioned, there's also Nibbler from Futurama, Flerken from the MCU, and the Killer Rabbit of Caerbannog from Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975) as mentioned in that Kill Kitten link.
Hmm. I don't remember that scene at all. Hell, most of the characters don't ring any bells with me, either. I barely remember the premise (a much more elaborate version of the same premise as the TOS short stories, "Visit to a Weird Planet" and "Visit to a Weird Planet Revisited," if I recall, i.e., a group of actors from a science fiction series finding themselves in a milieu where their fiction is the reality).
And Ewoks were straight up about to cook Luke, Han and Chewie.
I mean, I would count the salt vampire, but wasn't aware sentience was part of the criteria.Hmm. I don't remember that scene at all. Hell, most of the characters don't ring any bells with me, either. I barely remember the premise (a much more elaborate version of the same premise as the TOS short stories, "Visit to a Weird Planet" and "Visit to a Weird Planet Revisited," if I recall, i.e., a group of actors from a science fiction series finding themselves in a milieu where their fiction is the reality).
The thing is, the Moopsy, the Attack Tribble, Monty Python's Killer Rabbit, and the Kill Kittens of the Arduin RPG system, are all presumably non-sentient beasts, whereas the beings in the clip, and the Ewoks, Flerken, and Nibbler are presumably sentient beings. If the latter count, then Salt Vampires may as well count, too.
By the way, I seem to recall seeing the "vicious predator that's deceptively cute and deceptively meek" trope before. And before the "attack tribble" turned up on PIC. Anybody else have any other recollections of this trope showing up in ST? Or SW? Or someplace else I might have seen it?
The earliest recollection I have of the trope is from my sophomore year of high school, from the fellow who introduced me to D&D. His campaign included an awful lot of stuff imported from the competing Arduin game system (common enough, back before D&D became so proprietary), including the "kill kitten."
TV Tropes calls this the "Killer Rabbit" and has quite an extensive list:
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/KillerRabbit
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