Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "When the Bough Breaks (Star Trek: The Next Generation)" ¶ 6
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

episode's and title
In his 1959 promotional film shown to potential sponsors, Rod Serling summarized an earlier version of this episode's plot under its original title, " Death, Destry, and Mr. Dingle.
The episode's title was borrowed by a song on The Fall's 1992 album Code: Selfish, and a 2004 independent film about a man who tries to escape an office building.
The episode's title comes from the Greek epic poem Odyssey, traditionally attributed to the legendary poet Homer.
*, an unnamed female voice that presents a short tale in the prologue before each episode that is often related to the theme of the episode's title.
Mrs. Maple was the only human inhabitant of the title town in this version, and she offered every episode's moral lesson to audiences.
In Season 1, episode 3 (" The Catevari ") of The Invisible Man, protagonist Darien Fawkes sarcastically references the film's title when his boss refuses to tell him secrets regarding the episode's villain by saying: " Why don't you cut the Three Days of the Condor crap?
Toying with many television conventions, Monty Python's Flying Circus ( 1969 – 74 ) played around with the concept of cold opens, sometimes having an entire episode before the starting credits, and, in two instances (" The Cycling Tour ", the first episode to have a full-length story, and " The Golden Age of Ballooning ", the first episode of series four ) had no opening credits at all ( the former has a brief title card with the episode's title, and the latter has no titles because Terry Gilliam had not finished the new opening sequence ).
As evidenced by her inclusion in this episode's opening title sequence only, she was intended to be a regular cast member during the first season.
* The episode's original title was " Pestilence, Famine and Death ".
Immediately following the opening credits, the episode's title card is superimposed over a nighttime view of the Los Angeles skyline, reading " The Greatest American Hero " before appending the letters " i n e " individually to the sound of the NBC chimes.
The episode's title is a play on the boyband New Kids on the Block.
The episode's title is derived from the term " Doppelgänger ", a German word for a look-alike or double of a living person.
The episode's title (" Enter Magneto ") appears in various additional works involving the X-Men.
The episode's title is a reference to the short story " The Tell-Tale Heart " by Edgar Allan Poe.
* The initial episode's title as Episode 14: The Eyes of Paragon, a reference to the fantasy novel The Eye of Argon.
The episode's title is the name of the medical facility run by Starfleet Medical and the Denobulans, where much of this episode's plot unfolds.
* The episode's title is a play on the saying " All's fair in love and war ", a proverb found in John Lyly's 16th century book Euphues that is commonly used to justify cheating.
Although the episode's title is a reference to the Danish mystery novel Smilla's Sense of Snow, there are no other allusions to the book in the episode.
In line with the community-focus of the Rooster Teeth and Achievement Hunter websites, and similarly to The Rooster Teeth Podcast, each episode's title sequence is created by a member of the community.
The episode's title " The Joy of Sect " was pitched by Richdale.
* " The Inquisitor " ( Red Dwarf ), an episode of the TV series, or the episode's title character
( The episode's title is spoof of the film Goodbye, Columbus, in which Benjamin played the lead.

episode's and is
An episode is considered " First Run " if aired within two weeks of that episode's initial air date.
This is illustrated on this episode's page on InfoSphere.
The episode's significance is in his forced introspection about his life, and its meaning, while contemplating his impending death by formal execution ; only in formal trial and death does he acknowledge his mortality and responsibility for his own life.
In the episode's epilogue, Sam is shown to have returned to Beth, appearing to her as himself, assuring her that Al is safe and will return to her ; this results in Al and Beth remaining happily married in the future, while Sam never returns to the future.
Also in the episode " Flaming Moe's ," a person in the bar is shown to have that episode's provocative name ( Hugh Jass, or " Huge ass "), and when he takes the phone, Bart quickly explains about it being a prank call and they hang up with Hugh Jass saying " what a nice young man.
Every episode's name is meant to be a suffix to the word " bottom ".
A still photo from the episode's shoot scene with Mike Wallace is on page 68 of the book 60 Minutes ': 25 Years of Television's Finest Hour ( 1993 ) by Frank Coffey.
At the two-part episode's conclusion, Pike is reunited with Vina and given the illusion of perfect health.
Although it is implied that nuclear warfare has destroyed humanity, film critic Andrew Sarris notes that the episode's necessarily unrealistic format may have been what allowed its production to commence:
Logan St. Clair was created to be a recurring character, which is evident in the episode's dialogue, but only appeared once.
The fifth and final episode's status is unknown, but presumed to exist.
The daughter has taken to calling Jerry " Uncle Jerry ", but by the episode's end, it is said she now refers to him as " daddy "-to the clear discomfort of Elaine and Jerry.
The ship is shown ( by a postcard ) to have reached a planet named Siluria with its dinosaurs at the episode's conclusion.
The music during the episode's final scene, for example, is the same as that which played at the conclusion of the Fourth Doctor's regeneration into the Fifth in Logopolis.
The episode's story is similar to Guardian's first comics appearance ( as Weapon Alpha ) in Uncanny X-Men # 109.
The audience's first critical assumption — that this is a " musical episode " where the Buffy cast is presumably unaware that they are singing — is overturned when it becomes clear that the characters are all too aware of their musical interludes and that determining the supernatural causes for the singing will be the focus of the episode's story.
The episode's setting is stated in dialogue and a newspaper masthead as being 18 – 25 December 1981, and Sarah Jane's experiences with the Doctor and UNIT are in her past, indicating that the Third and Fourth Doctor serials took place more or less contemporaneously to their original broadcast dates.
He demonstrates mastery of whatever field of science is convenient for a given episode's plot ; however, in the episode Mars University when asked what he is teaching, he responds: " The same thing I teach every semester, the mathematics of quantum neutrino fields.
The episode's name is the first usage of the phrase " Where No Man Has Gone Before " in Star Trek.

0.907 seconds.