| Capt. Miller: |
This place is a tomb. |
| ----- |
| W.F. Smith: |
When you break all the laws of physics, do
you seriously think there won't be a price?! |
| ----- |
| Dr. Weir: |
Hell is only a word . . . the reality is much,
much worse. |
| ----- |
| Dr. Weir: |
[W]hat's the shortest distance between two
points? |
| Mr. Justin: |
A straight line. |
| Dr. Weir: |
Wrong. The shortest distance between two points
is zero. |
| ----- |
| Capt. Miller: |
Vacate! I want off this ship. |
| ----- |
| W.F. Smith: |
[T]his ship is fu**ed. |
| Dr. Weir: |
Well, thank you for that scientific analysis,
Mr. Smith. |
| ----- |
| Capt. Miller: |
Okay, Dr. Weir, you don't wanna leave your
ship . . . you never will. |
| ----- |
| Dr. Weir: |
[D]on't do this. |
| Capt. Miller: |
It's done. |
| ----- |
| Dr. Weir: |
Well, using layman's terms: you use a rotating
magnetic field to focus a narrow beam of gravitons. Those
in turn, fold space/time, consistent with vail tensile dynamics,
until the space/time curvature becomes infinitely large and
produce a singularity. Now, the singularity . . . |
| Capt. Miller: |
Layman's terms? |
| Mr. Cooper: |
Well, fu** layman's terms. Do you speak English? |
| ----- |
| D.J.: |
If what Dr. Weir tells us is true, this ship
has been beyond the boundaries of our universe--of known scientific
reality. Who knows where it's been, what it's seen, and what
it's brought back with it. |
| ----- |
| Capt. Miller: |
I want you calm! I want you cool! |
|