“All right, you ragtag bunch of misfits! You hate me, and I hate you even more. But without my beloved ringers, you’re all I’ve got. So I want you to remember some inspiring words that someone else might have told you over the course of your lives, and go out there and win!”
Mister Burns, to his softball team in The Simpsons, episode “Homer at the Bat.”
I don’t go to superhero movies anymore. True, there are accessibility accommodations made for the blind in mini theaters, but frankly I find having the spectacular exploits of Thor or Spider-Man described when I can’t really see them makes the experience worse, not better.
While not exactly what the OP had in mind, Angel’s “Epiphany” speech comes to mind.
[/QUOTE]
I doubt will find any peer examples of this sort of speech in the works of Joss Whedon. There are bad ass boasts a plenty, but with this kind of thing, Whedon generally prefers to subvert expectations.
What is that from? Seems a little weak, especially as the USS Enterprise CV-6 was the most important ship in WWII for the US and the USS Enterprise CVN-65 was the first nuclear Super Carrier and served for 50 years.
“Attention all hands. As you know, we could outrun the Klingon vessels. But we must protect the Enterprise-C until she enters the temporal rift. And we must succeed. Let’s make sure history never forgets… the name… ‘Enterprise’. Picard out.”
Weak one. In the Star Trek Universe, how many times did NCC-1701 save the Federation and/or Earth? And continuity includes the 2 carriers I mentioned from the US Navy. Hell, when they went back in time, Chekov & Uhura snuck aboard CVN-65 to collect power from her reactors.
I must be missing some context or Picard was being very ignorant.
I saw the episode and I thought the speech was weak, too. Patrick Stewart’s delivery just seemed way off, like he was having trouble remembering the line. His “That will be the day” later in the scene was a lot cooler.
Today… At the edge of our hope, at the end of our time, we have chosen not only to believe in ourselves, but in each other. Today there is not a man nor woman in here that shall stand alone. Not today. Today we face the monsters that are at our door and bring the fight to them! Today, we are canceling the apocalypse!
– Stacker Pentecost, Pacific Rim