Disclaimer: Of course i do not own Voyager or Star Trek , all right belong to Paramount. If you want this in a better quality with bonus material , buy the DVDs. Do it now!
I haven't seen this since probably '92, maybe earlier. I had to find this to try and flesh out the hazy memory but in this case, despite the fact that everything else about the show is exactly as remembered, this scene still doesn't match my memory the same way.
So, what you're saying is, if earlier in the day I've been tucking into some Brazils, right before I nut on a girl's face, I should first ask her if she's allergic to nuts? Or, just say nothing, attend an orgy, and play Russian Roulette, machine gun nutspray edition.
There is no experience in the world that cannot be described by a british person walking into a room; stopping, emoting thoughtfully, then leaving. This is the basis of all British Theatre.
General Melchett: "Everybody now where's my map, come on" Darling: "Sir." *hands Melchett the map* Melchett: "Thank you." *rolls out map* "God! It's a barren featureless desert out there!" Darlin: "The other side, Sir."
The moustache was a way of preventing females enrolling in the Army. In WWI, it became obvious that a moustache prevented proper seating of a gas mask. I hated having to wear a gas mask, the smell of the rubber also put me off dentists.
During the First World War, my grandad was charge-sheeted for not growing a moustache. He managed to speak to his CO and get the charge-sheet removed, since he was too young to grow a moustache.
Slight deviation but this means that the movie "Zulu" is way off with it's historical depiction of the soldiers of Rouke's Drift. Not many of the actors had moustaches and that conflict was in 1879, during the time that the regulation was enforced.