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Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Posted: Fri Jan 22, 2021 7:40 pm
by cbr
Perhaps the challenge is to remove the poison from the chalice without the help of the scarred squire?
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Posted: Fri Jan 22, 2021 8:41 pm
by Nite Owl
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Posted: Mon Jan 25, 2021 10:41 pm
by RockDoctor
Well, if I'm juggling a chalice of poison - red poison, above my pure white fur carpet - then I shall ask for people who got bumped off in a SF story, using boring old poison. Not a Litvinenko-esque radioactive poison, or nanobots bearing crushed glass, or anything sophisticated - just pure unadulterated poison. Inorganic (MBP for something which is not arsenic!) or organic, systemic taking months of small doses, or something fast-acting enough to make "I've been poi..." the full set of Famous Last Words.
Boring poison - in a SF story.
MBPs are also available for real world examples in a "sciency" environment, so I'll take the Edinburgh Atropine Academic and the Thallous Teabreak Louse off the table already.
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2021 1:33 am
by ffutures
Duke Leto Atreides in Dune (1965) - Doctor Yueh is forced to capture him by Baron Harkonnen, but Yueh gives him an opportunity to take revenge by fitting a poison capsule into his teeth. Leto tries to use it to kill Harkonnen and himself, but only succeeds in taking out one of Harkonnen's henchmen as he dies.
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2021 9:44 am
by Rxke
Piter?
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2021 12:57 pm
by Disembodied
In the Tom Baker-era Doctor Who story "The Talons of Weng-Chiang", Leela kills a potential assassin using a blowdart tipped with a Janis thorn, a poisonous plant from her home planet (one of several people she disposes of by this method, I think).
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Posted: Tue Jan 26, 2021 9:18 pm
by ffutures
Rxke wrote: ↑Tue Jan 26, 2021 9:44 am
Yes, that's the henchman Leto killed, my mind went blank on the name
https://dune.fandom.com/wiki/Piter_de_Vries/XD
Another one - an unnamed hit-man who attacks the superhero Ozymandias in
The Watchmen.
Spoiler - select text below to make it more visible:
It appears that Ozymandias overcomes him and tries to stop him swallowing a poison capsule; in fact Ozymandias puts the capsule into the hit-man's mouth and breaks it, while pretending to stop him.
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2021 1:10 am
by RockDoctor
ffutures wrote: ↑Tue Jan 26, 2021 1:33 am
Duke Leto Atreides in Dune (1965) -
What a surprise - the toxic (if not themselves poisonous) roll in at #1 because they're mostly too fat to walk, or have a slave ... impeding ... their leg motion.
Another one - an unnamed hit-man who attacks the superhero Ozymandias in The Watchmen.
Yeees, and I'll give a MBP for a duet which I also remember.
Where, I wonder, did this trope of someone dieing
frothing at the mouth from a poison originate. Probably her Agathaness, but I'd have to check my Sherlock too. It's probably meant to play on people's memories of descriptions of rabies.
Disembodied wrote: In the Tom Baker-era Doctor Who story "The Talons of Weng-Chiang", Leela kills a potential assassin using a blowdart tipped with a Janis thorn, a poisonous plant from her home planet (one of several people she disposes of by this method, I think)
Another one which I remember. Have a MBP, to keep things even.
Another MBP for anyone who can tell us whose hate-mail "Leela" sometimes reads.
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2021 3:45 am
by ffutures
Re Leela - I remember running a Dr. Who tabletop RPG at an SF con many years ago. Leela was played by SF author Mary Gentle, who really channeled her inner barbarian for the role. At one point the characters were captured inside a bunker belonging to the president of a post-apocalyptic alternate world USA in 1991:
Leela: "I am Leela, warrior of the Sevateem!"
John Wayne (aged 80-ish): "Well hi there, little lady."
Leela (brandishes janis thorn, despite having been searched several times): "Can I kill him now, Doctor?"
Later in the adventure they had to convince the 1950s John Wayne to take a film role that would change history back the way it was supposed to be by pretending that Leela was a rising starlet who would be playing a barbarian slave girl in the film and was really anxious to work with him. She pretended to be rehearsing and used more or less the same line - and somehow made it sound seductive. He decided to make the film.
It's on line via the wayback machine if anyone wants to read it, and should be easy to adapt to most RPG systems:
Curse of The Conqueror
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2021 6:20 pm
by RockDoctor
ffutures wrote: ↑Wed Jan 27, 2021 3:45 am
Leela (brandishes janis thorn, despite having been searched several times): "Can I kill him now, Doctor?"
That should give the Church of Incompetent Creationism pause for thought. Their thinking processes are by definition deranged, so quite what those thoughts would be, by there would definitely be thoughts. A rare and unsettling experience for the poor bunnies.
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2021 7:40 pm
by Disembodied
In William Gibson's Neuromancer, Molly kills Ashpool (who may be well on the way anyway, from booze and pills) by shooting him in the eye with a dart tipped with shellfish toxin.
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2021 11:12 pm
by RockDoctor
Disembodied wrote: ↑Wed Jan 27, 2021 7:40 pm
In William Gibson's Neuromancer, Molly kills Ashpool (who may be well on the way anyway, from booze and pills) by shooting him in the eye with a dart tipped with shellfish toxin.
That's number 4, but I did a little wobbly on how badly the projectile in the eye would have injured him. Have to choose whether the poison is the killing agent or the projectile. I'm having a mental image of a rockfall trap with poison smeared on <i>one</i> of the cobbles, then ascribing death to poison instead of blunt force trauma.
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Posted: Thu Jan 28, 2021 11:07 am
by Disembodied
RockDoctor wrote: ↑Wed Jan 27, 2021 11:12 pm
That's number 4, but I did a little wobbly on how badly the projectile in the eye would have injured him. Have to choose whether the poison is the killing agent or the projectile. I'm having a mental image of a rockfall trap with poison smeared on <i>one</i> of the cobbles, then ascribing death to poison instead of blunt force trauma.
A fair point, but the dart made very sure. Later in the book another character says
[Ashpool] had a medical remote planted in his sternum. Not that your girl's dart would've left a resurrection crew much to work with. Shellfish toxin.
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Posted: Thu Jan 28, 2021 11:10 am
by Disembodied
Another death by poison: in the
Star Trek: TNG episode "
Reunion", Picard is summoned to the Klingon homeworld to act as arbitrator for the selection of a new Chancellor, after the previous Chancellor, K'mpec, reveals that he had been slowly, but fatally, poisoned.
Re: Science Fiction Trivia
Posted: Fri Jan 29, 2021 2:02 am
by RockDoctor
Disembodied wrote: ↑Thu Jan 28, 2021 11:10 am
Another death by poison: in the
Star Trek: TNG episode "
Reunion", Picard is summoned to the Klingon homeworld to act as arbitrator for the selection of a new Chancellor, after the previous Chancellor, K'mpec, reveals that he had been slowly, but fatally, poisoned.
And that looks like a winner of this ... marvellous ... chalice. With ... additives. Just remember your isolation suit when you pick it up.