- Carl Sagan: It's an ancient human theme. You can find it in virtually every culture. In religion, folklore, superstition, and, now, in science. The search for life elsewhere is remarkable in our age because this is the first time that we can actually do something besides speculation. We can send spacecraft to nearby planets. We can use large radio telescopes to see if there is any message being sent to us lately. And it touches to the deepest of human concerns. Are we alone?
- Olga Solís: I don't know if this is boundary testing or sleep regression or..
- [Groans]
- Olga Solís: Which one of these is you?
- Elio: I don't know, but i think that one is you.
- Carl Sagan: [voice recording] Since the dawn of time, humans have gazed at the stars and wondered... are we alone? Voyager is our attempt to find out. This intrepid explorer is on a mission, traveling farther than any human has ever gone, to the distant reaches of the cosmos and beyond. Voyager will never see those who made it again. It will drift on, solitary and alone. But maybe one day, distant worlds will receive its message, and Voyager will complete its mission, proving we aren't so alone after all.
- Ambassador Helix: [to Elio; repeated line] As they say on Ee-rth, "Goodbye! I love you!"
- [referring to Elio's message salutation]
- [Elio and Glordon are crawling through laval tunnels; a lava flow is coming towards them]
- Elio: [panicked] Glordon, I'm not fire-proof!
- Glordon: Get in my mouth!
- [opens his mouth which is lined with razor sharp teeth]
- Elio: [recoils] Yah!
- Glordon: Just trust me!
- Elio: [Elio climbs into Glordon's mouth and is resting in Glordon's crop] Hmm... I kinda like it in here... it's pretty cozy.
- Glordon: Really? I've never been in there!
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