@frostelf:
… so finnaly Dragon is former admiral than he betrayed WG become revolutionary and Kuma designed as human weapon against him .
Interesting theory. I'm not sure I can follow – or agree -- with all of what you're saying, but it's interesting.
@silverson:
i really think that zoro is the true captain of the crew and they would be nothing w/o him … hes the backbone of the crew.
I disagree! I don't think Zoro'd make a good captain at all. He's too much of a loner and he'd be too harsh on his crew. He gets too wound-up about things and is too easy to provoke. He hasn't got Luffy's innocence or natural confidence – but in spite of not being "good captain material", I think Zoro is excellent "first mate material".
@Coookie:
I wonder if Sanji will get a real pic of him on his bounty posters. It was a running gag until now that Kuma has seen his face. Sanji also told him who he was.
I think Oda's having too much fun with Sanji's current bounty picture to drop the joke so soon. Also, the current picture allows Sanji to move around unrecognized, so that's safer for him and better for his strategies – even if it's a blow to his self-esteem.
@Hiso:
Sanji tells Zoro to not forget his dream… but at the same time, he wants to die for Luffy as well... this kinda sounds like Sanji gave up his dream. (Or is it just me?)
Hiso, Sanji has a history of doing this. Think back to Baratie, and his feelings of obligation to Zeff – and to Zeff's dream (of creating a floating resturant). At Baratie, Sanji had basically pushed aside -- but not abandoned -- his dream of finding All-Blue, just as Zeff did (who also once wanted to find All-Blue). Years pass, and along comes this crew called Mugiwara who all believe in their dreams strongly, and who would even die for them (Sanji shouts "Just give up your dream!!" as Zoro gets sliced by Mihawk). Oddly enough, not only does this crew of dreamers love Sanji's food, but they also have a hot female navigator, and they don't laugh at him when he talks about his dream, and they're even willing to help him find All-Blue -- their only condition is that he joins of his own free will. So now he's free to talk openly about his dream again and not to keep it hidden within him.
Fast forward to the current chapter: so now Sanji stumbles onto this shocking scene where Zoro -- who never ever ever ever gives up his on his dream, right? -- is begging Kuma for death as a way of sparing Luffy's life. In other words, Zoro is placing his dream beneath Luffy's dream. And that probably gets Sanji thinking about his own dream, and if it ranks among the dreams of Luffy and Zoro (is finding a place as important as becoming "the strongest" or "the king"?) -- and those thoughts combined with Sanji's compassionate nature and Sanji's Alpha-type stubbornness are most likely what cause him to attempt to save Zoro's life, and why he feels so betrayed when Zoro knocks him down. He and Zoro usually only have physical contact when they're fighting each other, so that Sanji would grab Zoro by the shoulder, then grab him by the arm, then hang onto his arm until falling unconscious is significant (and no, not in a yaoi way, in a straight way). It's like Sanji's way of saying "Ok, you bastard, you tricked me and you won, but as long as I'm still conscious, I'm not letting you forget that I tried to stop you from killing yourself ..."
So I don't think Sanji'd given his dream up, at that moment, I think he'd just pushed it aside, just like Zoro pushed his own dream aside at that moment -- and I'm expecting that when we get closer to Fishman island and further from the events of this chapter, we'll see more training from Zoro and hear more daydreams about beautiful mermaids from Sanji (I'm beginning to think that Sanji's main reason for wanting to find All-Blue is because he thinks he'll find a beautiful mermaid there ...)