The Original Series [TOS] !Next Generation [TNG] !Deep Space Nine [DS9] ! Voyager [VGR] !Enterprise
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 1, Episode 1]
Caretaker Part I
In a scene straight out of Star Wars IV: A New Hope , including the scrolling exposition, a giant Cardassian warship chases a small rebel vessel. They fly into a spacial disruption. The Maquis ship, crewed by Chakotay [ ], Tuvok [Tim Russ] and Belanna Torres [ Roxann Biggs-Dawson ] is lost without trace.
Back on Earth, Captain Janeway [ Kate Mulgrew ] is selected for the rescue mission.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 1, Episode 2]
Caretaker Part II
Trapped in the Delta Quadrant, Voyager encounters an alien trader named Neelix. He is an interesting character with a lot of potential. A potential Ferengi-type character, he is a wheeler-dealer who cons Janeway into rescuing his girlfriend Kes [ Jennifer Lien ].
Janeway must make a decision - use the Caretaker's Array to get Voyager home [and allow the Kazon to salvage its technology] or destroy the Array [and trap Voyager 75 years from home.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 1, Episode 3]
Parallax
Voyager detects a ship's emergency beacon, and flies towards a subspace anomaly to rescue the other ship. However, they get trapped inside the anomaly.
When they discover what the source of the emergency beacon was, Tom Paris remarks on how impossible the whole scenario is. He then asks Am I making any sense? ... And Janeway replies No!!! WTF? His statement is the only thing about the episode that DOES make sense.
There is an attempt at character development of Belanna Torres [ Roxann Biggs-Dawson ] and an undercurrent of conflict concerning the Maquis. However, by the end of the episode this has all been neatly tied up and the show's potential has been reduced immensely. This was the first appearance of Seska [ Martha Hackett ].
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 1, Episode 4]
Time And Again
Voyager discovers a planet that was recently devastated by a massive explosion. Half the bridge crew beams down to investigate. Kes [ Jennifer Lien ] has a psychic flash, then Paris and Janeway are sucked through a time portal.
The explosion, caused by the civilisation's power source [a blatant metaphor for Nuclear power], has opened rips in time. Paris and Janeway find themselves in the past, just a couple of days before the doomsday explosion. Luckily the aliens look exactly like humans!
The local anti-nuclear demonstrations consist of amateurish cops and middle-class rioters.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 1, Episode 5]
Phage
Neelix decides to turn the Captain's private dining hall into a public galley. This is the start of his destruction as a character - he has been blatantly transformed into comic relief fodder. Thus, nobody will shed any tears when his lungs are stolen!
In sick bay, Neelix asks the HoloDoc Are you programmed to sing? Yes, in the destruction of one character are the seeds of another. Meanwhile, poor Kes is almost willing to seek solace in the arms of Paris. She also decides to become a medic.
The villains of the episode are the organ-stealing Vidiians, one of the show's better villains. They have been afflicted with a disease known as the Phage which causes them to slowly rot away. As a result they constantly need to be transplanted with new organs. Janeway orders them never to attack her crew again, or she will retaliate against them. Will they heed this?
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 1, Episode 7]
Eye of the Needle
Voyager discovers a small wormhole. They use it to contact a ship in the Alpha Quadrant, piloted by a Romulan named Telek [ Vaughn Armstrong ].
Belanna isn't close to mother, doesn't keep in touch with her. The Capt calls her "torres", Belanna calls Harry starfleet.
The EMH is dissed by crew, Kes talks Janeway into helping him gives him control over when he's switched on.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 1, Episode 9]
Emanations
While exploring a hollow asteroid filled with corpses, Harry Kim is sucked through a mini-wormhole. He arrives on the world the corpses came from, part of a religious ceremony presided over by Jerry Hardin [ X-Files ].
Aboard Voyager, Seska [ Martha Hackett ] is still working in Engineering.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 1, Episode 10]
Prime Factors
Voyager discovers a planet with a highly-advanced civilisation, based on hedonism. The locals have technology that allows them to transport people into a different Quadrant! However, the locals have their own Prime Directive which means they cannot share the technology with the Federation.
Janeway wonders if it is justifiable for her to break the local law. Tuvok, Torres and Seska [ Martha Hackett ] wonder if it is justifiable to ignore Janeway's orders and break the law themselves.
Janeway takes a long time to deduce that the locals' hedonism is merely selfishness.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 1, Episode 11]
State of Flux
Seska [ Martha Hackett ] is back.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 1, Episode 12]
Heroes and Demons
Voyager encounters a photonic energy being. Harry Kim is in the holodeck, running Beowolf, and he doesn't come out! Tuvok and Chakotay go in to look, but they don't make it out either.
The only person who can go into the holodeck is the EMH. He encounters a babelicious Viking warrior-woman [ Marjorie Monaghan ] and the villainous Christopher Neame [ Babylon 5 ].
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 2, Episode 1]
The 37s
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 2, Episode 2]
Initiations
Chakotay is attacked by a pubescent Kazon boy who wants to earn his name by gloriously defeating someone in battle. The Kazon is played by the kid who plays Nog the Ferengi in Deep Space 9.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 2, Episode 3]
Projections
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 2, Episode 4]
Elogium
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 2, Episode 5]
Non Sequitur
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 2, Episode 6]
Twisted
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 2, Episode 7]
Parturition
Neelix gets jealous when his GF, Kes, spends all her spare time with Tom Paris instead. Then Neelix and Paris crash-land on a deserted planet, and must learn to get along while they await rescue.
This episode is un-notable, with the exception of one piece of dialogue. Paris tells Neelix some Trekkie crap about reversing polarities or something. Neelix replies Don't give me any of your TECHNOBABBLE!
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 2, Episode 8]
Persistence of Vision
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 2, Episode 9]
Tattoo
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 2, Episode 10]
Cold Fire
Voyager encounters a space station similar to the Caretaker's array. It appears to have been built by the Caretaker's companion. The inhabitants are Ocampa, ruled by Garry Graham [ Alien Nation ]. He tempts Kes to join them.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 11]
Manoeuvres
Voyager is attacked by the Kazon Nistrom sect, who are now getting tactical and strategic advice from the treacherous Cardassian Seska [ Martha Hackett ]. Chakotay takes this very personally, and vows to settle the score. Meanwhile, the Kazon try to barter with other kazon sects, using stolen Voyager technology to show their power.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 12]
Resistance
Voyager is running short on Plot Device-ium. An Away Team beams down to a planet, and instead of openly dealing with the [repressive and paranoid] government they buy the stuff from the Resistance. However, some cops dressed like Streethawk arrest them.
Neelix gets back to the ship with the stuff. Tuvok and Torres get captured. And who led the team? Someone expendable like Chakotay? No, it was Janeway herself!
Chakotay tries to negotiate with the government, and deals with low-level magistrate Alan Scarfe [ Seven Days ]. However, Scarfe and his army [well, two thugs] are torturing the two Voyager prisoners.
Janeway is in the house of an apparently crazy old man [Joel Grey - Buffy, Season 5 ]. He claims she is his daughter, and offers to help her break into the prison. He makes her wear a necklace and write a letter - but she doesn't realise that he may be an Agent Provocateur!
There is a good bit to the episode, though. To break into the prison, Janeway has to pose as a street-whore for the guards!
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 13]
Prototype
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 14]
Alliances
Janeway decides that to survive, Voyager must make an alliance with a local power. She holds a peace conference with Seska [ Martha Hackett ] and the Kazon Nistrom.
Neelix discovers a group of interstellar refugees, survivors of a race called the Treib who once enslaved the Kazon.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 15]
Threshold
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 16]
Meld
Tuvok investigates a murder, and decides to mind-meld with suspect Ensign Suder [Brad Dourif - Alien Resurrection ].
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 17]
Dreadnought
Voyager is up against a Cardassian superweapon that Torres reprogrammed. Now she must outsmart herself ...
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 18]
Death Wish
Voyager rescues an errant Q [Gerrit Graham - Philadelphia Experiment 2 ] who has been exiled from the Continuum. His wish: to be allowed to die. John de Lancie pops up, too.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 19]
Lifesigns
The Holographic Doctor falls in love with a Viidan woman. Voyager takes a female Vidian doctor aboard, and the Holodoc treats her. He uploads her consciousness into the hologram buffers, so that she becomes a holographic entity like him. They socialise together, and he falls in love with her.
The B-story sets up foreshadowing for next episode. Crewman Jonas is secretly communicating with Seska [ Martha Hackett ]. Meanwhile, Paris has fallen out with Chakotay. Paris is insubordinate to Janeway, and Seska plans to attack Voyager. Both these plot threads are continued in the next episode.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 20]
Investigations
Paris leaves the crew, and is soon kidnapped by Seska's Kazon allies.
Meanwhile, Neelix investigates and deduces that Paris was working for Seska all along.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 21]
Deadlock
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 22]
Innocence
Tuvok tries to help 3 alien children abandoned by their own race.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 23]
The Thaw
Voyager rescues some Aliens in Cryo. Their brains are linked into VR. The Clown [Michael McKean] reads their fears. He can kill [heart attack due to fear - cliche].
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 24]
Tuvix
Tuvok and Neelix are involved in a transporter accident that merges them into a single entity that calls itself Tuvix. At first they cannot reverse the process, so Tuvix fulfills the role of both the composite characters.
The part is well-cast, well-acted and even the makeup is excellent.
The story has a basic flaw. Because of Star Trek's disgusting lack of plot development, we know the reset button will be pushed at the end of the episode. Therefore when Janeway confronts the dilemma of destroying Tuvix to restore Neelix and Tuvok, we know what her decision will be - wven if the viewers all know it to be the wrong one!
There is another problem with the logic. The transporter works by disentigrating the person and replicating them from the buffers. Therefore, Janeway can replicate an infinite number of Neelixes and Tuvoks without harming Tuvix.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 25]
Resolutions
Janeway and Chakotay have contracted an apparently incurable disease. They are marooned on an M-Class world. Sexual tension is implied, but they decide not to do it. Huh!
Meanwhile, Tuvok is left in charge of Voyager. The crew is unhappy about losing their leaders, although for both of them to get infected smacks of incompetance.
Harry Kim gets mutinous, and tries to force Tuvok to contact the Vidiians. They can offer to trade Belanna's Klingon DNA, a nice piece of continuity. Also, the Doctor's GF has a cameo.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 2, Episode 26]
Basics, Part I
Seska [ Martha Hackett ] outwits Janeway. That doesn't sound too difficult, eh? Of course, she reckons without the EMH and Ensign Suder [Brad Dourif].
Star Trek: VGR [Season 3, Episode 1]
Basics, Part II
Voyager's crew has been marooned in a desert on an M-class world. Without the ship's super-tech Neelix is the only one with any survival skills. Before the credits begin, a redshirt gets snatched by an unseen menace in a scene that may have inspired Aussie SF movie Pitch Black.
The Doctor is the only officer left aboard the ship - except for Ensign Suder [Brad Dourif] the convicted psychopathic murderer. Lieutenant Paris has taken a shuttle to get help from the Talaxians. They have to retake the ship, while the marooned crew struggle to survive.
The desert is inhabited by humanoids with putty on their foreheads. Their behaviour is reminiscent of the ape-men in 2001 - A Space Odyssey , and their language is untranslatable by the Universal Translator. There is also a CGI beastie and a volcano to contend with.
We get to find out who the father of Seska's baby is. We also get an end to the Seska story arc.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 2]
Flashback
Tuvok has strange visions. It turns out that a repressed memory is manifesting itself, and it will soon cause him permanent brain damage. His only hope is for Janeway to mind meld with him. Together, they explore Tuvok's memory.
They find themselves on the bridge of the USS Excelsior during the events of Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country . Not only are there excerpts from the original film, there are actually re-staged scenes where Tuvok and Janeway interact with the characters in Tuvok's memory. Captain Sulu [George Takei] and Janice Rand [ Grace Lee Whitney ] both appear.
This was apparently the Pilot episode of the Captain Sulu series, a touted replacement because Voyager's ratings were falling.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 3]
The Chute
Harry Kim finds himself trapped in an underground prison with fifty violent aliens. Luckily he has the [comparatively] tough and streetwise Tom Paris to watch his ass.
Meanwhile, Janeway is insensed that her splods have been arrested, convicted and imprisoned of a crime they are blatantly innocent of. Does she take on the fascist regime, and rescue her crewmen? No, she tracks down the real freedom fighters - resorting to piracy and kidnapping on the flimsiest of pretexts.
In the prison, Harry must defeat the security systems that protect the only way in or out ... The Chute. However, the prison conditions and neural implants drive our heroes to the brink of insanity ...
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 4]
The Swarm
This is from back in the days when Janeway was tough, before 7of9 appeared and took over as the token tough female. VGR approaches an area of space controlled by a species who do not let strangers enter their space. It will take VGR 15 months to go around. Hey, they're going to take 70 years to get back anyway, what does a few extra months mean to anyone? Janeway doesn't see it that way; in direct violation of the Prime Directive she decides to barge on through!
Paris and Torres are in a shuttle on an Away Mission, flirting away. They are boarded and zapped by mysterious aliens - creatures that actually LOOK alien! The aliens attack anyone who enters their space, and bypassing it would take Voyager an extra 15 months!
Meanwhile, the Doctor is practising his opera singing in his spare time when he somehow forgets the lyrics. Most of the episode's screen time is taken up with the Holodoc's premature senility. It turns out that he is starting to suffer from memory loss, which soon interferes with his ability to perform surgery. It seems that he has a serious memory fragmentation.
Standard procedure is a complete reboot, which means that he will lose all the character development of the last years. Torres starts up the diagnostic program, a hologram of Dr Lewis Zimmerman [the EMH's creator]. Robert Picardo is excellent in the dual roles of senile EMH and irritating Zimmerman.
The Doc has exceeded his 1500 hours warantee - he has been running for 2 years! The obvious option is to re-install the program, and reboot - thus losing all the personality improvements that have developed.
Nobody realises 2 very important things.
A side note: the doc [a hologram!!!] is shown scrubbing pre-operation, and he has to use his fingers to press the off switch when he has finished - thus contaminating himself again!
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 5]
False Profits
Voyager arrives at a planet where there is evidence of use of a replicator. It turns out that, thanks to Star Trek: TNG , a pair of Alpha Quadrant types ended up on the world. They co-opted the local religion and declared themselves gods, the Sages. These so-called Sages live in a palacial temple while the local citizens have a medieval society. Hmm. That would never happen on Earth, eh? Yes, the Sages have to TEACH greed to the [human?] natives!
Neelix expertly cons the Sages - this is a wonderful example of what a cutting-edge character he could have been, instead of just comic relief. Unfortunately this doesn't last long.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 6]
Remember
Torres starts to have very vivid erotic dreams. Voyager has an alien delegation aboard, and since the aliens are telepathic the dreams may in fact be memories.
The alien culture revealed in the dreams gets gradually more repressive, with quite a shocking ending.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 7]
Sacred Ground
In an alien planet's shrine, Kes gets zapped into a coma by a strange forcefield. The local Magistrate [Harry Groener, the Mayor in Buffy Season 3 ] helps as much as he can. Janeway must undertake the aliens' religious ritual.
Robert Duncan MacNeill directed this episode, so Tom Paris doesn't appear much.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 8]
Future's End Part I
Voyager is attacked by a Federation ship from the 29th century. Apparently there will be a temporal disaster caused by Voyager. The ship gets sucked into a temporal rift and ends up in ... 1996!
In Los Angeles, the source of the temporal anomaly, a billionaire [Ed Begly Jnr] is plotting something. Janeway, Chakotay, Tuvok and Paris beam down - leaving Harry Kim in charge! Then the Transporter buffers crash, trapping all the senior staff in 1996 LA!
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 9]
Future's End Part II
Tuvok and Paris are on the run with the nerdy babe [ Sarah Silverman ].
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 10]
Warlord
Kes is possessed by the spirit of a dead alien warlord. The result? An unthreatening villan, and a wasted opportunity to develop Kes' character.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 11]
The Q & The Grey
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 12]
Macrocosm
Janeway returns to Voyager, and discovers it infested with massive, man-sized viruses.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 13]
Fair Trade
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 14]
Alter Ego
Harry Kim falls in love with a holodeck character. She is not all that she seems, and prefers the company of Tuvok!
Torres accompanies a Vulcan officer to the Holodeck Luau. Their relationship comes up again in the episode Blood Fever!
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 15]
Coda
Janeway and Chakotay are on an away mission together. Yes, both command officers! Their shuttle crashes, and Chakotay drags the injured Captain to a cave. She finds herself in the afterlife, with her father as her guide.
As ever, there's lots of pseudo-science. In the climax scene we see the holodoc in the cave [ie outside of med-bay], so he must have got his remote emitter by this stage.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 16]
Blood Fever
A Vulcan crew-member begins to act irrationally. He tries to mind-meld with Torres, who breaks his jaw. The holodoc discovers that the Vulcan has Ponn Farr ... Hell, any SF fan could have told him that.
Voyager detects an abandoned mining colony. Torres [chief engineer], Tom Paris [rock-climber] and Neelix [former Miner] beam down to investigate the mines and caves. Torres begins to act irrationally, especially when she and Paris get trapped underground together.
Of note, this episode was directed by Andrew Robinson [Garak in Deep Space 9 ]. Also, it is Voyager's first encounter with an important race ...
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 17]
Unity
Chakotay and a female redshirt are on a shuttle that crash-lands on a planet with a primitive society. Chakotay develops a relationship with a human woman who lives on the world, and discovers that her group use a mental link to maintain a peaceful, Federation-type society.
Meanwhile, Voyager discovers the remains of a Borg cube.
Robert Duncan MacNeill directed this episode, so Tom Paris doesn't appear much.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 18]
The Darkling
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 19]
Rise
Tuvok and Neelix, on a rescue mission, end up stranded on a planet about to be smashed my an asteroid. Luckily, Neelix has the skills to repair an orbital elevator.
The ep's maininfluence appears to be Flight of the Phoenix. Neelix's embelishment of his skills is lifted directly from it. Butthis ep allows the annoying little rodent to play the underdog, and gain our sympathy [to a small degree].
To give a bit more action-adventure, lifted from the works of Alastair MacLean, one of the survivors on the elevator is a saboteur ...
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 20]
Favourite Son
Shown 14th February 2002 [Thursday]
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 21]
Before And After
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 22]
Real Life
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 23]
Distant Origin
A pair of scaley-faced aliens are hunting Voyager down. They infiltrate the ship and spy on Paris and Torres' flirtation ...
It turns out that their species is descended from Hadrosaurs - plant-eating dinosaurs from Earth! They want to prove it scientifically. However, their own species' government are a bunch of religious zealots. And their technology far outstrips Voyager's.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 24]
Worst Case Scenario
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 25]
Displaced
Voyager's crew start disappearing, one by one. They are replaced by harmless-looking alien civilians. Yes, apparently this is a strange natural phenomenon.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 3, Episode 26]
Scorpion Part I
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 4, Episode 1]
Scorpion Part II
Janeway makes a deal with the Borg. She insists they use a representative to communicate with her, to mirror the use of Locutus in Best of Both Worlds. The end result is ... 7of9, the suited-up Jeri Lynn Ryan .
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 4, Episode 2]
The Gift
Kes' psychic powers drive her to a meltdown.
The Doctor removes most of 7of9's implants. The result is ... Jeri Lynn Ryan
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 4, Episode 3]
Day of Honour
A disaster happens in Engineering, as per usual, and they have to eject the warp core. Torres and Paris fly out to collect it. However, they end up trapped in their spacesuits, with the oxygen running out and little hope of rescue. Torres opens her heart to Paris ...
Since this is more or less a sequel to Blood Fever, Ensign Vorek gets a walk-on part at the start of the episode.
Meanwhile, 7of9 starts to bond with Janeway.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 4, Episode 4]
Nemesis
Chakotay is captured by some human soldiers on a jungle planet. They have no armour or uniforms beyond camouflage t-shirts! Their rifles are 1990s bullpups, not very alien at all. The Universal Translator is having problems with their language - we get lots of phrases that belong in Mad Max 3 .
Slowly but surely, Chakotay is sucked into the war. The villains, with make-up reminiscent of the creature in the film Predator , are keen on committing war crimes against civilians. The strange thing is that, despite being a Maquis captain, he sticks to Federation pacifism for as long as possible!
When Voyager arrives, they make contact with one side. Now, which side do you think that is?
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 4, Episode 5]
Revulsion
This takes place three days after Day of Honour. After Tuvok's official promotion to Lieutenant Commander, Paris and Torres meet up to discuss things.
Voyager detects a distress beacon from a ship. The only survivor is a hologram, so the Doctor and Torres are sent to the ship. The Hologram is hostile to organic life-forms, sometimes violently so. It's nice to see a potentially evil version of the Doctor. However, the character is totally OTT and lacking in any subtlety.
Speaking of unsubtle, Harry Kim and 7of9 are building the astrometrics lab. Harry is subject to the same response that all heterosexual men have towards her ...
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 4, Episode 6]
The Raven
7of9 goes rogue. She thinks the Borg are calling her home.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 4, Episode 7]
Scientific Method
Star Trek: VGR [Season 4, Episode 8]
Year of Hell, Part I
7of9 and Harry Kim have compleed the Astrometrics lab, and plotted a new route home. It will save 5 years off their journey - but unbenkownst to them it will take them into the path of Anorax [Kurtwood Smith - Star Tek: Undiscovered Country ], who has a superweapon that can alter the past!
This starts part one of a 2-part story; finally the Space Cadets get their asses kicked! The villains are some kind of human mutants [they have Trill-like freckles and dimly-lit ships, but they're obviously not aliens - Narns and Ferengi are aliens!] that have control over time-warps or something. I don't know the details - I had trouble staying awake. But I know something Janeway doesn't; the bad guys are winning because their leader is the Federation's President from Star Trek VI - no wonder he knows all their weaknesses!
Two noticeable references made in the show are
Star Trek: VGR [Season 4, Episode 9]
Year of Hell, Part II
Taking up from where last ep left off, Chakotay and Paris are Anorax's .... guests. Yes, in typical supervillain style he monologues them! Chakotay is taken in by this interstellar Ahab/Nemo, while Paris plots mutiny.
Janeway and the command crew are all that remains on Voyager. The power is down, everything is damaged as the villains attack them constantly, week after week for several months. Just like the show should have shown us in every episode for the last 3 years!
Star Trek: VGR [Season 4, Episode 10]
Random Thoughts
Star Trek: VGR [Season 4, Episode 11]
Concerning Flight
Janeway spends her spare time with a hologram of Leonardo Da Vinci [John Rhys Davies - Sliders, Raiders of the Lost Ark].
Voyager is attacked by a group of aliens with transporters that can cut through Voyager's shields and remove things. The aliens steal the central processor from Voyager's main computer.
Janeway investigates, helped by Leonardo - who uses the Holodoc's mobile emitter!
This episode raises important questions about the Prime Directive. Should Janeway destroy the aliens to prevent them mis-using Federation technology?
Star Trek: VGR [Season 4, Episode 12]
Mortal Coil
This is a Neelix episode. It starts well enough, with him interacting with 7of9 and playing father-figure to the ship's token little kiddie.
Then Neelix goes on an away mission, and is physically killed. His body is left to rot for 18 hours, then 7of9 brings him back to life by injecting him with Borg nanoprobes. This manages to reverse the affects of rigor mortis and the fact that most of his soft tissue would have been practically unsalvageable. Ah well, the wonders of technobabble.
Anyway, Neelix now has a conflict of faith. His near-death [well, actual-death] experience showed him that there is no afterlife, so what is the point of living?
Star Trek: VGR [Season 4, Episode 13]
Waking Moments
Voyager is invaded by a hostile species that attacks the crew through their dreams.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 4, Episode 14]
Message In a Bottle
Voyager discovers a network of apparently disused communication relay stations. Janeway uses it to have the Holodoc sent to a Starfleet ship on the border of the Alpha Quadrant.
The Starfleet ship has been taken over by Romulans led by Judson Scott [ Star Trek II: Wrath of Khan ]. The Holodoc must save the day, but his only help is the ultra-gay EMH Mark II prototype [Andy Dick]. The two doctors bicker like Niles and Frasier Crane, which makes it pretty obvious where the inspiration came from. For some reason they don't think to reconfigure their appearances and look Romulan! However, they manage to provoke a big space battle.
Back on Voyager, the central computer's HDD has no backup of the EMH program. Harry and Paris try to create a new one, to no success. Meanwhile, Torres and 7of9 discover that the relay stations are owned and used by the Hirogen. This provides a role for Tiny Ron, who usually plays the servant of the Ferengi Grand Nagus.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 4, Episode 15]
Hunters
Now in its 4th Season, just received its first mail from home. Chakotay discovers that while they were gone the Cardassians made an alliance with the Dominion and destroyed the Maquis.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 4, Episode 16]
Prey
One of the Hirogen hunters is after an elusive and deadly prey. A lone member of Species 8472 is on the loose.
In this ep, 8472 are still the vicious, murderous monsters they always were. But this one, hunted and alone, almost evokes sympathy.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 4, Episode 17]
Retrospect
7 of 9 plays a central role in this episode - not surprising, as she is the only interesting character out of the whole mundane crew.
Voyager encounters some friendly aliens who secretly want Borg technology. Or do they?
This episode is a despicable attempt to portray 7of9, the callous and unfeeling mechanical psychopath, as a rape victim. A creature that by her own admission was responsible for the destruction of countless millions now descends into self-pity after the Doctor helps her recover a repressed memory of being violated. Violation is a state of mind - one that a Borg should be incapable of feeling.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 4, Episode 18-9]
The Killing Game Part 1-2
This sees the entire crew cast as members of the French Resistance and US Army, in a French town occupied by Aliens in Nazi uniforms.
It turns out that the Nazis are a species of alien blood-sports fanatics, who wiped the crew's memories and put them in the holodeck for an entertaining hunt.
The aliens are a lot more sympathetic than the usual 2-dimensional villains these shows churn out every week. However, the stereotypical portrayal of them as Nazis is predictable. Why would the hunters want to play the side who LOST the war? And why not try to humanise the German characters by making them the Voyager crew? The Wehrmacht holograms even try to execute US Army POWs, until they are stopped by Neelix the Klingon!
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 4, Episode 20]
Vis A Vis
Tom Paris has finally got his life sold out - I mean, SORTED out!. He's monogamous with Belanna [but the sleep in se[perate rooms, never mind beds!], he's friendly with arch-rival Chakotay [remember the mutual bitterness in the Pilot episode?], he's become a straight-and-narrow boring git!
Luckily for everyone [including the audience, who might die of boredom] a rogue trader pops up. It's Bulldog from Frasier, with putty on his nose, and he offers to trade with Voyager. He has cool new technology, and Tom is assigned to help him work on modifying a shuttle.
Without spoiling the twist, we get to see the old Tom Paris. Getting drunk, flirting with Belanna and 7of9 ...
Unfortunately, he doesn't fit in with the Starfleet fascists any more. Even the Maquis - the who? They're all Starfleet clones now! Will the reset button get pressed?
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 4, Episode 21]
The Omega Directive
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 4, Episode 22]
Unforgettable
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 4, Episode 23]
Living Witness
This episode concerns the Warship Voyager, equipped with extra guns and armour, and a cool darkened interior. All the crewmembers wear black leather gloves, and all Security troopers carry rifles. Even Neelix is in uniform! 7of9 is realistic - still borged up, rather than just the tits and ass. The rest of the crew are undisciplined sadists who would do well in the Mirror, Mirror universe. Janeway is incredibly cool, and the Doctor is an android who uses biogenic weapons and tortures prisoners.
It turns out that this is just a simulation in a museum run by Voyager's enemies, 700 years in the future. Voyager got involved in a war between two humanoid species. The two alien species still have trouble getting on, and they blame Voyager's intervention for their social problems. The species who allied themselves with Voyager are holocaust deniers,
The museum curator uncovers the Holodoc's backup module. Yes, apparently Voyager had a backup EMH all along! The Doctor straightens out the curator, but the new evidence causes social upheaval.
The Doctor's version shows Voyager as technologically vulnerable and the crew as inept and bumbling. Just like in regular episodes. 7of9 is a damsel in distress, though she gets tougher only when the writers thought it appropriate. The eeevil Voyager is much more interesting, and would make a much better show. Tim Russ directed this episode, and did a nice job of it.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 4, Episode 24]
Demon
Voyager's magical engines are running short of fairy-dust. Instantly, after 4 years, the ship's systerms start to fail.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 4, Episode 25]
One
To get through a deadly Nebula the crew must go into status. Only 7of9 and the Holodoc are safe.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 4, Episode 26]
Hope and Fear
An alien tourist named Arturus [Ray Wise - Twin Peaks, Swamp Thing, RoboCop ] pops up and helps the Voyager crew. He's a multi-skilled genius who asks nothing in return. .
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 5, Episode 1]
Night
The ship is trapped in an area of space the crew nickname the void, because it is absent of any stars. It is so large that no stars from outside the area are visible to the naked eye. Janeway is overcome with regret over her decision to strand the ship 70 years from home.
It appears the void is the battleground between two unknown alien species - but who are the good guys?
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 5, Episode 2]
Drone
The Holodoc is on an Away mission with 7of9, on a shuttle in a nebula. An emergency means they have to beam back to Voyager, but the Doc's 29th-Century-tech remote transmitter is damaged. Unbeknown to everyone, it has bonded with some of 7of9's nanoprobes and begins to assililate things. It clones and creates a unique drone, and 7of9 is assigned to educate it in humanity.
What do we learn about Voyager? Well, Belanna Torres sleeps alone [not with Tom Paris], and wearing an Ivanova-style nightie into the bargain.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 5, Episode 3]
Extreme Risk
The episode continues the themes expressed in the void episode. The theta-radiation garbage-dumpers are back, venting their nuclear waste into the super-dense atmosphere of a gas giant, where the Voyager crew are trying to recover a lost Federation probe. The 2 crews compete to build shuttles strong enough to survive the planet's atmosphere long enough to recover the probe.
This time the disturbed crew-member is Belanna Torres, who shuts herself off from her companions and engages in self-destructive holodeck programs. She is brought round not by Tom Paris [her lover] but by Chakotay [her ex-boss, whom she used to be attracted to] ... HUH? Nonsensical! So much for character development!
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 5, Episode 4]
In The Flesh
Admiral Tucker Smallwood [ Space: Above & Beyond ] suspects that there is a spy in the Starfleet training academy. The spy is ... Chakotay!
Chakotay photographs everything he can see. The Starfleet types wandering around include at least one Ferengi - surely Nog was the first Ferengi in Starfleet, and that was after Voyager got lost in the Delta Quadrant. Chakotay gets a date with Kate Vernon , and it's Ponn Farr night at the Vulcan night-club.
All is not as it seems. Voyager has found a Federation base in the Delta Quadrant! Further investigation shows that Species 8472 has returned. But this is not the B5-inspired Shadow-like Survival of the Fittest CGI creature; this is a touchy-feely cheapo Drek non-villain! They are more scared of the humans that the humans are of them - but at least they see through the Federation's charade of being civilized.
One more problem with this trash [Only one? I hear you cry] - the references to 8472 as being not of this galaxy ... They are not of this UNIVERSE, they are from fluidic space!
Also, there is a hint of continuity - they still have Paris' new shuttle [built in the last episode].
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 5]
Once Upon A Time
This ep sees a token child aboard the starship. We meet a young girl, Naomi Wildman, who is in Neelix' care while her mother [a female redshirt!] is on an Away Mission with Paris and Tuvok. Yes, some damn fool took a pre-teen on a warship that was going into hostile territory where the Cardassians and Maquis were going head to head.
It's nice to see members of the crew who aren't senior officers. Also, there's a genuine possibility that a character might die.
Paris' new shuttle crashes, and the team are MIA ...
The child asks Neelix about his sisters; naturally he lies and doesn't tell her they are dead. His nightmare flashback indicates he saw them die. Anyway, as the story unfolds it is Neelix who cannot handle loss, not the child.
We learn something useful about Federation society. The child uses an innovative holodeck program that encourages her to learn. The thing is, we are never shown the below-average people in their society.
Paris and company make their last messages; Paris address his to Torres. Odd, considering they were barely on speaking terms a couple of episodes previously.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 6]
Timeless
This episode was directed by [and guest-starring] LeVar Burton. 15 years in the future, Chakotay and Harry come back to rescue the rest of the crew. Yes, they made it home on Tom's shuttle, but the ship was lost without trace. Their only hope - a Borg temporal transmitter that may enable them to change the past.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 7]
Infinite Regress
7of9 [ Jeri Lynn Ryan ] develops multiple personality syndrome. This shows off what a talented actress she is, covering personalities that include a Klingon, a Vulcan and a pre-teens girl who plays with Naomi Wildman. And best of all, Ms Ryan has a beautiful smile!
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 8]
Nothing Human
B'Elanna encounters one of the few non-humanoid species in Trek. It bonds itself to her, sucking nutrients from her system. The Holodoc must do something, or she will die.
Non-humanoids are so rare that the only holo-consultant the Holodoc can create is a Cardassian. Well, it's better than the attempt Harry Kim came up with in Message in a Bottle. Unfortunately, the Cardassian is based on a real fellow, who is accused of War Crimes by the Maquis. He claims he only did his duty as a doctor, but the character is written and played as completely unlikeable.
We get a very unconvincing debate about the morality of using information gained by unethical means. Starfleet is against it. They should have dismantled all their starships, then, because space travel comes from military technology. Especially Von Braun's V2s, built for the Nazis by slave labourers, and the Russian missiles that helped keep Stalinism on its legs for decades after it should have died.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 9]
Thirty Days
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 10]
Counterpoint
Janeway and Co smuggle refugee telepaths through an Empire which has a higher level of tech than the Feds, and interns all telepathic races.
Neelix keeps the children amused with tales of the holo-characters Flodder & Treebus - why not just take them to the holodeck and let them run the educational programs themselves?
The head Inspector defects to Voyager, and offers to help them find a wormhole and escape. But can he be trusted? Janeway and he develop a relationship of sorts. Janeway admits she breaks the Prime Directive, then sorts it out at the Board of Enquiry. I'm on first-name terms with several of the Admirals.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 11]
Latent Image
The Doctor discovers that his memories have been tampered with. His investigations show that 18 months previously, before 7of9 joined the crew, the Doctor and Harry Kim went on an away mission with an unknown Ensign.
The inevitable flashback does not feature Kes, even though she was the Doctor's assistant during that period.
7of9 is in her red-brown bodysuit again. The show centres around a philosophical debate.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 12]
Bride of Chaotica
Tom Paris is Captain Proton and Harry Kim is his sidekick. The Doctor becomes President of Earth . Janeway poses as Queen Arachnia of the Spider People
The villain is a Ming-type creation who calls himself Emperor Chaotica.
Important things to note are:
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 13]
Gravity
This episode centres around Tuvok. He and Tom Paris crash-land on a desolate planet trapped in a subspace pocket. Lori Petty special guest stars as a Jawa, and Tuvok has to explore his emotions for her.
The Emergency Medical Hologram is along, with his remote projector. There is no mention of an EMH on Voyager at the same time - can they have 2 EMHs at the same time, or is there only one? Tuvok has to switch the EMH off to conserve power; the EMH complains I'm a Doctor, not a battery!
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 14]
Bliss
Voyager detects a wormhole that will take them directly back to Earth. Is this too good to be true?
7of9 [in her blue bodysuit], Naomi Wilder and the EMH have to save the ship. To help is Morgan Shepherd [ SeaQuest DSV, American Gothic ] an alien Ahab. His Moby Dick seems the inspiration for the Bu-Dong creature from Farscape .
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 5, Episode 15]
Dark Frontier Part I: Dark Visions
This episode centres around 7 of 9. A new Borg drone is discovered and isolated from the hive-mind. However, the Collective [now a big metal ball with a flashy disco interior] locate them and attack the ship.
Voyager is attacked by the Borg, and takes out its attacker. When they salvage the wreckage they discover its long-distance scanner logs, which indicate that a crippled Borg scout-ship is nearby. Janeway takes this as an opportunity to attack the Borg and steal a transwarp coil.
7of9 is ordered to examine her parents'journals. It turns out that her parents were sent to study the Borg - yes, even before their first appearance in TNG the Borg were known to Starfleet. Now, this makes sense when you take Star Trek 7: Generations into account, but it is still a niggling problem in continuity.
7of9 is contacted by the Queen - she knows of VGR's plans, and wants the human-friendly ex-drone to rejoin the collective.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 16]
Dark Frontier (Part II)
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 17]
The Disease
Ensign Harry Kim screws an alien babe [ Musetta Vander ], and gets a rash!
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 18]
Course: Oblivion
Tom and Belanna finally get married. However, just as they prepare to have their holodeck honeymoon they discover that the newly enhanced Warp core [which will get them to Earth within only 2 years] has given the entire crew a lethal dose of radiation poisoning.
This is quite an incredible episode, in that it does not have the usual reset button. This is NOT the end of the series, but it does ask a couple of questions about continuity. With all that has happened,
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 19]
The Fight
Chakotay is afflicted with halucinations, courtesy of telepathic aliens from Chaotic Space. He remembers his favourite holodeck program, boxing, and halucinates that he is the Maquis Mauler in the ring fighting Kid Chaos.
We get yet more flashbacks to Chakotay's childhood, where he learns about his heritage from his grandfather. In other words, instead of developing the character they use cliches.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 20]
Think Tank
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 21]
Juggernaut
Voyager encounters a Malon garbage scow that is badly contaminated. They rescue the crew, but the ship is en route to destroy an inhabited system. An Away Team must go aboard, and steer the ship away.
This is a Belanna Torres episode. She is at her best - very aggressive, only now is she receiving anti-aggression meditation therapy from Tuvok! Once aboard the Malon ship she strips down to her standard issue skimpy vest and starts to sweat profusely. Luckily for us her cohorts, Neelix and Chakotay, keep their clothes on.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 22]
Someone To Watch Over Me
As a result of a bet with Tom Paris, the Holo-Doc gives 7of9 socialisation lessons to prove that she can be more ... human. The Doc himself is somewhat attracted to her. Shades of Pygmalion ...
Meanwhile, Neelix is assigned to look after an alien ambassador from a very repressed culture. The ambassador can't break down synthohol, and as a result gets drunk!
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 23]
11.59
Janeway reminisces about an ancestor of hers, Shannen O'Donnell, who she says was one of the prime movers in a Biosphere type project called the Millennium Gate. We are shown a flashback of O'Donnell [played by the same actress] at December, 2000 CE, in a small town where the Millennium Gate is going to be built. However, in the flashback we learn that the accepted view of history is not completely factual.
Unlike most Flashback episodes, we do not get to see the entire cast in 20th Century garb - just Janeway and guest-star Kevin Tighe.
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 24]
Relativity
Bruce McGill [ Quantum Leap, Babylon 5 ] is the Captain of the Federation time-ship. He refers to a previous encounter with Janeway, where she abandoned him in the late 20th Century.
Janeway doesn't give a damn about paradoxes.
Apparently 7of9's Borg occular implants are better than Federation time-ship sensors from 500 years in the future! Also, for the second time in the series 7of9 refers to the events of Star Trek VII: First Contact.
It turns out that the villain is only trying to destroy VGR to prevent himself suffering the terrible fate that drives him to destroy VGR in revenge ... However, the so-called villain is captured and punished BEFORE he commits the crime, and thus is given his motivation for his so-called crime.
Why didn't someone go back in time and stop Janeway from harassing him, and thus ensuring that he never got the motivation for revenge against her?
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 25]
Warhead
Star Trek: VGR [Season 5, Episode 26]
Equinox Part I
John Savage [Deer Hunter] as Captain Ransom, commander of the USS Equinox - a Federation Nova-class planetary research vessel. The Equinox is under attack from CGI aliens of unknown origin. However, Ransom and his crew are concealing an unpleasant secret.
One of the crew [played by Titus Welliver] is Torres' BF from the Academy - and he is every bit as skilled as she is. Yes, it looks like goody-2-shoes Janeway has finally met her match!
Star Trek: VGR [Season 6, Episode 1]
Equinox Part II
Janeway has become Ahab, intent on her revenge. She becomes so ruthless that she would stand by and let aliens kill members of the Equinox's crew. At the end she even resorts to slavery!
Aboard the Equinox we get to see 7of9 manacled to a table. Once the Voyager's Doctor has his ethics removed he is willing to work on her to extract information the Equinox crew need.
The episode has decent production values, with actual outdoor footage!
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 2]
Voyager takes aboard three humanoids who are actually ex-Borg. They abduct Seven in an attempt to undo some of the side-effects of their Borgification. This is quite a good story, with no happy ever after ending of the type this show usually provides.
Of note, one of the ex-Borg is Tim Kelleher - Jeri Ryan's co-star in Dark Skies - and another is Vaughn Armstrong .
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 3]
Barge of the Dead
Torres dies and finds herself on the Barge of the Dead, taking her to the Klingon afterlife. There are some beautiful [and expensive-looking] sets - quite amazing, especially compared to the usual standard of one-off sets in this show.
Apparently the replicators can create Klingon blood-wine, although they shouldn't be able to create alcoholic drinks.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 4]
Tinker, Tenor, Doctor, Spy
The Holodoc gives an opera recital that is so excellent it sends Tuvok into the Ponn Farr. Well, it's been seven years since he's had any action. Later on, at a meeting, the Holodoc is sexually harrassed by Torres, 7of9 and even Janeway herself!
Meanwhile, nearby aliens hack into the Holodoc's subprocesses. They receive input on everything he is aware of - but unknown to them, all they intercept is his daydreams!
The daydreams get out of control. He fantasises about painting 7of9 topless, but forgets to do the breasts and nipples! :)
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 5]
Alice
Voyager's crew meet a trader, and Paris buys an old shuttle off him. The shuttle has a neurogenic interface, and after Paris uses it he becomes obsessed with the new ship. Oddly, Chakotay states that Voyager has its full complement of shuttles - even though they've lost one in every other episode for six years!
Finally Belanna has to reveal her true feelings for Tom. They even get to kiss. After only seven years!
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 6]
Riddles
Tuvok is on an away mission with Neelix when he is shot by an invisible alien. Janeway calls in a local alien investigator, a sort of knobbly-foreheaded Fox Mulder.
Neelix is overcome with guilt. Tuvok has brain damage and amnesia ...
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 7]
Dragons Teeth
Voyager accidentally discovers a system of Hyperspace tunnels. The aliens who use the tunnels attack Voyager, which takes refuge on a dead world. However, it turns out that the world isn't as dead as they thought.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 8]
One Small Step
An object closely follows Voyager.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 9]
The Voyager Conspiracy
7of9 builds herself a Borg learn-while-you-sleep device that allows her to download information. She comes to conclusions that, as Tuvok says, are logical but highly speculative.
An encounter with a hyperspace catapult inspires 7of9 to check through the files on the Caretaker's Array. 7of9 tells Chakotay of her Conspiracy Theory, and sets him against Janeway. Is she exploring the Delta Quadrant or mapping it for invasion? Either way, she is not endangering the ship or its crew.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 10]
Pathfinder
Dwight Schultz [A-Team] pops up as Reg Barclay, the most human character in the Federation. He goes to see his old shipmate, Deanna Troi [ Marina Sirtis ]. Barclay is working on a new technical development, Pathfinder, and has a cat named Neelix. Troi is still on the Enterprise, serving under Captain Picard.
Barclay spends his spare time on a holodeck simulation of Voyager. This is easy to tell from the real thing: the Maquis are not in Starfleet uniform, and there is no sign of the new crew members 7of9, Kes or ... Neelix.
Barclay's personal project is to communicate with Voyager. They have a general location thanks to the Holodoc contacting Starfleet two years earlier. Tom's Father, Admiral Paris [Richard Herd - V ] pops up.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 11]
Fair Haven
Tom Paris develops a holodeck program set in Fair Haven , an Irish village in the Victorian era. Typical yank, he seems to have left out any reference to Queen Vic or the fact that Ireland ran the British Empire. Ah well. Worse is the use of Gaelic in sign-posts, because Gaelic was a dead language even then.
Voyager passes through a 3-day Ion Storm. Neelix persuades Janeway to let the holodeck run permanently, and everyone has a go.
Janeway becomes romantically entangled. She meets a male hologram and modifies him - she makes him better educated, more confident and taller.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 12]
Blink of an Eye
Voyager encounters a strange planet with a primative civilisation. Voyage is caught in [and interacts with] the planet's gravity field: the planet's time passes at a faster speed than on Voyager, and the ship's attempts to leave cause tectonic shifts ...
The Holodoc is the only member of the Voyager crew who can go undercover on the planet ... Later, the natives develop nechnology and send up a space ship. The pilot is David Dae Kim [ Crusade, Angel, Lost].
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 13]
Virtuoso
DS9 arrives at a highly advanced civilisation that has no concept of music. They are taken with the Holodoc, whose opera singing [albeit dubbed] makes him a megastar.
Predictably, the Doctor has a crisis of conscience. Should he stay with Voyager and the crew that takes him for granted, or remain on the planet where he's a megastar. Janeway objects when he calls her Katherine - but McCoy and Crusher were both on first-name terms with their Captains. But if he stays, when will his fifteen minutes of fame going to run out?
7of9, strangely absent from the early part of the episode, appears in the second half and acts as the Doctor's conscience.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 14]
Memorial
Chakotay, Neelix, Paris and Kim return from a two-week Away Mission. They have flashbacks to a battle they could not have fought in, and suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder.
Torres actually shows affection towards Paris!
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 15]
Tsunkatse
Voyager arrives at a peaceful planet, and Janeway decides to give everyone shore leave. She heads off somewhere and leaves Chakotay in charge. He delegates command to his subordinates so he can spectate at the local Martial Arts contest, Tsunkatse.
7of9 and Tuvok fly off in a shuttle and are kidnapped by aliens. The boss is played by Jeffrey Combs [Weyoun in DS9], while JG Herzler [Gowron in DS9] pops up as a helpful member of the Hunter species.
7of9 has to fight The Rock [ The Mummy Returns ] in an arena. However, as in his movie appearance he just flexes his muscles and doesn't say anything of interest.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 16]
Collective
On an away mission in a shuttle, Chakotay, Harry, Paris and Neelix are attacked by the Borg. Voyager discovers that the Cube is damaged, and when 7of9 goes aboard she discovers the only drones are teenagers! Yes, we get yet another society of adolescents story. Oddly, 7of8 [who supposedly has superhuman strength] is quite wimpish here.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 17]
Spirit Folk
Tom Paris' hologram program, Fair Haven, has been running 24/7 for several months. And believe it or not, just like every holodeck for the last 2 decades it goes haywire and holds the crew hostage. Does nobody learn from past experience?
The village inhabitants think that Paris and Harry Kim are faerie folk.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 18]
Ashes To Ashes
Voyager is hailed by a humanoid woman who claims to be one of their crew, killed by the Hirogen 3 years previously. She was apparently resurrected by an alien species, but has now returned to continue her former life.
She settles into a period of adjustment. She is Harry Kim's love interest - but as Tom Paris points out, Harry has a bad history with women.
Meanwhile, 7of9 is in charge of the ex-Borg kiddies. She uses the immortal line fun will now commence!
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 19]
Child's Play
The oldest of the Borg kids, E-Chubb, is a scientific genius. Hell, they all are. Not a high-school drop-out among them. However, E-Chubb's parents have been located on a primative farming colony. He is due to be sent back to them, somewhat against his will.
There are several inconsistencies about the episode. The age gap is too small - either the actor playing the kid is too old, or those playing the parents are too young. The other oddity about the episode is the lack of sexual tension between E-chubb and 7of9. She has emotional difficulty being seperated from him, but though he's reached puberty he's not her lover. The episode doesn't even indicated that he's attracted to her, although to a teenage male like him 7of9 must be quite something!
The episode is based around the Prime Directive, but the ending is a complete denial of that.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 20]
Good Shepherd
7of9 runs a performance review and uncovers a trio of Misfits - an academic, a hypochondriac and his number-blind Bajoran babe girlfriend. Yes, there are PEOPLE aboard the ship, not just Starfleet drones.
Janeway leads the trio on an Away Mission in the Delta Flyer.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 21]
Live Fast And Prosper
A pair of con-artists are impersonating Janeway and Tuvok in order to steal cargoes from unsuspecting aliens. Somehow they have managed to duplicate the uniforms, the background information, everything they need! It turns out that Neelix and Paris, two of the crew's most cynical and street-wise members, have been conned!
Chakotay, Torres and 7of9 barely appear in this episode.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 22]
Muse
A bunch of near-humans in an Ancient Greek-style amphitheatre are acting out a stage-play based on a Torres/Kim Away Mission. Torres crashed the Delta Flyer, and the playwrite who found her is using her as his muse.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 23]
Fury
Kes returns to Voyager. Not only does she look well past fifty, now she's powerful and hostile! She gets to the Warp Core, kills Torres and travels back in time.
We get a flashback to the days before the holodoc had a remote emitter, before 7of9 and the Delta Flyer. Naomi Wilder has not been born yet - her mother is pregnant with her. Kes wanders around, masquerading as her younger self, plotting to sell the ship out to the Vidians. Only Tuvok has any idea that something is awry.
Kes originally left the ship when Janeway kicked her off - even though the Ocampan was an incredibly dangerous risk to lifeforms in the Delta Quadrant. Now, Janeway's approach is equally weak. An acquaintance of this reviewer suggested that Janeway should not have let such a valuable resource go to waste, but rather just lobotomise the bitch and use her as a psychic weapon.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 24]
Life Line
Voyager is contacted yet again by Ensign Barclay [Dwight Shultz]. The Holodoc discovers that his creator, Dr Zimmerman, is dying of a mystery illness. He gets Janeway to transmit him over the ether [leaving no backup program on Voyager's HDD!] so he can save his Father.
It turns out that the EMH and Zimmerman are much too alike to get on. As a result, Barclay gets Counsellor Troi [ Marina Sirtis ] to give them Family Counselling!
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 25]
The Haunting Of Deck 12
Voyager has a ship-wide power blackout. Neelix tells the Borg Kids a ghost story about a space-dwelling life-form that took over the ship before the kids came aboard. Apparently the ghost-like entity is still on Deck 12 ...
It is nice to see the kids pick holes in Neelix's story, especially his use of technobabble. However, Farscape does this kind of story so much better.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 6, Episode 26]
Unimatrix Zero, Part I
The Borg Queen makes another appearance. Janeway, Tuvok and Torres get captured and borgified, but with the EMH's help they can survive it.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 7, Episode 1]
Unimatrix Zero, Part II
7of9 meets with her fellow free-thinking Borg in a VR chat-room named Unimatrix Zero. Apparently while she was a Borg she and a male Borg were independant enough to have an on-line relationship. Yes, she has a boyfriend! Even more interesting, we get to see Ms Ryan as a woman, not a Borg.
The Borg Queen detects the independant activity going on. She tries to stop it, firstly by having entire ships self-destruct and then by attacking Unimatrix Zero itself.
Tom Paris, now Acting Second Officer to Chakotay, gets to do what the Second Officer always does - question orders.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 7, Episode 2]
Imperfection
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 7, Episode 3]
Drive
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 7, Episode 4]
Repression
Voyager receives a transmission from Starfleet - it is mail from home! Soon after, Tuvok has to investigate a series of mysterious attacks on Maquis members of the crew.
It turns out that a Maquis fanatic [Keith Sjarabaka - Angel] in the Alpha Quadrant intends for Chakotay and his former Maquis crew to take over Voyager.
What about Paris? Not only was he convicted and imprisoned by Starfleet for Maquis membership, he is also Belanna Torres' lover. Supposedly.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 7, Episode 5]
Critical Care
A slimy thief [John Kassir] sells an overworked Hospital administrator [Larry Drake - Prey ] a new piece of medical equipment - the Holodoc!
The hospital's resources are divided by a computer called the Allocator. People who are useful to society [eg Chief Engineer of a water treatment plant that keeps half a continent alive] get preferential treatment. The Holodoc tries to set this straight. His ethics are now somewhat flexible ...
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 7, Episode 6]
Inside Man
Voyager's monthly e-mail from Starfleet has jammed the receiver. They discover it is a hologram version of Lieutenant Barclay [Dwight Schultz] who claims he can get them home. He has a dubious plan to create a spacial fold that links two red giant stars.
Meanwhile, back in the Alpha Quadrant Barclay is typically paranoid. He takes a vacation on the beach with Troi [ Marina Sirtis ]. They uncover a conspiracy, and call in Admiral Richard Herd.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 7, Episode 7]
Body And Soul
Harry, 7of9 and the EMH are on an Away Mission in the Delta Flyer. They are boarded and captured by aliens [including Megan Gallagher ], who are having a biogenic war against holograms. They try to destroy the Doctor, so he hides - in 7of9's cerebral implants. Nobody thinks of using her Borg super-strength to escape.
Meanwhile, back on Voyager Tuvok is entering the Ponn Farr - and the only medic aboard is Tom Paris.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 7, Episode 8]
Nightingale
Kim, 7of9 and Neelix are in the Delta Flyer, scanning a nebula for Dilithium. They encounter a warship attacking a cloaked transport ship. Kim drives off the warship, and boards the transport to provide medical aid. The transport's crew have been killed, so Kim ends up commanding it. 7of9 joins him and provides advice.
Meanwhile, Voyager is getting an overhaul. Belanna enlists the help of the Borg teenager, E-Chubb. He thinks she is developing romantic desires for her!
The director is LeVar Burton.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 7, Episode 9]
Flesh & Blood
The Hirogen appear, led by Vaughn Armstrong .
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 7, Episode 10]
Flesh & Blood, Part II
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 7, Episode 11]
Shattered
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 7, Episode 12]
Lineage
Belanna Torres is finally pregnant. The foetus has Klingon traits, and Belanna wants the child genetically engineered to be human.
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 7, Episode 13]
Repentance
Star Trek: Voyager [Season 7, Episode
]
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