Showing posts with label Robert Beltran. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Beltran. Show all posts

Monday, March 4, 2013

“Endings Are Such Sweet Mediocrity” Why “Endgame” Is Not A Great Finale For Star Trek: Voyager!


The Good: Special effects, Moments of plot and character, Most of the performances are fine
The Bad: Conceptually preposterous plot, Inorganic character motivations, Derivative nature
The Basics: “Endgame” brings Star Trek: Voyager to a close in an action-packed episode that falls apart the moment one begins to closely look at it!


Back when I was on the convention circuit, dealing most weekends at various Star Trek conventions around the United States, I took particular delight in posing the question, “Who is the most important character on Voyager?” Almost no one ever got it right. While Janeway is the instrument, the motivation for Star Trek: Voyager is, of all characters, Tuvok. Tuvok is the reason Voyager gets lost in the Delta Quadrant in “Caretaker” (reviewed here!) as Janeway goes searching for the ship he was lost on while undercover and in the series finale, “Endgame,” it is the plight of Tuvok that finally sells Captain Janeway on using a shortcut home.

“Endgame” is a season finale that makes a wink and a nudge to the series finale of Star Trek: The Next Generation in more than just the costumes (the later 24th Century costumes are seen in that finale and the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode “The Visitor,” reviewed here!). Some of the temporal mechanics issues in “Endgame” are disturbingly similar to those in the final episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, as are some of the character motivations. Unfortunately, while “Endgame” similarly ties up loose ends for Voyager, some of the relationship issues that motivate characters in “Endgame” (most notably the Seven Of Nine/Chakotay relationship) seem somewhat contrived or rushed to.

Starting on the tenth anniversary of Voyager’s return to Earth after a twenty-three year journey home, Admiral Janeway is working to tie up loose ends in her life. She has Torres and Paris’s daughter assigned to a secret mission, though StarFleet Command denies she is a part of any classified missions and she seems to be working for Temporal Mechanics and StarFleet Academy. Working with Commander Reginald Barclay and having procured an experimental compound from the holographic doctor (Joe), Admiral Janeway says goodbye to the mentally-fractured Tuvok and disappears in a shuttle to meet with a corrupt Klingon, Korath. Shortly after getting ablative armor technology from Korath, Janeway is picked up by Captain Kim and his ship, the U.S.S. Rhode Island. Admiral Janeway talks Kim into letting her go, on a mission into the past to save Voyager sixteen years of its journey and more than twenty lives in the process.

Interspersed with the future narrative, in the standard timeframe, Voyager passes a red giant where it detects an inordinate amount of Borg activity. While Chakotay and Seven Of Nine have their third date and Torres has her umpteenth false labor, Captain Janeway feels relief that the ship managed to avoid contact with the Borg and counts her blessings. But that changes when a spatial anomaly appears in Voyager’s path and Tuvok detects Klingon weapons fire from the other side of the anomaly. Admiral Janeway’s shuttle emerges from the phenomenon and Admiral Janeway orders her younger self to close the rift. When that is done and Admiral Janeway’s identity is authenticated, Admiral Janeway slowly reveals to her younger self the truth of her mission: she wants Janeway to take Voyager back to the Borg transwarp hub they passed days prior, outfit Voyager with ablative armor technology, and use the transwarp hub to get home. Captain Janeway, however, only wants to use the technology to destroy the Borg’s massive tactical advantage. Working together, the present and future Janeway work out a tactic that may allow them to accomplish both goals.

First, what I liked most about “Endgame:” there is a remarkably clever and subtle element to the episode that I take peculiar delight in. In order to sell Captain Janeway on the importance of going along with her plan, Admiral Janeway reveals elements of the future to her younger self. The fact that gets Captain Janeway to stop with her wholesale objections to her older self’s plan is learning that three years in the future, Seven Of Nine will die. In authenticating Admiral Janeway’s identity, the Doctor discovers a microchip in Admiral Janeway’s brain that the Admiral informs him he developed some twelve years ago. What delights me here is the implication: that after Seven Of Nine died, the EMH began to study her discarded Borg implants and developed Federation-based microtechnology that replicated some of the Borg’s cybernetic technologies!

For all the rushed nature of it, I did like the character relationships in “Endgame” as well. The future ones play off a longer sense of the journey and having Harry Kim advocate in favor of a longer journey, but destroying the Borg Transwarp Hub is pretty cool. Also cute was that Paris takes a moment to note that he will win the betting pool on the birth of his child. The acting is also fine throughout the episode, though the only one given a real performance challenge is Kate Mulgrew, who has to play off herself for several long scenes.

Unfortunately, the novelty aspects and the decent acting do not negate the severe issues with “Endgame.” The first problem is conceptual: “Endgame” acts as if Star Trek: Voyager was a heavily serialized show when it most explicitly was not. In fact, the producers wanted to avoid a second serialized Star Trek as, when Star Trek: Voyager began, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine was already doing long arcs. “Endgame” is all about consequences and Star Trek: Voyager has largely lacked that. For sure, there was the occasional episode where the ship was running low on deuterium, but by the beginning of almost every episode, Voyager was back to being perfectly intact, despite years without maintenance at a StarBase. To sell Captain Janeway on the importance of her mission, she has to convince her younger self that the consequences outweigh the temporal prime directive issues. Unfortunately, this is a sophisticated argument in a show that has pointedly avoided developing that very level of detail and continuity.

This leads to the primary, severe, plot and character issue in “Endgame.” “Endgame” is a temporal tampering episode that ultimately makes no rational sense. Admiral Janeway arrives in Captain Janeway’s time to explicitly alter the flow of history. Fine, I can buy the premise. I accept the premise entirely. What does not make sense is the timing. Admiral Janeway is prepared to equip Voyager with the technology and information needed to make it reasonable to erase sixteen years of its voyage and restructure the ten years that followed that. She does this by playing on Captain Janeway’s feelings of loyalty to her crew and in the knowledge that in the sixteen years that will be erased, Captain Janeway will save the lives of twenty of her crew and get Tuvok the medical attention he needs in the Alpha Quadrant before his degenerative disease makes him into a turnip. [Sidebar: We’re asked to believe that in seven years, Janeway can effectively travel 40 years worth of distance, but in the subsequent sixteen years she finds no anomalies that take the other 30 years off the trip significantly faster?!] What about all of the crew that was killed when the Caretaker abducted Voyager and all of the casualties that mounted over the seven years of Star Trek: Voyager?! Armed with the knowledge of Admiral Janeway, Captain Janeway trades millions of lives for . . . twenty and the mental health of another. “What?!” I hear you cry. Walk with me. If Admiral Janeway had simply gone back to the beginning, preventing the Maquis from being abducted by the Caretaker and preventing Voyager from similarly being taken, millions of people survive. First, there are all the people on Voyager who stay alive and could actually be, potentially, an asset to StarFleet during the Dominion War. So, initial Maquis and StarFleet deaths are reduced to zero. But then, there are all the ancillary deaths that occurred as a result of Voyager’s journey through the Delta Quadrant, most notably the millions of Borg killed by the Borg Queen in “Unimatrix Zero, Part 2” (reviewed here!). So, rather selfishly and stupidly, Janeway trades the lives of dozens of StarFleet officers, several Maquis, and millions of Borg for . . . Seven Of Nine. The only character who faces a real life or death change by Voyager returning to Earth after seven years in the Delta Quadrant is Seven Of Nine. Otherwise, she would have remained a Borg. There are a shitton of other temporal problems with “Endgame,” but the ethical argument that is made in the episode ultimately comes down to Janeway trading the last twenty casualties for sixteen years. This makes no sense because if one is going to go ahead and alter decades of time anyway, why not save the greatest number of lives?!

This leads to the biggest character problem in “Endgame,” which (admittedly) is biased for me by actress Kate Mulgrew. I did a convention with Kate Mulgrew the week after “Endgame” aired and I recall Mulgrew very proudly telling a little girl (could not have been more than ten) that she killed the Borg Queen. Admiral Janeway does, in fact, go up against the Borg Queen and here the writers fall down. Admiral Janeway has worked for Temporal Mechanics and, presumably, has access to all of the classified data they have, at least as it pertains to the Borg. So, Janeway should know that the Borg Queen has been killed at least twice by that point. Why does she think that when she kills the Borg Queen it will be any more permanent than when Riker or Data killed the Borg Queen before?!

And so, Star Trek: Voyager ends with the same issues that dominated it for the entire series: it goes out with a big bang of spectacle and style that is pretty immediately recognized as lacking in substance the moment one scratches surface.

[Knowing that VHS is essentially a dead medium, it's worth looking into Star Trek: Voyager - The Complete Seventh Season on DVD, which is also a better economical choice than buying the VHS. Read my review of the final season here!
Thanks!]

For other Star Trek finales, please visit my reviews of:
“Turnabout Intruder” - Star Trek
Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country
“All Good Things . . .” - Star Trek: The Next Generation
“What You Leave Behind” - Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
Star Trek: Nemesis

4/10

For other Star Trek episode and movie reviews, please visit my Star Trek Review Index Page!

© 2013 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
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Friday, March 1, 2013

The Doctor’s Last Hurrah Illustrates Him To Be A “Renaissance Man!”


The Good: Moments of performance, Moments of plot
The Bad: Problematic plot and character aspects, Mediocre special effects.
The Basics: When The Doctor is extorted by an alien race, he makes some poor decisions in a mediocre episode.


It always surprised me when the “breakout character” for a television show is one that the producers of the show somehow did not figure would be the character audiences were drawn to. In the case of Star Trek: Voyager, the breakout character was the Emergency Medical Hologram. The Doctor was witty, sarcastic, and intriguing and actor Robert Picardo portrayed him exceptionally well. Even after Seven Of Nine arrived on Star Trek: Voyager and took much of the emphasis off Captain Janeway, The Doctor managed to keep a rising number of episodes focused on him. The final one is “Renaissance Man.”

“Renaissance Man” is actually not a traditional Doctor episode. Instead, it is an episode similar in concept to “Warhead” (reviewed here!) where the Doctor’s program is corrupted and, like “Body And Soul” (reviewed here!) has other actors essentially playing The Doctor, though in this episode, the viewer quickly comes to understand that it is the Doctor who is portraying other characters!

Janeway is annoyed by the Doctor when they are on a mission in the Delta Flyer. When the Delta Flyer returns to Voyager, Janeway tells Chakotay that the Delta Flyer encountered a vastly superior alien race that they almost did not escape from. Somewhat irritated, Janeway tells Chakotay that Voyager will be surrendering to the alien armada and setting down on a Class M planet after ejecting their warp core. Facing the real possibility of the crew being stranded on a planet in the Delta Quadrant and Janeway acting twitchy, Chakotay asks the Doctor how Janeway behaved after her interrogation by the violent aliens.

The truth is revealed to the viewer quickly enough; Janeway is not herself. Instead, she is The Doctor, having managed to reprogram his holo-emitter to appear to be the Doctor. Janeway has been abducted by aliens and to get Janeway back, the Doctor must impersonate Chakotay, Torres, and Kim to meet the demands of the captors and get Janeway back safely.

“Renaissance Man” is interesting, but it is essentially a remix of “Tinker Tenor Doctor Spy” (reviewed here!) where instead of simply seeing through his eyes, an alien race compels The Doctor to impersonate others. Unlike “Body And Soul,” where Jeri Ryan had the chance to really impersonate the Doctor and recreate Robert Picardo’s performance, the only actor who really has the chance to “play Picardo” is Roxann Dawson. When “Torres” encounters Paris in Engineering, the Doctor is squeamish about what Paris wants to feed her and Roxann Dawson gets to bug out her eyes and pretend to be The Doctor.

The rest of the actors pretty much play their traditional characters, even when it is The Doctor in altered form playing those characters.

“Renaissance Man” has plot and character aspects that require a level of suspension of disbelief that is far too extreme for me. First, in this episode, we see stasis pods in use. It seems strange to me that Voyager, if it had functional stasis beds still, would not have minimized the risk to the crew by using the stasis tubes and keeping only a skeleton crew awake.

But the big thing for me is that one of the more idiotic races in the Star Trek universe not only extorts The Doctor, but gets him to successfully take command of Voyager. It seems like the commands for the ECH would have been designed to prevent exactly that type of co-opting. Moreover, the crew’s inability to find and neutralize the Doctor fast seemed particularly incompetent. As well, the Doctor’s safety protocols and medical subroutines should have come into conflict with the demands of the aliens. In using sedatives on crewmembers seems like they could have risked his life and violated the medical ethics of “do no harm.”

Finally, in the wake of so many episodes where the Doctor’s program has been corrupted, it seems like there should have been a failsafe to prevent exactly this type of self-modification.

“Renaissance Man” does not have any particularly extraordinary performances from either the main cast or the guest actors. The net result is a fair episode, but not a particularly incredible one.

[Knowing that VHS is essentially a dead medium, it's worth looking into Star Trek: Voyager - The Complete Seventh Season on DVD, which is also a better economical choice than buying the VHS. Read my review of the final season here!
Thanks!]

4.5/10

For other Star Trek episode and movie reviews, please visit my Star Trek Review Index Page!

© 2013 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
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Monday, February 25, 2013

The Top Ten Episodes Of Star Trek: Voyager!

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The Basics: Star Trek: Voyager may never have had a perfect episode, but these are the ten episodes that were the best the show produced!


As my reviews of Star Trek: Voyager come to an end, I am happy to compile the Best and Worst lists that my readers have, historically, enjoyed. Already, I have compiled the Worst Ten Episodes Of Star Trek: Voyager (that’s here!) and I was somewhat surprised that there were more second season episodes in that list than there were episodes from the fourth season and beyond (which is generally where I feel Star Trek: Voyager and the Star Trek franchise went off course). It is now time for the flipside, the ten best episodes of Star Trek: Voyager.

It is worth noting that Star Trek: Voyager, in my rating system, never had a perfect episode. These episodes were the highest rated using my objective rating system and it is also worth noting that many fan favorite episodes do not appear on this list for a very simple reason: I am not impressed by special effects. Special effects account for only one point out of ten in my rating system, so the primarily special effects-driven episodes that are very popular with many of the fans may not score as high with me because so many of those episodes lack the distinctive or interesting plots, the genuine character development, or remarkable acting one might hope for. Many episodes of Star Trek: Voyager - even some that I emotionally enjoy – did not score that high because the enjoyable aspect was the dazzle and effect aspect, as opposed to anything genuinely, qualitatively good.

I also wanted to note that “Phage” (reviewed here!) and “Faces” (reviewed here!) were near-misses to make this list. For all of my issues with Star Trek: Voyager and the way the series completely undermined the menace of the Borg and the Q, they created a truly frightening and wonderful villain with the Vidiians. The Vidiians were scary and interesting and consistently well-executed. It is a shame that they can never again be Star Trek villains (or at least, not with the same menace, punch, and desperation). For what it is worth, emotionally, I was somewhat surprised that “Distant Origin” (reviewed here!) also got muscled out of the Top 10!

What might be most surprising about this list of the Top Ten Episodes Of Star Trek: Voyager is how many of the episodes were first and second season episodes. I attribute this to the fact that, for those looking for a series with substance, Star Trek: Voyager was a great example of the law of diminishing returns. The show had so much potential and it mortgaged it with each passing season. Even so, there were some pleasant surprises for me as I considered the series as a whole. So, without much fanfare, here are the best ten episodes of Star Trek: Voyager!

10. “Human Error” (reviewed here!) – The last great surprise episode of the series, “Human Error” is bound to be a surprise to those who read my many reviews because it is a Seven Of Nine episode. Not only is “Human Error” an unabashed Seven Of Nine episode, it is derivative of the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode “Hollow Pursuits.” And yet, when Seven Of Nine creates a second life inside the holodeck, the writers smartly steer away from the novelty of the holodeck-altered characters and keep the episode focused on Seven Of Nine’s character struggle. The result is a silent quest for deeper emotions from a woman who is struggling with what it might mean to be human again and the episode works amazingly well. It comes at a time when Seven Of Nine can reasonably expected to be coming out of her shell and overcoming her Borg programming and it works incredibly well for that! This is, arguably, Jeri Ryan’s best performance of Seven Of Nine as well,

9. “Equinox” (reviewed here!) – It might have an utterly preposterous premise – that the Caretaker abducted a second StarFleet vessel (it is never made explicit what genetically-different crewmembers the Equinox might have had compared to Voyager and that is problematic) that has been taking a different route home through the Delta Quadrant – but once one accepts that, “Equinox” becomes a very dark exploration of what Voyager could have been. Battered, demoralized, and operating on a skeleton crew, Captain Ransom’s U.S.S. Equinox has not stuck to Federation morals and the results are monstrous. This was the best season finale Star Trek: Voyager produced and the only one that made me truly hunger for the season that followed it,

8. “Ashes To Ashes” (reviewed here!) – Not at all a “token Kim” episode, “Ashes To Ashes” is legitimately wonderful. An alien race that reproduces by genetically reprogramming corpses recovered a Voyager crewmember and she starts recalling her initial identity and catches up to Voyager. This intriguing premise leads to Harry Kim having one of his more successful romantic relationships and one of the few that the viewer can really emotionally invest in. However, being that it is Kim . . . Still a wonderful character episode,

7. “Projections” (reviewed here!) – A very typical Brannon Braga plot finds the Doctor having an identity crisis when he is told that he is actually a flesh and blood human being who is having a mental breakdown on the Jupiter Station. It might not be a deep character study, but Robert Picardo’s performance makes it easy to invest in the “what is real and what is not?” episode,

6. “Lifesigns” (reviewed here!) – The only (primarily) Vidiian episode to make the list, “Lifesigns” is not an action or horror episode, instead, it is a quiet character study that gives the Doctor his first romantic encounter . . . with a brilliant Vidiian doctor who is suffering from advanced stages of the Phage and whom the Doctor must make a holographic body for. One of the few episodes that wrestles with the consequences of prior episodes, “Lifesigns” gives B’Elanna Torres a great secondary character conflict when her genetic material might help the Doctor and Dr. Pel, but her past experiences with the Vidiians leaves her unwilling to donate her tissue. Brilliant and fun,

5. “Mortal Coil” (reviewed here!) – Neelix has a crisis of faith after dying and goes to the brink of utter desolation. Enough said,

4. “Jetrel” (reviewed here!) – The first powerhouse performance by Ethan Philips, “Jetrel” fills in the backstory of Neelix and sets up the most-alluded to single event (outside Voyager’s abduction by the Caretaker) in the series. In this episode, we learn that Neelix’s home world was attacked and the planet’s moon was utterly devastated by a terrible weapon. The episode has a compelling build-up to the revelation of Neelix’s part in the war for his planet and it is balanced by the story of a scientist motivated by his own powerful sense of guilt trying desperately to make up for his wrongs. This is one of James Sloyan’s best supporting performances and a knock-‘em-out-of-the-park performance by Ethan Philips,

3. “Heroes And Demons” (reviewed here!) – The first episode to give the Doctor an away mission of his own, “Heroes And Demons” has the EMH in Beowulf and the episode is funny, clever, and filled with menace. Not simply a holodeck adventure story, the episode realistically explores the psychological consequences for what is essentially an agoraphobic being thrown out into a very big world. On screen, Robert Picardo and Marjorie Monahan (Freya) have great chemistry that makes the romantic and tragic aspects of the episode work wonderfully,

2. “Caretaker” (reviewed here!) – The best of the Star Trek franchise pilots, it is telling that the show started high that its pilot made it to #2! The characters are introduced in interesting and compelling ways, the performances are not as clunky as on the other pilot episodes and the production crews were refined enough to shoot a pilot that did not look like a pilot. “Caretaker” has a Maquis vessel disappearing in a dangerous area of space and Captain Kathryn Janeway conscripting an arrogant pilot with a troubled past to help find it. But, the simple recovery mission starts an epic journey when both ships are abducted by a powerful alien 70,000 light years from the Badlands. “Caretaker” is well-plotted and makes one enthusiastic to start the journey of Voyager, which is exactly what a first episode ought to do,


and finally . . .

. . . against all odds or bets . . .

1. “Resolutions” (reviewed here!) – What many people might have seen as a throwaway bottle episode became its finest episode. When the Doctor is unable to treat Chakotay and Janeway of (of all things!) an insect bite, the two senior officers make the difficult decision to stay behind and Voyager, under the command of Tuvok heads for home. “Resolutions” is a tight character episode, exploring both Janeway’s desperate search for a cure on the planet, contrasted with Chakotay’s easy acceptance of life outside a command structure and Tuvok’s rocky command as Harry Kim makes constant appeals for the new captain to negotiate with the Vidiians for a cure for Janeway. The acting is top-notch, the characters are exceptionally explored and the plot is surprisingly engaging. If only it didn’t waste so much time with the damn monkey . . . this is the must-see episode of the series, but best appreciated by those invested in the characters.

For other “Best Of” lists, please check out my lists of:
The Top Ten Episodes Of Star Trek
The Best Ten Episodes Of Star Trek: The Next Generation
The Top Ten Episodes Of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
The Top Ten Episodes Of Frasier

For other television reviews, please visit my Index Page for an organized listing!

© 2013 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Star Trek: Voyager’s Writers Look Back And Forward With Chakotay In “Natural Law!”


The Good: Moments of plot and character, Concept
The Bad: Some of Jeri Ryan’s performance, Absurd b-plot, Mediocre plot, Very obvious special effects shots (and cheats)
The Basics: “Natural Law” puts Chakotay and Seven Of Nine in a situation where they must rely on a primitive culture to survive.


As a series winds down, especially one that has so many characters to service as Star Trek: Voyager, the show has to essentially “write out” characters if the series finale is going to primarily focus on a single character or one or two of the main characters. While Star Trek: Voyager did not have nearly as many plotlines to tie up as Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, it had as many characters. While only one of the characters (Neelix) will explicitly be written out of the series, Harry Kim has, by the time “Natural Law” comes up, already had the final episode that would focus exclusively on him. Chakotay and Tom Paris are given their last real hurrahs in “Natural Law,” an episode that focuses on Chakotay and gives Paris a surprisingly weak subplot that seems more intended for comic effect than character development.

In “Natural Law,” the writers seem to recall that the original draw for the characterization of Chakotay – even more than that he was a member of the Maquis – was that he was a Native American Indian. This look back is a decent one and seems entirely plausible given the events of prior episodes, like “Tattoo” (reviewed here!). However, if the purpose of “Natural Law” is truly to give Chakotay one last shining episode, writer James Kahn unfortunately fails. Like so many things since she arrived on the show, “Natural Law’s” story that could have easily focused on Chakotay and his ability to communicate with the alien indigenous people, Seven Of Nine co-opts much of the episode.

Chakotay and Seven Of Nine are en route to a conference when their shuttle encounters a mysterious energy barrier on the planet surface they are flying over. They crash as a result of hitting the energy barrier and the two find themselves stranded on a lush, forested planet. Meanwhile, Tom Paris is reckless in flying the Delta Flyer around the planet Voyager is at and he is sentenced to the spatial equivalent of a defensive driving course. Underneath the energy barrier, Seven Of Nine and Chakotay discover an apparently ancient civilization still preserved in a pre-warp state of evolution. With Chakotay wounded, the pair stays the night with the indigenous people, despite Seven Of Nine’s trepidations and desires to recover debris from the shuttle that might allow them to contact Voyager.

While Paris muddles through his driver’s education course, Chakotay becomes distressed that the Ventu natives are beginning to recover debris from Voyager’s shuttle and imitating the two survivors by adorning themselves with pieces of the debris. When Seven Of Nine conscripts the Ventu to help move a piece of the debris, she and a Ventu girl work to temporarily bring down the barrier for rescue. But, when the barrier is lowered, the industrialized powers enter the habitat, much to the horror of both Chakotay and Seven Of Nine.

“Natural Law” is essentially the episode where Chakotay teaches Seven Of Nine to respect the sovereignty of the native people. This actually makes a much more sensible bond between the two characters that sets up the role their relationship plays in the series finale. Far more plausible than just throwing together Chakotay and Seven Of Nine, “Natural Law” gives them a common bond, purpose, and experience to make their brief relationship reasonable for the fans.

The subplot with Lieutenant Paris is mediocre and vaguely humorous, though both Robert Duncan McNeill and Neil Vipond (Kleg, the flying instructor) play off one another very well in order to sell their interactions.

The only other acting of note is that of Jeri Ryan’s Seven Of Nine. Throughout much of the episode, Ryan is lax in her portrayal of Seven Of Nine. Her eye motions and physical contact with Robert Beltran’s Chakotay seems much lazier than deliberate. For much of the episode, she seems like Jeri Ryan walking around a set, as opposed to Seven Of Nine on an alien planet. This is brought to a head in the episode’s final scene, where Ryan plays Seven Of Nine exactly like what one expects of her, which further accents the awkwardness of the early performance.

“Natural Law” is also notable in that it has surprisingly bad and noticeably cheated special effects. On the planet, when Seven Of Nine is forced – by her young guide – to take a breather and appreciate the scenery, the viewer is subjected to a painfully obvious green screen shot that does not gel with the characters occupying it. But more significantly, until the last possible moment of the episode when it is absolutely essential, the barrier is not seen. The viewer – who, as a Star Trek fan is likely to be very comfortable with brightly colored energy barriers, like from “Where No Man Has Gone Before” and Star Trek V: The Final Frontier - is told about the all-powerful energy barrier and the phaser discharge that allows the shuttle to survive passage through it, but we don’t see it. It is an invisible barrier (except for a convenient final shot) from space and from the surface, allowing director Terry Windell to gloss over actually showing the effect, especially as an alternate sky for the land shots.

“Natural Law” has a good message, one which Chakotay fortunately never hammers home in a painfully explicit Saturday Morning Cartoon kind of way. Chakotay does not want to use the Ventu natives, not only because he does not want to influence their culture an undo amount, but because of the history Earth has with enslaving its Native Peoples. Robert Beltran insinuates that concern in his performance, without stopping to make it obvious and I liked that.

Unfortunately, “Natural Law” does not nail the episode home in any meaningful way. It is good, but not great and hardly one of the more memorable episodes, which is an unfortunate condition for an episode to be so close to the end of the series.

[Knowing that VHS is essentially a dead medium, it's worth looking into Star Trek: Voyager - The Complete Seventh Season on DVD, which is also a better economical choice than buying the VHS. Read my review of the final season here!
Thanks!]

5/10

For other Star Trek episode and movie reviews, please visit my Star Trek Review Index Page!

© 2013 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
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Thursday, February 21, 2013

The Worst Ten Episodes Of Star Trek: Voyager!

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The Basics: What started out with so much potential quickly sank in the saga of Star Trek: Voyager: here are the episodes that can be safely avoided.


As I near completion of my reviews of Star Trek: Voyager, I find myself wistfully looking back at the series. And, as my readers have come to expect, I am now happily able to reveal my list of the Worst 10 Episodes of the series! I was actually surprised, when compiling this list, to discover that while Star Trek: Voyager had more consistently low-rated episodes (all of these episodes have a lower rating than the series rating for Star Trek: The Animated Adventures!), Star Trek: The Next Generation actually had more episodes that hit the lowest possible ratings (and are fairly painful to watch).

It is worth noting that the usually-despised episode “Threshold” (reviewed here!) does not make the list. For all the problems most people had with the special effects, I think it’s a great performance by Robert Duncan McNeill, the concept is good, and the episode actually tries to make a plot-based technology problem into a character episode that explores Paris’s feelings of inadequacy. And it lives up on that front.

So, without fanfare, here are the bottom ten episodes of Star Trek: Voyager!

10. “The Fight” (reviewed here!) – I can’t think of an episode in the Star Trek franchise that, when it was finished, I sat and said to myself, “What the hell was it I just watched?!” like “The Fight.” Chakotay has to train for a fight as a method of communication with an alien race and the idea seems needlessly complicated and ill-executed. Sure, it’s an excuse for Ray Walston to show back up one final time as Boothby, but it pretty much undermines his legacy when the DVD bonus features for the episode have actors talking about how far gone he was when working on the episode (and the episode that preceded it with him). “The Fight” is just a mess and I would not be surprised if Robert Beltran left it off his filmography whenever he had the chance,

9. “Resistance” (reviewed here!) – Honestly, the last time I watched the episode, I liked it a bit better than I ever had before, but this episode is a sad excuse to have Janeway use her feminine wiles (even momentarily) to accomplish a goal. The plotting is obvious and for all of Joel Gray’s wonderful performance abilities, the episode is gutted by obvious direction that telegraphs the ultimate demise of his character. And, oh yeah, because their plight is treated like something of an afterthought, Tuvok is so completely un-Vulcan in the episode and the experience never seems to have any ramifications on either Tuvok or Torres! And I write all that having enjoyed the bulk of books written by the episode’s writer, Michael Jan Friedman,

8. “Repression” (reviewed here!) – It speaks poorly of an episode when, a month after watching it and writing about it, it was so unmemorable that I had to go back and read my own review to even remember what the episode was. “Repression” is terrible, is what it is! Voyager, apparently, has no anti-viral software and a message gets through that reprograms the most obvious person possible, to start incapacitating former Maquis members . . . because of something that once happened long ago and blah de blah blah blah. I couldn’t muster up the enthusiasm for writing about it the first time, I’m not wasting more time on it here,

7. “Innocence” (reviewed here!) – The real idiocy of “Innocence,” an episode that tries to make Tuvok dealing with three (apparent) children into an awkward situation for him is that Tuvok is the first Star Trek franchise character who begins the series with adult children. So, of all the characters in the entire Star Trek pantheon, the one best equipped to deal with children effectively and in an unruffled manner is Tuvok. But then, the kids aren’t kids and the “reversal” is something so unclever, it could have been an episode of the Star Trek: Animated Series,

6. “Learning Curve” (reviewed here!) - Star Trek: Voyager apparently did not particularly want a second season, because they left four decent episodes in the can and ended the first season with an episode that had Tuvok, a former Academy instructor, struggling with basic education principles when teaching members of the Maquis how to serve aboard Voyager. And the villain is . . . cheese. Seriously, not “cheesy,” the villain in “Learning Curve” is cheese. That would be fine; I can suspend my disbelief to believe that Voyager and its experimental bio-neural gel packs could get an infection. I fail to believe, though, that Voyager is so poorly designed that the air vent from Neelix’s kitchen would lead to open circuitry where the cheese could ever be exposed to a bio-neural gel pack,

5. “Fair Haven” (reviewed here!) – Filled with terrible Irish stereotypes and the most underwhelming sense of menace for any Holodeck episode in the Star Trek franchise, what really sinks “Fair Haven” is the casting. Janeway (and Kate Mulgrew) had more sexual chemistry with the guy from her governess holonovel in the second season than she did with Michael the bartender (Fintan McKeown),

4. “Nemesis” (reviewed here!) – Apparently, nothing good comes from naming something “Nemesis” in the Star Trek franchise. When Chakotay is brainwashed to be a soldier for an alien race, the only thing more annoying than the pretense that he might get killed on the planet is how the word “nemesis” is used almost every other line. The episode is a great example of how a good theme can be presented in an absolutely terrible way. And the make-up in the episode is just painfully lazy. The villains are clearly redressed Naussicans. Or Predators,

3. “Prototype” (reviewed here!) - Star Trek: Voyager went through something of a lull in its second season. When it came back from its hiatus, it was with an episode where Torres is abducted by robots. Things did not look good for the series. “Prototype” is one of those episodes that might have worked if it was ever put in context. B’Elanna Torres might be the most-abducted character on Voyager. “Prototype” was at least her fourth time she was abducted (she had been abducted and tortured in the prior episode, “Resistance!”) and she never developed a complex about leaving the ship. How Torres ever ended up trusting anyone or wanting to leave Engineering is a mystery to me. “Prototype” hinges on a false sense of emotional attachment that Torres has for a robot she helps repair and because that bond is not plausibly sold, the episode falls apart,

2. “Twisted” (reviewed here!) – Arguably the worst-conceived spatial anomaly-of-the-week episode, Voyager enters a distortion ring where everything gets stretched and skewed. The best part of the episode is the end; not that the episode ends, but rather that the solution to the problem is surprisingly original for the franchise. Beyond that, “Twisted” makes no sense unless the ship and crew are made of gummy candy. Metal snaps, plastic cracks and tears, nothing in the episode satisfactorily explains why Voyager does not hit the anomaly and get torn apart, as opposed to ridiculously warped around,

And . . .

. . . the worst of the bunch is . . .

1.“Spirit Folk” (reviewed here!)! Star Trek Voyager revisits the pathetic setting of “Fair Haven.” And, if that episode’s romantic subplot was poorly executed, its follow-up is even worse. Why? Michael’s faith hinges on the virtually gutted relationship he has with Janeway. But long, long before it gets to that point, “Spirit Folk” is an ugly mess of an episode with a double-helping of the Irish stereotyping that made “Fair Haven” so bad in the first place. The doctor is hypnotized, another hologram takes the mobile emitter, and the Holodeck safeties fail yet again. This episode features the bulk of the actors looking bored or walking around in a daze, like they realized while making the episode that they were involved with creating something preposterous.

For other “Worst Of” lists, please check out my lists of:
The Worst Ten Episodes Of Star Trek
The Worst Ten Episodes Of Star Trek: The Next Generation
The Worst Ten Episodes Of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine

© 2013 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
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Friday, February 15, 2013

The Best Seven Of Nine Episode? “Human Error” Might Well Be It!


The Good: Surprisingly good chemistry between Ryan and Beltran, Good character development
The Bad: Spatial anomaly plot seems forced, Technical details.
The Basics: “Human Error” has Seven Of Nine yearning for a second life, one that has her hiding out in the Holodeck where she is able to be more human than she is in real life.


Those who have been reading my many reviews of episodes of Star Trek: Voyager know that Seven Of Nine was my least favorite character of the series. When she arrived in season four of the show (reviewed here!), I thought her presence was an obvious attempt to court more of a lowbrow audience, one where sex appeal was more important than substance. Moreover, Jeri Ryan’s performances, which usually have the actress acting as stiff and subtly inhuman, tend to hit on the same note, giving her very little to do.

So, it is somewhat ironic that “Human Error,” a Seven Of Nine episode that has Jeri Ryan forced to perform very little – Seven Of Nine spends much of her time in the episode as a surprisingly emotionally-realized human being – is actually one of the episodes I more immediately enjoyed. Despite the rather obvious inclusion of a spatial anomaly subplot (which is a frequent conceit for Star Trek: Voyager), “Human Error” is largely a slow, subtle, character-focused episode that officially starts off the romantic relationship between Chakotay and Seven Of Nine.

In one of the least-compelling teasers of the entire series, Seven Of Nine is established playing piano. Seven Of Nine attends a baby shower for Paris and Torres, but when the Bridge contacts here there, it becomes apparent that it is merely a simulation. With the actual baby shower imminent, Seven Of Nine continues to return to the Holodeck to continue simulations of what her life might be like after her Borg implants are removed and she is granted a rank and position on the ship officially.

While Voyager tries to navigate through an area filled with subspace shockwaves from the discharge of an alien weapon nearby, Seven Of Nine retreats into the Holodeck to have a virtual life.

As is the series frequently does, “Human Error” borrows extensively from a Star Trek: The Next Generation episode. “Human Error” is basically “Hollow Pursuits” (reviewed here!) where Seven Of Nine replaces Reginald Barclay and she has only one virtual world in the holodeck.

Despite the spatial anomaly subplot, the Seven Of Nine storyline is actually quite engaging and it is enhanced by pretty incredible on-screen chemistry between actress Jeri Ryan and Robert Beltran. Beltran plays Chakotay and in Seven Of Nine’s virtual life, she and Chakotay have a romantic relationship. Watching “Human Error,” it is hard for the viewer not to ask, “Where the hell has this been?!” The onscreen presence and interplay between the two actors is exceptional and the looks, Ryan’s subtle smile and Beltran’s relaxed body language make the two virtual characters far more intriguing than their actual characters often are on the show!

Even better, “Human Error” has some very real consequences and knowing that it is the start of an arc (albeit a limited one, given how the series is almost over), makes it all the more pleasant. While Seven Of Nine lies to Janeway about her Holodeck activities, Janeway comes across as the bigger jerk in the scene, invading Seven’s privacy without any hint of remorse. Despite that scene and the subplot that serves as the backdrop for how Seven Of Nine is neglecting her duties, “Human Error” is a surprisingly good episode. In fact, it might well be the best Seven Of Nine episode of the series.

[Knowing that VHS is essentially a dead medium, it's worth looking into Star Trek: Voyager - The Complete Seventh Season on DVD, which is also a better economical choice than buying the VHS. Read my review of the final season here!
Thanks!]

8.5/10

For other Star Trek episode and movie reviews, please visit my Star Trek Review Index Page!

© 2013 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

The Rescue Of The Voyager Crew From The Soap Opera Of The First Part Is “Workforce, Part II”


The Good: Character progression, Moments of performance
The Bad: Continued lame special effects, Very predictable plot progression
The Basics: “Workforce, Part II” resolves the plot of the first part, which has the Voyager crew trapped without their memories on an alien world.


As I sit watching the second part of the Star Trek: Voyager episode “Workforce,” it occurs to me that if the subsequent spin-off in the Star Trek franchise had not been a prequel, this two-parter would have been the perfect time to introduce the new crew. For sure, it would have been anti-climactic for Star Trek: Voyager to have Voyager’s crew rescued from an outside source, but it would have made the threat much more real if the captured crew did not have the means to get out of their current predicament.

“Workforce, Part II” is a direct sequel to “Workforce” (reviewed here!), which works more to explore the characters as they struggle through their dilemma, unaware of who they are supposed to be. “Workforce, Part II” has some refreshing play for the characters viewers are familiar with by this point in the series, but it suffers from a fundamental problem that stretches suspension of disbelief far beyond what viewers can actually accept. “Workforce, Part II” hinges on the idea that it is at all possible for Voyager’s crew to be lost, trapped on a planet where they have no memory of who they actually are. Because it does not take an even remotely sophisticated sensibility to know that there is no way this is going to be the end of the series, the predictability of the plot virtually writes itself. Fortunately, the only wrinkle in the predictable nature of the plot progression is a decent character development - a romantic relationship for Janeway that is actually one of the most compelling ones of the series.

Picking up where the first part ended, with Tuvok freaking out and a disguised Chakotay fleeing for his life, awaiting transport off the Quarren work world, Voyager manages to recover Torres, but not Chakotay. Chakotay is wounded and he meets with Janeway and learns that she is moving in with Jaffen. With Annika Hansen becoming suspicious that Tuvok may not actually be ill and that his assertion that he does not belong there, Janeway’s attempt to help Chakotay runs into conflict with her budding relationship with Jaffen. As Torres responds to treatment from the Doctor and Neelix, Voyager avoids capture by setting down on a small moon.

When Jaffen turns on Janeway and Chakotay, Chakotay gets an unlikely ally in Inspector Yerid, the detective who has been hunting him for his collusion in the abduction of B’Elanna Torres. As Yerid follows the clues, he becomes troubled by how the society he is a police officer for has been utilizing personnel. When his medical counterpart begins asking questions, Dr. Kadan is exposed for the social engineer he is. Both men find the methods barbaric and aid the Voyager crew is escaping the planet.

The acting in “Workforce, Part II” is a tribute to Roxann Dawson as both a director and an actor. She and Ethan Philips play off one another amazingly well in a quiet scene in the mess hall where Torres tries to recall being married with Tom. That scene is followed by a wonderful moment where Garrett Wang and Robert Picardo have a meaningful exchange that gives decent insight into Picardo as the ECH. Even Jeri Ryan is convincing when she has to play Hansen involved in a covert operation to infiltrate the neuropathology unit and get information on the truth of what is happening to the crew.

The guest performers shine in “Workforce, Part II.” Don Most is cold and deliciously evil as Kadan. Robert Joy, who plays Yerid, is smart and methodical and the role is one of the best guest roles I have seen him in. Jay Harrington gives an intriguing performance that is emotive and rational (this is the first thing I have actually seen him in) that makes him truly stand out; it is easy to see how he got such a good career after this!

“Workforce, Part II” is a very satisfying conclusion to the story of Voyager’s captured crew and it is one of the rare examples of a second part of a two-part episode being superior to the first.

[Knowing that VHS is essentially a dead medium, it's worth looking into Star Trek: Voyager - The Complete Seventh Season on DVD, which is also a better economical choice than buying the VHS. Read my review of the final season here!
Thanks!]

7/10

For other Star Trek episode and movie reviews, please visit my Star Trek Review Index Page!

© 2013 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
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Monday, February 11, 2013

Another Opportunity For The Actors On Star Trek: Voyager To Play Outside Their Characters Comes In “Workforce!”


The Good: Interesting plot and concept, Fine acting
The Bad: Minor special effects issues, No real character insights, Very inconsistent conceit
The Basics: The crew of Voyager is taken hostage by aliens who need the personnel for their “Workforce.”


Like Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Voyager did not have any episodes that were set in the Mirror Universe or involved any crossovers with that setting. While Star Trek: The Next Generation got around that wrinkle by providing numerous holodeck episodes that allowed the actors to stretch their wings and display other aspects of their talents. On Star Trek: Voyager, the crew had numerous episodes where their sense of identity was compromised, usually in two-parters, like “The Killing Game” (reviewed here!) and “The Killing Game, Part 2” (reviewed here!). The last episode where the performers had a chance to play outside the bounds of their characters is “Workforce.”

“Workforce” does not thoroughly upend the characters – Tuvok laughs and jokes, but Janeway still loves to cook – and that is part of the problem with the episode. The episode is not riddled with problems, but some issues stand out, none more than the fact that the identity-erasing conceit of the episode is very erratically applied. Annika Hansen (Seven Of Nine) is essentially a Borg, Paris is a quarrelsome loner, but Tuvok is stiff and while he initially laughs, he quickly reverts to logic and order (even before the medication slips). That said, “Workforce” has a lot going for it.

On an alien world, an excited Janeway, out of uniform, takes a lift down several levels to try to find a supervisor. She is assigned to monitoring a thermal readout and she takes to the job with an uncharacteristic enthusiasm. Janeway is rescued from embarrassment and an overload by Jaffen, who keeps her from the new efficiency expert, Annika Hansen. Paris, meanwhile, is struggling to find work in a local bar. As Janeway and Jaffen get closer, Janeway learns that as part of the compensation package, she is given inoculations against radiation, an injection that Tuvok seems to dread.

Returning from a trade mission, Chakotay, Kim, and Neelix come upon Voyager stuck at the outskirts of a nebula. There, the Emergency Command Hologram has been working desperately to get Voyager back up and running. He tells Chakotay about how the ship hit a mine and was flooded with radiation shortly after the team left. With the crew forced to abandon ship and command turned over to the ECH, commands Voyager through an attack. Working to get Voyager operational again, the Away Team searches for its lost crew. With the Doctor surgically altering Chakotay, Kim and the ECH are left on Voyager while Neelix and Chakotay try to unravel the mystery of the local labor shortage and discover what has happened to their crews.

The return of the ECH, a peripheral plot point in “Tinker Tenor Doctor Spy” (reviewed here!) is a welcome one. It is almost shocking that perceptive writers Kenneth Biller and Bryan Fuller can recall the concept of the ECH to utilize, but sloppily have Ensign Kim declaring that his encounter on the Away Mission (which is basically the worst case of a stomach ache he has had) was the worst he has ever had when he was attacked and almost killed by Species 8472. Similarly, Chakotay reacts to seeing Janeway as second season Chakotay might, which is off because his character’s memory is never wiped.

Unlike most of the other episodes of Star Trek: Voyager where the characters are given identity issues, “Workforce” does not give any of the actors a real chance to shine. Kate Mulgrew plays the brainwiped Janeway much the way she played Janeway outside the command structure in “Resolutions” (reviewed here!) and by this point in the series, we have seen Tim Russ play Tuvok conflicted and struggling to get himself under control at least half a dozen times, so he gives us nothing new either. In fact, more than any other identity change episode, “Workforce” gives the viewer nothing new for the actors and no real character insights. The acting is not bad, it is just not at all surprising; no one is stretching their abilities at all.

The special effects, though, are another matter. The opening shot of “Workforce” has very obvious computer generated effects for the city and monorail. For some reason, the way the elevated train moved in the teaser instantly set me off; I knew I was looking at a virtual construct. On HD televisions, this episode may show its age more than others. Also particularly problematic is that the ship the ECH defends Voyager from is a Breen ship! It’s a distinctive ship and particularly sloppy of the producers to reuse the vessel.

Despite the minor issues, “Workforce” is an engaging first part and it intrigues the viewer enough to look forward to how the dilemma will be resolved when it ends in a pretty obvious cliffhanger.

[Knowing that VHS is essentially a dead medium, it's worth looking into Star Trek: Voyager - The Complete Seventh Season on DVD, which is also a better economical choice than buying the VHS. Read my review of the final season here!
Thanks!]

6/10

For other Star Trek episode and movie reviews, please visit my Star Trek Review Index Page!

© 2013 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
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Sunday, February 3, 2013

A Clever Retrospective Opens A Temporal Nightmare In “Shattered!”


The Good: Interesting and initially engaging concept, Robert Beltran is good in the episode
The Bad: Physics of the problem make absolutely no sense,
The Basics: “Shattered” has Chakotay wandering around Voyager through temporal barriers that put him in different times in the ship’s history.


The danger of doing a time travel episode that allows characters from a television series to encounter different eras in the show’s history is that fans might realize just how much they liked the show in one of its earlier iterations. In Star Trek: Voyager, there seems little danger of that happening and as Chakotay goes around a ship that serves as a convenient window into different eras in Voyager’s history, the viewer is much more likely to simply recall how preposterous the show can be at times. The look ahead in the timeline is unfortunately preposterous.

In fact, much of “Shattered” is ridiculous, though it is an emotionally enjoyable episode. Details in the episode are problematic and when viewed rationally, “Shattered” is actually one of the most ludicrous episodes of the entire series. Take, for example, the teaser which has Chakotay breaking out one of the last of his bottles of cider hidden on the ship. When Chakotay came to Voyager, he was alone, being beamed off his ship as it exploded. It was a desperate gambit. Here, we are made to believe that Chakotay (or the transporter operator at the time) beamed aboard personal possessions, including a case of cider, which he managed to stash before anyone noticed.

After encountering an anomaly, Chakotay is wounded in Engineering. He awakens in Sickbay, where the Doctor brags about having created a chronoton-based cure for him and expresses frustration that he is cut off from the rest of the ship. Chakotay leaves Sickbay, already theorizing the problem involves time travel of some sort when the Doctor is baffled by the idea of a mobile emitter. Chakotay arrives on the Bridge where Janeway arrests him for his activities as a Maquis, but en route to the brig, his guards disappear and Chakotay goes to Engineering. There, he encounters Seska, who is in control with the Kazon. Returning to Sickbay, Chakotay gets a hypospray of the treatment the Doctor gave him before and returns to the Bridge. There, he enlists the aid of Janeway.

Together, Janeway and Chakotay visit Astrometrics where they meet an adult Icheb and Naomi Wildman and figure out how to restore the ship. Chakotay and Janeway go throughout the ship injecting bioneural gel packs to restore the ship. In the process, Janeway encounters the macrovirus, the Borg, Chaotica and others Voyager encountered over the seven years of the show!

“Shattered” is basically a retrospective episode that can be best appreciated by those who have seen (and enjoyed):
“Caretaker”
“Basics, Part 2”
“Macrocosm”
“Scorpion, Part 2”
“Bride Of Chaotica”
and “Bliss”

“Shattered” also requires viewers to believe that in seven years, Voyager made it about 35 years worth of the trip home, but seventeen years from now, the ship will still be on its journey. The future Icheb and Samantha Wildman are interesting variations on the characters.

In fact, what doesn’t work is Chakotay, at least on the character front. Chakotay has to advocate in favor of Janeway getting the ship lost in the Delta Quadrant. In that speech, Chakotay neglects to consider just how many people died for Janeway’s vision of the future. When Seska inevitably turns on Chakotay, it shows real insight into her character, whereas Chakotay is illustrated to be a fool . . . yet again.

The physics of “Shattered” are also problematic. The idea of the anomaly is not a bad one and it would make sense on a perfectly stationary target. The idea of the different rooms existing in different times is cool, but it only works if the rooms are in the same places.

“Shattered” almost seems like a self-congratulatory episode, reminding viewers of just how far the show came and all it went through. But, it also is a ballad of missed opportunities, most notably in the relationship between Janeway and Chakotay. Chakotay actually seems like a bit of a douchebag in one respect in “Shattered.” Chakotay has been very, very slowly cultivating a relationship with Seven Of Nine. But, in “Shattered,” he comes close to actually having a real emotional connection with Janeway that borders on the romantic. It is almost like Chakotay is hedging his bets.

Fortunately, it is actually just that the writers of this bottle episode were probably not privy to where the show was going with Chakotay and Seven. As a result, “Shattered” is a well-acted, somewhat nonsensical episode that is fun, but not much more.

[Knowing that VHS is essentially a dead medium, it's worth looking into Star Trek: Voyager - The Complete Seventh Season on DVD, which is also a better economical choice than buying the VHS. Read my review of the final season here!
Thanks!]

For other works with Vanessa Branch, please visit my reviews of:
Post Grad
Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World’s End
Pirates Of The Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest
Pirates Of The Caribbean: The Curse Of The Black Pearl
The Cell

5/10

For other Star Trek episode and movie reviews, please visit my Star Trek Review Index Page!

© 2013 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
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Monday, January 21, 2013

Working Hard To Remind Viewers Of The Differences, “Repression” Is Unimpressive


The Good: None of the acting is bad.
The Bad: An utter lack of character development, Lack of understanding of the characterizations for the crew, Banal plot
The Basics: “Repression” is a real throwaway episode that might have been interesting had it come very early in the series when the Maquis still mattered and the show had done fewer “possession” episodes.


Every now and then, I encounter an episode of a television show that seems like it was produced in the wrong season, as if the writer was working off initial characterizations and plot developments, without any respect for the character development that has occurred between the original concept and the season in which it aired. In the Star Trek franchise, Star Trek: Voyager was unfortunately riddled with episodes that stretched to restore the idea that there were divisions between the StarFleet and Maquis crewmembers, long after there was no real distinction between the character groups. This is somewhat ironic in that the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode that introduced the Maquis had Major Kira characterized much like her first season persona, as opposed to the late second season officer she was by the time “The Maquis” (reviewed here!) aired. By the time “Repression” was produced, the Maquis are essentially non-entities. Voyager has learned that the Maquis in the Alpha Quadrant are almost all dead or incarcerated and in “Life Line” (reviewed here!), Janeway and Chakotay are equally troubled by StarFleet’s reminder that the Maquis are still considered criminals.

“Repression” makes a passing effort to acknowledge that resolution to the characters, but the conflict itself, especially post-“Worst Case Scenario” (reviewed here!), seems forced (indeed, the scene where Chakotay and B’Elanna meet with the remaining Maquis crewmembers seems remarkably well-populated).

Tom Paris takes Torres on a date to the Holodeck where he has made a 3-D movie theater and when they delete the rest of the audience, another Voyager crewmember is found in the theater, in a coma. The anomaly soon turns into a pattern when five ex-Maquis members fall into comas. As Paris and Kim work to create a holographic representation of the assailant who comatized the crewmembers, Tuvok investigates the crew, convinced a member of the crew is causing the attacks that result in the comas.

Tuvok is perplexed when Tabor, the first victim, awakens, and soon after, Torres falls into a coma. When Chakotay finds her, the assailant is revealed!

The irony of my complaint that “Repression” is “out of season” is that it is essentially “Cathexis” (reviewed here!) with a motive and an order to it. “Repression” is sloppy in the characterization as the assailant is never questioned . . . and Harry Kim has a pretty obvious moment where he could. Moreover, when Janeway asks Tuvok why he is convinced the assailant is a man, he says he does not know, but the holographic recreation is clearly a male form.

“Repression” is a ridiculously simple concept episode: one of the crew is remotely controlled by a Bajoran with a grudge against the Maquis. But far more than trying to be an intimate (or even interesting) character study, “Repression” belabors the plot, then belabors explaining the plot. There is no character development, nothing at all superlative.

Tim Russ, for example, shows nothing new from his range than he had before. In fact, he has given more compelling performances, though none of the acting in the episode is actually bad. That is all that saves the episode from the very lowest ratings.

[Knowing that VHS is essentially a dead medium, it's worth looking into Star Trek: Voyager - The Complete Seventh Season on DVD, which is also a better economical choice than buying the VHS. Read my review of the final season here!
Thanks!]

For other works with Keith Szarabajka, please visit my reviews of:
Argo
Transformers: Dark Of The Moon
The Dark Knight
Angel - Season Three

1.5/10

For other Star Trek episode and movie reviews, please visit my Star Trek Review Index Page!

© 2013 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
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