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By Jadzia-Dax

Alright Bill - you get the "Steve treatment". heh

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And now we come to the third season of STAR TREK: VOYAGER. It’s one of those television shows that you either admit to liking or not, depending on your viewpoint.

Well that seems to be the sentiment on the fan boards. But I think the average non-posting fan watched it mostly and in fact, I have seen stats pages that indicated that of all the series, VOY had the most fan sites on the web. Of course this might be due to its timing for premier - right at the dawn of the "world wide web". But it is a fascinating stat nevertheless.

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At times for me it felt like VOYAGER was a NEXT GENERATION “wanna-be”, replacing Picard, Data, and the Enterprise with a different crew and a different ship.


And that's what I have always dubbed it - "TNG lite".

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Like the other STAR TREK series, VOYAGER had its share of bumps and bruises, but there were certain episodes that made the series harken back to the days of the Original Series with a particular sparkle. VOYAGER had its share of serious stories, mixed in with the romps, the bumps, and the bruises.


All true.

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Of course, this was all in the day before the creative powers at the helm of STAR TREK began running out of gas by resorting to contrived stories and plot retreads not only during VOYAGER’s run but also in ENTERPRISE. Still, there was some energy to VOYAGER, and after several years of watching the series on TV it’s good to see that it’s still there.


Well here is an interesting tid bit regarding your comment about "running out of gas" and I am sure you know this but during/after season 5 of VOY, no more unsolicited stories or scripts were accepted to Trek. And so the self-fullfiling "running out of gas" was bound to happen.

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1996 marked the 30th anniversary of the premiere of the original STAR TREK, and executive producer Rick Berman saw to it that they celebrated in style. The eighth feature film STAR TREK: FIRST CONTACT was released to a huge box office success. On DEEP SPACE NINE, Sisko and crew went back in time to revisit Kirk and company in the comic romp “Trials and Tribble-ations”, the sequel to “The Trouble With Tribbles.” And on VOYAGER we had a nice look back to the days of 'Captain Sulu' and the crew of the Excelsior. Mixed in with a return visit from John de Lancie’s 'Q', several time-travel adventures including one to the 1990’s, the return of a couple of misplaced Ferengi from THE NEXT GENERATION, some new threats, and several serious dramatic turns for the crew, VOYAGER -- like a buried diamond -- still shines once you clean it up.


LOL

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The third season marked the first time VOYAGER saw a complete 26-episode production run (while the second season had 26 episodes telecast, four of those episodes had been initially produced during the first season but were held until the fall of 1995.) But in these 26 there’s a real maturity to the characters. Each of the nine major cast members undergoes growth and change that adds real depth to their personas, contributing new aspects along the way.


By "9" you are including? 7 of 9 at the end of the season?

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'The Doctor' (Robert Picardo) would undergo major changes to his character this season, not only learning the value of human emotions in “Real Life”, and turning violent in “Darkling”, but also receiving his portable holo-emitter in “Future’s End, Part II”, allowing for more action beyond the confines of sickbay.


He also gets to be a tricorder in VOY "Displaced". LOL

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Jennifer Lien’s under-utilized 'Kes' came into the spotlight in “Warlord”, exhibiting a rare amount of toughness and action to her frequently quiet and demure character, while beginning to see changes in her Ocampan physiology in “Before and After”, which would eventually lead to her departure early in the fourth season’s “The Gift”.


And I think that VOY "Warlord" rightly generated alot of discussion considering some underlying implications with the plot device of a male (who was infact married and had his wife/lover there participating) inhabiting the female body of Kes - sortof harkening back to DS9 "Rejoined", but not going as far as the DS9 treatment did - but close.

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'Neelix' (Ethan Phillips) showed that there’s more to his character than meets the eye in “Fair Trade”. This one episode disturbed me more than the others because of the way that he got taken down several notches throughout the episode, first slowly then all at once.


Yeah - that was an interesting one - not only for what I have been debating about in Steve's thread regarding the supplies deal with VOY, and not only the domino effect that Neelix experiences when trying to desperately get the item that he needed the most (a la like how Jake and Nog did all their convoluting to get a baseball card in DS9 "In the Cards"), but because I believe it was indicated that once they were past the Necrit Expanse, Neelix was essentially useless as a guide. Thus the driving point behind why he went through such lengths to get that map.

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And we saw 'Kathryn Janeway' (Kate Mulgrew) explore her spiritual beliefs in “Sacred Ground”, get caught in a time loop in “Coda”, and become Q’s love suitor in “The Q and the Grey”.


And in the case of VOY "Coda", there was this interesting surreal memorial service going on there that was quite poignant. But then the very end of the ep was pretty cliche. ;-)

And god forbid, don't forget "Ripley Janeway" (a la how Picard was shown in TNG "Starship Mine") in VOY "Macrocosm", the 3rd season ep that fans and non-fan viewers alike love to hate! Image

And as a side note to that ep, I believe VOY "Macrocosm" represented the EMH's first REAL "away mission" (as opposed to his first "away mission in the holodeck" in VOY "Heroes and Demons" in the first season).

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Finally, the third season saw the return of a long-time deadly threat, one that would lead to a new crew addition in the fourth season.


Right - and as you have noticed, no Borg appeared BEFORE VOY "Blood Fever", the 16th episode into the 3rd season. Not episode 2 of the 1st season as so many want to think. ;-)

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I must admit, it’s been a while since I’ve really watched VOYAGER in its entirety. For me this was one of the most haphazard overall viewings of STAR TREK that I had personally experienced since the reruns of the Original Series during those college days in the 1980’s. Not because I didn’t like VOYAGER, but because in those days UPN was a fledgling fourth network, and at the time the only way I was able to catch the first four seasons of VOYAGER was in second-run syndication after the initial UPN telecasts. For a while during the fifth season we didn’t even have VOYAGER, much less UPN, on our cable television system, thanks to the city council. Those were the days I had to rely on a buddy with a satellite dish out in the woods to record the episodes so I could borrow them to watch �" and even then, it was fuzzy. It wouldn’t be until the sixth season that we finally got UPN in our area. Now, with the advent of DVD, I can sit back and enjoy �" or suffer through? �" the series again in its entirety, without having to worry about late nights, cable problems, satellite dishes, or the city council.


Wow. What a dedicated guy. ;-)

Image

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One of the most eagerly-awaited episodes of the third season was the first one that went into production that year, the 30th anniversary tribute episode “Flashback,” featuring the return of George Takei as Captain Hikaru Sulu and Grace Lee Whitney as 'Janice Rand', in a recreation and extension of events from STAR TREK VI: THE UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY. It made sense; after all, 'Tuvok' lived long enough and had graduated from the Academy, making his service aboard the Excelsior certainly plausible. While the 24th century teaser �" basically Tuvok’s weird-sounding Vulcan neurological disease �" was not the most inspired of plot devices, it’s the 23rd century recreation that fans embraced, giving Sulu one more spin at the helm of the Excelsior. The visual effects were on par with the feature film and each of the 23rd century scenes could have easily fit into the framework of the overall film. While the final episode met with mixed results, “Flashback” gave us one of the final glimpses into the past, into pure, joyous STAR TREK, and not the rumbling mass-produced machine it became in years to come.


Except one of the BIGGEST criticisms here and elsewhere from TUC purists is that in TUC, Valtane didn't "die". Whereas in VOY "Flashback" he did.

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Time travel again reared its head during the third season of VOYAGER, taking the crew to Los Angeles, 1996. Time travel stories are a STAR TREK staple, and VOYAGER is no exception.


Time travel stories are a Star Trek staple - as an occassional plot device to explore some aspect of past or future history. But now they are part and parcel of the franchise in order to get around continuity... but I digress.... ;-)

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In the two-part episode “Future’s End” the VOYAGER crew found themselves investigating a 29th century time traveler who sought escape by going back in time to the late 20th century and interacting with an ambitious technology executive (played to the hilt by guest-star Ed Begley, Jr.).


Actually, Braxton wasn't "escaping" anything. He was supposedly there to stop Voyager from firing on Henry Starling who would find and abscound with Braxton's timeship in the late '60s, use it to start the "PC revolution", and eventually take off in it in order to steal more high tech - but from the "real" future, eventually creating an unstable rift in space-time (because of his true lack of knowledge for how the ship is supposed to operate), that Voyager would ignite when attempting to blow Starling out of space to keep him from travelling to the 29th century. And this would result in the distruction of space-time over thousands of light years worth of space, essentially destroying Earth and everything near it. And thus Braxton is there to destroy Voyager (which is a bit over the top IMHO) before this chain of events gets set into motion.

Of course this sets up the Braga "causality loop" where Braxton's attempt fails when Voyager fights back in defense, causing instability in Braton's ship and the time rift that he had created, which effectively hurtles him back to 1969. Where then hippy Henry Starling witnesses the crash of Braxton's ship. Meanwhile, Voyager gets caught in Braxton's temporal wake and gets hurled back in time as well, but not as far - only to 1996. They do eventually find Braxton, a homeless derelict near out of his mind, living on the streets of L.A., after having spent the past near 30 years, in 20th century Earth, with no way to get home.

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It was in this story that we saw the advent of the holographic Doctor’s mobile holo-emitter, allowing him to freely move anywhere and everywhere. And seeing the VOYAGER crew in modern-day attire is a hoot: Chakotay comes off at his George Clooney-best, Tuvok takes a page out of Spock’s book with a head scarf, and Janeway and 'Tom Paris' (Robert Duncan McNeill) look like they could easily fit into the times. This also continued Paris’ love of the 20th century, a running theme throughout the series.


Couple this with Neelix picking up the myriad of local entertainment broadcasts and he quickly falls in love with the "soap....opera". LOL

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Two of VOYAGER’s most exciting episodes, they're perhaps best evidenced by a line spoken by the 'Borg Queen' in FIRST CONTACT: “Watch your future’s end” certainly had a double entendre that year.


And we see the introduction of actress Susanna Thompson in the part of the Borg Queen because as I understand, Alice Krige was unavailable at the time. Alice does make a return to reprise the role in the finale VOY "Endgame I & II". Susanna reprises the role in VOY "Dark Frontier I & II" (5th season) and VOY "Unimatrix 0 I & II" (6th - 7th season cliffhanger).

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Fan favorites John de Lancie and Suzie Plakson returned as squabbling his-and-her Q’s in the romp through time and space, “The Q and the Grey”. Janeway’s reaction to Q’s proposal to be the mother of his child, and her frequent rebuttals, are classic: Mulgrew and de Lancie play off each other with perfect comic timing.


And this because according to a number of interviews, the two were long time and close friends off-camera.

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But what begins as a comic adventure turns into a true life-and-death struggle within the Q Continuum, and it’s up to Janeway to resolve everything. Clearly Q’s impact in NEXT GENERATION had been drastically reduced from galactic menace to galactic comedian in VOYAGER’s time, though it would not be his last appearance on the series. Still, it nicely reveals further aspects to the Q Continuum’s view on life, death, and even sex.


Well now this whole thing that develops the Continuum was fascinating to me. It seems a number of fans didn't want this to happen - I guess to keep the Q "mysterious". But I thought the surrealistic view of "life in the Contiinuum" in the symbollic sense, was unique.

However fans also criticized the somewhat cliche Civil War setting of VOY "The Q and the Grey", although I thought why the hell not? It's better than Nazi aliens any day. ;-)

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The often-repeated plot of holodeck adventures found its way into VOYAGER stories again, as seen in the episode “Worst Case Scenario.” Stumbling across a hidden military training file, it soon develops into a first-person interactive holographic novel co-written by Tuvok and Paris where crewmembers could become either Starfleet or Maquis officers. It would be one of the last episodes to feature fan-favorite Martha Hackett as 'Seska', the former Maquis-turned-Cardassian spy.


And actually it WAS the "last" because Seska died at the beginning of the season in VOY "Basics II".

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The twists and turns make this one enjoyable adventure, with skillful direction by frequent TREK director Alexander Singer.


Well yeah, it was a pretty dark ep. But the timing of it was also interesting because it provided a sharp contrast to the momentum of working together, that had been slowly building between the Star Fleet officers and the Maquis crew. There were alot of technobabbly things going on to manipulate the scenario, but I guess this was to be a sortof swansong footnote for Seska.

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Even with its romps and suspenseful adventures, VOYAGER could also explore serious modern-day themes. In “Distant Origin,” we see Voth scientists attempting to prove that life evolved over the millennia by kidnapping Chakotay. This episode has a wonderful hook to it that baits us in with the often-debated argument of creationism versus evolution, working well on many levels.


But not only that, about 1/2 of the ep was actually written and filmed from the Voth point of view rather than from the Voyager POV.

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In the episode “Real Life,” director Anson Williams (forever known to us as 'Potsie' from HAPPY DAYS)


LOL! For those who remembered that show. ;-) (and we know that his buddy Don(ny) Most - "Ralph Malph", appeared in VOY "Workforce I & II" in the 7th season)

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gives us an all-too-human Doctor looking to explore what it means to be human by giving him a wife, a rebellious son, and the youngest daughter, Belle. The final moments with the Doctor and Belle are unforgettable and utterly heart-wrenching, bringing the Doctor one step closer to understanding humanity.


Yeah, that ending was sortof deep.

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Despite many strong episodes, VOYAGER also began to dip into mediocre and hackneyed plots, as evidenced in episodes such as “Favorite Son,” with a race of sexy alien women attempting to convince 'Harry Kim' (Garrett Wang) that he’s a member of their species (oddly enough, Wang would go on to be selected as one of People’s 50 Most Beautiful People during the mid-to-late 90’s);


Your quota T & A and an attempt to do a "Harry story". ;-)

However I thought that VOY "Alter Ego" was the better Harry story, although the focus then shifted to it being a Tuvok story.

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“Remember,” with everything from 'B’Elanna Torres' (Roxann Dawson) having strange dreams to the crew being put on trial for the crimes of their worlds’ pasts;


And more UPN sexual innuendo (and even MORE in VOY "Blood Fever"). Although in VOY "Remember"'s case, there was an interesting fleshing out of the passionate - in EVERYTHING - B'Elanna Torres (and her defense of the woman who gave her those memories)

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and even “Before and After,” which borrowed time-traveling plot elements from excellent TNG episodes such as “Future Imperfect” and “All Good Things…”.


Well yeah. But there were 2 things that happened with that ep - one, it essentially "predicts" (due to the airing sequence of it) the events of VOY "Year of Hell I & II", which Kes never appeared in (the character had left by then). And two - at the conclusion, Kes is a little bit older and sports a new "non-imp" hairstyle. ;-)

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It’s this element of mediocrity that marked a change in the writing from quality to quantity, throwing scripts together just to give the crew something to do.


And certainly the most oft-cited ep of that season that fits your description is VOY "Rise".... Although it's a shame because the sci fi concept of an "orbital tether" as a means for travelling to some station in orbit without needing a ship or rocket, was interesting. But the whole story around this was ugh.

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Heading into the season finale, “Scorpion” not only gave us the Borg, it also gave the Borg something very rarely encountered: an enemy that could wipe them out in an instant. The introduction of Species 8472 made the episode a memorable series climax on par with TNG’s “Best of Both Worlds” in 1990, not to mention the chilling return of the Borg Queen-less Collective.


And of course, we got 7 of 9 - all in a very big splash of UPN and other entertainment media advertising.

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While episodes such as “Before and After” and “Scorpion” paved the way for Jennifer Lien’s much-publicized departure from the series in 1997, it also paved the way for something either VOYAGER or STAR TREK was not necessarily known for: a new crewmember with a penchant for sexiness.


Well, in this case, I wouldn't say the character herself was that. On the contrary, she was very much "Borg". However her presentation was to exude that "sexiness". But only in the "physical" sense, upon the gradual removal of her implants and placing her in a catsuit. ;-) The character was quite abrupt, rude, and callus. And thus like the popular musical "My Fair Lady", Janeway becomes the "Professor Higgins" to 7's "Eliza Doolittle" in trying to guide this "Borg" into a woman - and even more like the play, the 5th season's "Someone to Watch Over Me" (a popular VOY ep amongst EMH/7 of 9 lovers - or I guess they now call them "'shippers"), will take this a step further in a most poignant fashion. ;-)

(but I digress)

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Thus began the “dumbing-down” of STAR TREK as we knew it, sacrificing strong storytelling for sex and rehashed plotlines... but that’s another argument for another time.


Well... that seemed to come to a head in the 7th season. But before then, I thought that Jeri Ryan actually did a good job.

And as a final note, to round out that season - the ep VOY "Blood Fever" actually marks the beginning of the less adverserial relationship between Tom and B'Elanna - ie., his willingness to help - all the way - is what seems to spark an on again, off again relationship that will last for 4 more seasons through a passionate courtship and love affair, a marriage, and eventually a child by the finale. And as another note, the presence of the Vulcan "Vorik" (played by actor Alexander Enberg who is Jeri Taylor's son and guest on TNG "Time's Arrow I & II" and more notably as "Taurik" in VOY "Lower Decks", the character that "Vorik" was sortof patterned after), as an occassional character, marked the rare instances of 2 Vulcans on a Trek who interacted (other than the father/son Sarek/Spock or the teacher/mentor Spock/Valeris in TUC).

Also we got a Ferengi episode via VOY "False Profits", where the crew actually discovers the 2 Ferengi who first appeared in TNG "The Price" who attempted to gain the winning bid access to the Barzan worm hole and who didn't believe Geordi when he told them to get out of there... Thus they were stranded in - ta da! The Delta Quadrant. ;-)

I also thought that VOY "Displaced" was an interesting one, where innocent-looking Humanoid aliens suddenly appear one by one on the ship, followed by the disappearance of 1 VOY crew member for each alien appearing.... Where at the end of the process, the entire crew has been summarily transported to a holoship that is peopled by many other "abducted" species who were similarly transported, each group residing in a different section of the massive ship in their own holographic "Worlds". Meanwhile, the aliens take over their ships and use them for their own purposes.

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