Star Trek: Voyager Season 3: Difference between revisions
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324: '''Displaced''' ''[[1997]] [[May 7]]'' | 324: '''Displaced''' ''[[1997]] [[May 7]]'' | ||
(First watched 2007-01-09) Standard non-crap, non-awesome. | |||
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Revision as of 02:46, 10 January 2007
SPOILERS TOTAL. You've been warned.
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301: Basics, Part II 1996 September 4
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302: Flashback 1996 September 11
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303: The Chute 1996 September 18
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304: The Swarm 1996 September 25
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305: False Profits 1996 October 2
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307: Sacred Ground 1996 October 30
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308: Future's End, Part I 1996 November 6
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309: Future's End, Part II 1996 November 13
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310: Warlord 1996 November 20
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311: The Q and the Grey 1996 November 27
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312: Macrocosm 1996 December 11
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313: Fair Trade 1997 January 8
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314: Alter Ego 1997 January 15
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315: Coda 1997 January 29
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316: Blood Fever 1997 February 5
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317: Unity 1997 February 12
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318: Darkling 1997 February 19
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319: Rise 1997 February 26
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320: Favorite Son 1997 March 19
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321: Before and After 1997 April 9
(First watched 2007-01-05) From her deathpoint with near-total memory loss, Kes keeps getting sent earlier in time, and must learn things backward and try to make progress with earlier and earlier forms of the crew. Really a great episode. It only falls apart a bit at the end, with her regressing to a point at least as far back as conception before somehow the treatment in the series' present catches up. Then the explanation that she's regained her memories so she can go on with her life as normal... but she's really the remnant of a future Kes. Why only fully regain the memories up to this point? Reconnecting with the physical memories in the brain in that time period's version of Kes?
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(First watched 2007-01-06) Two really good episodes in a row? Is this Voyager? The Doctor is consistently the best thing about the series, so this episode focused on him was enjoyable. He tries to simulate family life on the holodeck; at first with a too-perfect family, and then with a more randomized family that parodies usual family troubles with a Star Trek twist: not only is his son rebelling and taking on "undesirable" traits due to his friends, but they're Klingons and he wants to be a warrior. His reactions to his daughter's accident are quite sad, and grow him as a character. The B-story with the sub-space eddies is almost pointless, except that it gives the Doctor a chance to push his own story forward by getting pissy with Paris.
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323: Distant Origin 1997 April 30
(First watched 2007-01-07) This one is pretty good, too, but has a bit too much of the Voyager Crap. Interesting to have a big chunk of the episode not from Voyager's point of view. The scientists' lost battle was nice; too often on Star Trek we see things turn out perfectly. However, the very theory being argued over, while a cool idea... well, Voyager may be 70,000 light years from home, but they just CAN'T seem to avoid running into direct connections to the Alpha Quadrant and more specifically Earth, so points are lost. Having the Holodeck speculate on likely evolutions of creatures through millions of years in the blink of an eye with few guidelines given: crap. Not quite as crap as season 2's Threshold's take on evolution, but still crap.
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(First watched 2007-01-09) Standard non-crap, non-awesome.
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325: Worst Case Scenario 1997 May 14
(First watched 2007-01-08) Started off pretty interesting, with the crew treating the mysterious holoprogram like a group of gamers might a very freeform adventure game. However, it then became a standard "stuck in a dangerous program with the safeties off" affair.
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326: Scorpion, Part I 1997 May 21
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