Because I usually skip these episodes, I rewatched them to see if they were as lackluster as I remembered them being the first time through, or if any were actually hidden gems. After all, there's less consensus among fans about what Star Trek: Voyager's best episodes are, compared to Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.
Star Trek: Voyager's "Unforgettable" is an ironically titled episode about a woman named Kellin (Virginia Madsen) seeking refuge from her xenophobic homeworld on the USS Voyager. She's been there before, and even fell in love with Commander Chakotay, but no one remembers Kellin, thanks to the pheromone that makes people forget her species after a matter of hours.
But there are also good things about "Unforgettable", like the heartbreaking, Twilight Zone-style twist at the end, and Madsen's beautifully desperate, believable performance. And "Unforgettable" scores points for cleverly using Star Trek: Voyager's reset button problem to its advantage. It's easy to believe Kellin really was in an earlier episode that I just forgot about.
I judged "Unforgettable" too harshly.
Honestly, I judged "Unforgettable" too harshly. It's a solid character piece for Chakotay that highlights his compassion and kindness, while I—like Lieutenant Tuvok (Tim Russ) and Seven of Nine—was wondering if this was an elaborate scam. It's not a bad Star Trek episode, so I'll be adding it back into my future Star Trek: Voyager rewatches.
Modern Star Trek takes on the body-swap genre in Strange New Worlds season 1, episode 5, "Spock Amok"—but with more hijinks and humor.
That's par for the course for most good body swap stories, so "Vis à Vis" doesn't break any new ground in terms of storytelling. But this episode does help solidify Tom Paris as a character at this point in Star Trek: Voyager's run. We get insights into Paris' daily life as Steth tries to navigate one of Tom's ordinary days.
During "Vis à Vis", Chakotay tells Paris he's proud of how far Tom has come since their Delta Quadrant journey started. B'Elanna Torres (Roxann Dawson) expresses frustration that Tom isn't the best boyfriend (yet). These two conversations show that Star Trek: Voyager characters do actually evolve and change, and Tom Paris may be one who has changed the most.
"Vis à Vis" is a fun little episode that works better than I remember. Sure, the plot is a little derivative, but I like it when Star Trek: Voyager takes time to show us who individual characters really are. If you like Tom Paris, give "Vis à Vis" a chance—but if you're not a fan, you can still skip it.
"Waking Moments" is another Star Trek: Voyager episode where a Delta Quadrant alien species doesn't know what to make of the USS Voyager encroaching on its space. The solution, in this case, is to make the Voyager crew sleep as a protective measure, because these aliens spend their lives sleeping, and don't trust the "waking species" to leave them alone.
There's some humor in the Voyager crew's dreams in the cold open, and a scene where they do figure out the common element in their shared dream that echoes Star Trek: The Next Generation's "Schisms". But "Waking Moments" is neither a Star Trek comedy episode nor sufficiently creepy; instead, the tone is relatively even throughout.
The dreams in "Waking Moments" range from Lieutenant Tuvok reporting for duty sans uniform and Harry Kim (Garrett Wang) making out with Seven of Nine, to Captain Janeway discovering Voyager's crew are all dead.
The resolution to the mystery of who's keeping the crew asleep comes fairly early in the episode, and the solution to the problem is pretty simple. There are no character arcs giving the story emotional weight, and the premise of "Waking Moments" isn't weird enough to be bad in a memorable way, like Voyager's infamous season 2 episode "Threshold".
Instead, "Waking Moments" feels like a cobbled-together take on two better Star Trek: The Next Generation episodes: the aforementioned "Schisms", with the crew's troubling shared dreams, and TNG season 6, episode 21, "Frame of Mind", with a much more viscerally creepy take on questionable realities. I'd recommend watching those instead.
"Nemesis" sees Commander Chakotay being found by a group of alien soldiers, eventually joining in their fight after being radicalized by their personal stories. Chakotay's compassion is his downfall, as he compares the soldiers to Star Trek's Maquis fighting the Cardassians. Framing compassion as something that makes Chakotay easier to manipulate is a weird choice for Star Trek.
The soldiers' unique dialect sounds like it was filtered through multiple translations, with word choices that are just familiar enough to be understood, but odd enough to be unsettling. Using this dialect is supposed to signal that Chakotay is assimilating into the soldiers' culture, as he picks up on the misinformation and stereotypes of their "nemesis".
I see what Star Trek: Voyager's "Nemesis" is trying to say; they even spell it out once Chakotay is back on the USS Voyager. The insidiousness of propaganda is a particularly important message today, when it's harder to filter the signal from the noise on modern social media. I understand all that, and I still think "Nemesis" is boring.
Even though it's an interesting premise with a powerful message, "Nemesis" suffers from its perplexing delivery. The soldiers' jargon is dense and difficult to unravel, and watching "Nemesis" feels like wading through sludge. For Star Trek stories about the complexity of alien languages, try Star Trek: The Next Generation's "Darmok" or Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' "Lost in Translation" instead.
The episode is ostensibly about hypnosis creating false memories, but "Retrospect" risks supporting the idea that victims of assault should keep quiet, because rape accusations — regardless of guilt — ruin men's lives. Yes, Seven's memories are faulty, guided by the Doctor's (Robert Picardo) new recovery technique, but Janeway doesn't know that when she asks Seven to rescind her accusation.
Instead, Seven, who is already a victim of assault after Seven of Nine's history with the Borg, is branded as a difficult woman. Seven is barely liberated and just learning to speak up, before Janeway tries to silence her again. It's out of character for Captain Janeway, who is defined by her support for her crew, and it's off-brand for Star Trek.
It's hard to watch Seven of Nine recall the assault, and harder still to stomach the implication that Seven's accusation actually doomed an innocent man to his death. "Retrospect" is one of the few Star Trek episodes I really can't bear to watch, and I'm going to keep skipping it in my Star Trek: Voyager rewatches.
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