you can't take the sky from me..
Six seasons and a movie... HELL YEAH!
Chakotay: I need to go on a vision quest.
Me: -turns off episode-
I hate the way that whenever Voyager needs to show weird aliens trying to communicate, they just copy DS9's Prophet visions.
It was nice that the actor playing Chakotay's grandfather was the same actor from the TNG episode 'Journey's End'.
this cartoon give to the gays all our rights in the world
"That was instinct, I can't help being a badass. But I am NOT playing."
I just re-watched it, I totally missed the Captain America Elevator reference the first time.
Owen Wilson better still be alive or I riot!
I better see more of "The Butcher and The Baker" or someone owes me a montage of sorrys.
This is the first truly bad episode.
Quite a boring episode but the Dean‘s outfit was hilarious!
Chaotic bisexual "twins" from different universes is exactly the kind of time shenanigans I never knew I needed in my life.
Now THAT is how you write a final episode!
500 Kelvin hot? Did anyone actually bother to do some elementary school math? That is only about 440 Farenheit. My oven gets hotter than that. It's not even hot enough to set paper on fire.
The inconsistent danger of the Y class planet is very annoying, but otherwise a halfway decent concept.
The writers should have been better with DNA vs memory. We have known DNA does not contain any memory in the conventional sense for several decades before this episode was written
I've already forgotten what happened in this one. It's yet ANOTHER episode in which a crew member is accused of a crime and turns out to be innocent (for once, I'd love to see the crew member be guilty.)
My main recollection is being annoyed at the laziness of yet another alien species who look completely human.
Seven seems to be the only sensible crew member, telling Janeway to stop investigating so many damn planets!
Chakotay : Yeah? Well, I've got chronic arthritis in my fingers. I can barely keep this glass steady.
Neelix : Well, that's nothing. My spinal column is fusing together. In a matter of days, I won't be able to walk.
Chakotay : Got you beat! I can barely walk now.
There was a decent episode somewhere in here. But it got lost. This one was quite a stinker. And wow, look at the low budget Predators. Lol.
This is one of the hardest episodes to stomach on a rewatch. The funky dialogue just grates my nerves to the point where I have to stop paying attention lest I go insane. The premise is not bad but the execution is awful.
Roxanne Dawson gives it her all, as always, but can't overcome what is a pretty awful story for her character. The "romance" between her and Tom is finally given an official start, and I'm not sure that anyone was interested. I'm certainly not. They have no chemistry, but more importantly we haven't been given a good enough indication of their feelings towards each other up to this point. They've just hung out and got annoyed with each other once in a while (for what feels like a very long time).
Voyager also meets the most ungrateful alien refugees ever, and Janeway handles them quite poorly. If there's a reason to watch the episode, it's once again Jeri Ryan bringing more depth to the character of Seven than the script would suggest.
Also, I believe this is the first time we've seen a warp core ejection depicted on screen (amazing, the ejection system wasn't offline for the first time in Trek history!), and it's a pretty cool sight.
A strong, emotional ending doesn't quite save the episode. The A-story and B-story are so disconnected from each other that they just work to cancel each other out (also, are we meant to feel that Paris is in the slightest bit of danger?). There is literally a red alert crisis going on and the Doctor is playing with his pretend family.
Also, what's with the weird expression the Klingon youth constantly has on his face?
But damn, that ending. Powerful stuff and yet more proof that Robert Picardo is the heart of this show.
I have been a longtime fan of Grey's Anatomy, that being said over the years with all of the actors leaving the show it has really changed the dynamic of the show in my opinion and that has caused me to not want to keep up with the show as much. I am a person who can't leave a show, movie, or book unfinished because it irritates me. So during this season (12) after the doctor that told Meredith that Derek was brain dead showed up at Meredith's house for dinner I just couldn't continue watching the show, so I took a break in order to allow the overload of emotions that episode gave me to calm down. I have just now returned to start watching it again now that I am 8 episodes behind. So far i'm surprised Meredith is even willing to work with her I know that as adults people are supposed to be able to handle it but that has to be super hard.
half of the people that are in the header are dead or gone please change thank u
Amazing show. I was wondering what the fuss is all about until I started watching it, then I just couldn't stop.
What is the deal with Starfleet officers falling in love after a few days?
This show is streets ahead.
Michel Forbes was in more episodes then I remembered. Her character really had potential. It's an entertaining enough episode but it has the serious logical error: how come they don't fall through the floor, can sit on chairs and in one occasion on the bridge Ro even touches a panel when otherwise they pass through bulkheads, people and furniture. There isn't even much logic about it as to when they move through an object and when they don't. Just writers convienience. One has to be willing to accept certain things in order for a story to work.
The idea of the Romulans having that kind of technology in the future would have meant a power shift of epic proportions. Like with many other stories the nature of the episodic story telling made this disapear without comment.