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Voyager's
Final Episode: Endgame for a series that takes it up the end?
Bozo the Proctologist
takes a look at the last episode of Voyager. And it doth pleaseth
him not!
A genuinely interesting premise who's shoddy execution falls apart
at the end - what could be more appropriate for the "Voyager" finale?
In the words of the Immortal Harry Kim, "It's not the destination;
it's the journey." For seven years and five thousand times more
than that light years the good ship Voyager has been making their
way home, with only the occasional stop for maintenance, shore leave,
warfare, romance, violating the Prime Suggestion, supplies, parties,
conferences, sporting events and sightseeing.
It's been a good run - as long as TNG and DS9 got - but, somehow,
it always seems to leave us wanting.....
We open with newsreel footage of Voyager's return to Earth, to
celebrate the Tenth Anniversary of their arrival (which was 16 years
after we last saw Our Heroes in "Renaissance Man"). There's a party
where we meet our old friends: Admiral Janeway, Captain Kim, Holonovel
author Tom Paris and wife, newlywed Doctor Joe and Cmdr. Barclay.
Conspicuously absent are Chakotay, Seven of Nine and Tuvok- though
we subsequently see Tuvok is still alive, an inmate at a Home For
"Voyager" Screenwriters.
However, the ever-restless Admiral Janeway isn't resting on her
laurels going to parties; she's negotiating with a Klingon for a
technical doohickey. The Klingon inexplicably welches on their deal,
demanding (on top of the political favors Janeway has already done
for him) some new shield tech Janeway has on her shuttle.
Janeway refuses, but then appears to relent- only to steal away
the doohickey from the Klingon.
Captain Kim intercepts Janeway before she can instigate her cunning
plan- but, predictably, backs down before the force of Janeway's
personality.
Fortunately he's still around for his starship to run interference
for Janeway when the Klingons decide to show her how dishonorable
shoplifting is.
But not too much: when Admiral Janeway arrives back in Voyager's
timeline Voyager has to close the rift to prevent a Klingon ship
from following her through. Captain Janeway (normally so
trusting of aliens they've only just met) is distrustful of her
future self- only there's a reason this time: Admiral Janeway
wants Voyager to reverse course and go back to a Borg-infested nebula
Voyager passed three days previously, claiming that it's the way
back home.
Admiral Janeway invites Captain J to have her crew inspect the
shields and weapons on her Bat-shuttle, and to upgrade Voyager to
be able to get through the Borg in the nebula. They are going
to have more trouble than a near-miss on their second attempt, as
the Bored Queen is so desperate for entertainment she's actually
watching the "Voyager" Series Finale and knows about Admiral Janeway's
cunning plan.
During Seven's next regeneration cycle the Queen contacts her using
AIM (AOL Internet Mindmeld) to warn her that the nebula is Borg
territory, and that they'll assimilate Voyager if they come back.
For once Captain Janeway takes the threat of the Borg Collective
seriously and is looking for another way home. Instead of mentioning
her targeted wormhole opener she stole from the Klingons, Admiral
J prevails upon her to take the shortcut for the sake of her crew.
She's going to lose a lot more people over the next 16 years it
will otherwise take to get home - though, significantly less than
she lost in her first seven years - including Seven of Nine, who
will die in her husband's (Chakotay's) arms.
Captain J is as terrified and revolted about the prospect of a
Chak/7 romance as the audience is, and agrees to go back through
the nebula.
This time the Borg do take notice of the one small ship, but the
upgraded Bat-armor Admiral J brought back is shrugging off weapons
and tractor beams from three Battlecubes. Of course, with two Janeways
on the Bridge they have to wait for their armor to be seriously
compromised before crying havoc and unleashing the dogs of war -
in this case, "trans-phasic torpedoes" that can blast a Battlecube
the way Voyager does Trek continuity.
After two cubes get blown to digital bits the third one adapts
to the super torpedoes by running away, and Voyager is left unimpeded
to get to the center of the nebula: A very bright thing with a darker,
spider-web-looking thingy floating nearby.
Seven identifies it as a Transwarp Hub, basically a Borg Grand
Central Station. The Borg have only six of them in the galaxy, but
the system allows them to deliver huge numbers of Battlecubes anywhere
in the galaxy in minutes.
Despite having just fought their way in, and staring right
at a conduit that would take them to within a lightyear of Sol,
Janeway orders the ship back out of the nebula - the long way.
Captain J is furious that her future self withheld information
about the nature of the "wormholes" in the nebula. Admiral J is
adamant that getting Voyager back home safe is the paramount issue,
and that telling Captain J too much would lead her to a suicidally
silly idea ... which is what happens now. While braving throngs
of Battlecubes to get Voyager home was too dangerous, Captain J
decides to go back into the nebula yet again, only this time
to destroy the Transwarp Hub.
While the crew work on means to destroy the Borg Subway system,
the Janeways celebrate the moments of their life by arguing again
over opportunities lost and how the elder Janeway has adopted the
(perfectly natural) trait of allowing youthful idealism to mature
into cynicism.
Seven is pulling back from her relationship with Chakotay for fear
of splinters- oh, okay, she's worried how she'll deal with
the emotional pain if she allows herself to fall in love, and then
loses him.
Captain J confronts Tuvok about a neurological disease which can
only be cured in the Alpha Quadrant (the one that has Tuvok as crazy
as a Trek Continuitist in Admiral J's time), but Tuvok brushes off
his need to get home by quoting the only famous person the planet
has ever produced, Ambassador Spock: "The needs of the many stockholders
at Paramount outweigh the needs of the few Trek fans who still care."
Finally the plan is hatched: The destruction of three treknobabble
manifolds in the transwarp network will crash the whole thing (structural
integrity is irrelevant).
Voyager is planning to have their cake and eat it too (a time-honored
Trek tradition to rescue CO's from ever having to make a really
hard decision) by flying through to Sector 001, and firing a series
of transwarp torpedoes programmed to detonate simultaneously.
Even this cunning plan isn't enough, so Admiral J takes the Bat-shuttle
to Borg HQ, Unimatrix 01, to offer the Bored Queen a deal: let Voyager
get home and she'd tell the Queen how to adapt against the transphasic
torpedoes. While they're dickering the Queen discovers where the
Bat-shuttle is hiding, beams Admiral J aboard and assimilates her.
The Queen and her unimatrix suddenly start falling apart: they've
taken in a treknobabble virus as well as assimilating the kooky
and unstable Woman Of Ten Thousand Personalities, Katherine Janeway.
Her last act before her part of the Unimatrix blows up is to send
an unaffected Sphere to take Voyager.
Said sphere does indeed capture Voyager before exiting the transwarp
network (just as the network is collapsing) at Sector 001, where
a Starfleet Armada gets revenge for Wolf 359 by blasting away at
the ship.
Between the attack without and Voyager firing from within, the
Sphere explodes and Voyager comes sailing out of the debris. We
close on a shot of the armada escorting Voyager to Earth.
A few polyphasic nits made it through the plot:
With
their record for crashes, WHO in the hell ever allowed Voyager to
do aerobatics over a populated city like San Francisco? Wouldn't
that make a hell of a homecoming: returning from the Delta Quadrant
as heroes - only to crash doing stunt-flying over San Fran and killing
millions of civilians in the resulting inferno?
As
easily as Janeway stole the Klingon's time doohickey, the Klingons
must have been taking lessons from Starfleet Security. In the world
of Trek, I wouldn't consider anything "safe" without a treknobabble
field to scramble transporter beams.
And
did this episode need so much padding? Starfleet ships regularly
time-travel, but now of a sudden Admiral Janeway needs that Klingon's
doohickey to do what Starfleet officers have been doing for a hundred
years - at least? Maybe that doohickey was useful to cross
galactic distances as well as time- in which case, wouldn't repairing
it to get Voyager home be just a bit less dangerous than taking
on a few dozen Battlecubes?
Janeway's
Bat-shuttle carries shield tech that can brush off fire from multiple
Borg Battlecubes, and weapons that can destroy a Battlecube with
one torpedo - yet she has to yell to Captain Kim for help
against a couple of Klingon ships?
I
loved Admiral Janeway's line about "The easiest way to deal
with the Temporal Prime Directive is to ignore it!" With her
experience in ignoring Prime Directives.....
Why
would the Borg give an isolinear chip that uses their transwarp
subway system? And if they did care, why wouldn't they have
some kind of code signal needed to open the thing? IIRC, a code
signal was required in TNG's "Descent," which introduced
the Borg transworm warpholes in the first place, but here we see
first the Bat-shuttle and then Voyager just fly into the appropriate
openings and go.
And
with a transwarp system that can put a Borg Battlecube within one
lightyear of Sol, every time they send one it always has to blast
its way in from the hinterlands all the way to Earth?
Destroying
three manifolds will destroy the whole transwarp network? Given
that Species 8472 was blowing away whole planets, how many manifolds
did they ever take out?
Potentially a fascinating idea, this episode suffered from being
produced as a Voyager episode. Janeway's intermittent concern for
her crew's safety just didn't jibe with what we've seen for the
past seven years, the relationship between Seven and Chakotay was
sabotaged by Beltran's conviction that he's "above" stooping to
actually act in a sci fi show, and the plodding pace in the beginning
contrasted badly with the rushed, sudden arrival home in the end.
I would have liked to have seen them get home in the penultimate
episode, and the finale deal with the aftermath (Janeway's explaining
away her Prime Suggestion violations, the Maquis Question, Paris
and his father) and giving more closure than just fading to black
with Voyager approaching Earth..... but then, what we'd want
from this series will be argued even after "Enterprise" takes "Voyager's"
place on UPN.
A decent enough episode - but for the finale, we fans (if not the
Voyager crew) deserved better.
He-Who-Will-Be-Around-In-The-Fall
(c) Bozo the Proctologist
Starfleet has a special section where they assign officers with
absolutely no will to survive: Security.
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