I agree with this. Voyager had the best premise in my opinion which was closer to Gene's vision. They were on their own truly exploring the unknown
"Genes vision". ....how I hate that phrase.
He never had a vision except money and sex.
I agree with this. Voyager had the best premise in my opinion which was closer to Gene's vision. They were on their own truly exploring the unknown
Seriously. I would have been panicking, lol. "What the heck happened to my life??" Scared out of my mind... Harry handled it fine ;P
He behaved like an idiot. The first thing to do would have been to check on Voyager, for all we know they were closer to home without him than with him. Just because you're in an alternate reality (assuming that even makes sense.) doesn't mean that things are worse off. It's neurotic of him to automatically assume the latter without anything to back it up. Second HIS life was much better, why would he want to go back to one where he most likely will never see the earth ever again, and where he could be dead next year or sooner.
Just as I said there is nothing altruistic in Harry's decision to screw up his new life. It's just plainly neurotic.
He behaved like an idiot. The first thing to do would have been to check on Voyager, for all we know they were closer to home without him than with him. Just because you're in an alternate reality (assuming that even makes sense.) doesn't mean that things are worse off. It's neurotic of him to automatically assume the latter without anything to back it up. Second HIS life was much better, why would he want to go back to one where he most likely will never see the earth ever again, and where he could be dead next year or sooner.
Just as I said there is nothing altruistic in Harry's decision to screw up his new life. It's just plainly neurotic.
Let me modify my statement- emotionally, he handled it fine. I don't necessarily agree with his choices, I don't remember thinking he made the right ones when I watched it. But he wasn't totally freaking out like I would have.
I think I need to rewatch the episode =/I've never been in that situation of course but I have once or twice found myself in weird situations, because friends of mine had played a practical joke on me and I didn't freak out, what I did was pretend that things were normal while I was thinking things through. People still thought that funny though mostly because of my indecision. That's what practical jokes are for.
There was no need to become a criminal like Harry did very fast. I mean the reasonable thing to do is to act normal so in the case you are delusional people don't put you in jail or in a madhouse.
Stuck far from home, the troubles of having few resources and no back-up, greater potential for character drama than TNG, unlimited supply of new worlds and species...what a crappy premise.
Why would the crew be incompentent if they couldn't replace torpedeos? If you can't replace something you can't replace something it's not a matter of compentenace or lack thereof.
And no you don't need to come up with excuses for why a recurring charcter doesn't appear in an episode. If you look at TNG O'Brien clocked up something like 50 appearences before he moved over to DSN, you don't really here critisims of why he wasn't in certain episodes. So no you don't have to include them in stories when you don't want to. You simply reuse them when the story calls for it instead of say indrocuing yet another new character
In the case of Farscape and Dark Matter just about the only people on those ships are the main characters i.e those ships don't have other crew.
I agree with this. Voyager had the best premise in my opinion which was closer to Gene's vision. They were on their own truly exploring the unknown
There's a middle ground in terms of both length and intensity of the conflict,
In DS9, Odo and Kira were in a tense relationship with Sisko for the first season. After that, they became his trusted allies and friends with very little conflict between them after that. Did anyone complain? No.
With Voyager, apparently the conflict could never end until the series finale (and maybe not even then).
T
The ENT-D was a lot bigger than VOY, it made sense there we couldn't see everyone.
It's a matter of incompetence if it's a very basic resource that's not hard to make/harness.
Isn't the reverse of that VOY is a small ship so it's more likely we would see the same recurring faces?
But the point of the line was to make them something they had to be careful about using, the writers took the lazy route in addressing the issue, instead of spending a few seconds at the end of a Log entry saying something like "Engineering reports they have found away to replenish our photon torpedeos." they simply ignored it and hoped the audiance wouldn't call them out on it.
But they could have done more to show things like damage repair with a progression of dimisnishing damage over the course of a few episodes. Instead of it looking virtually brand new every episode. We as viewers all bring our expectations to a show any show, when those aren't met we can start to see what we percieve as flaws in a show rightly or wrongly.
This is a part of an interview that Ron Moor did :
And I can't help but agree with him, they never really sold the premise that these people might never see home again.
How would he have checked on Voyager from the Alpha Quadrant?He behaved like an idiot. The first thing to do would have been to check on Voyager, for all we know they were closer to home without him than with him. Just because you're in an alternate reality (assuming that even makes sense.) doesn't mean that things are worse off. It's neurotic of him to automatically assume the latter without anything to back it up. Second HIS life was much better, why would he want to go back to one where he most likely will never see the earth ever again, and where he could be dead next year or sooner.
Just as I said there is nothing altruistic in Harry's decision to screw up his new life. It's just plainly neurotic.
How would he have checked on Voyager from the Alpha Quadrant?
I don't remember hearing many complaints that the main cast of DSN wasn't getting enough screen time. Yet they managaed not only to develop their main cast but a fair few secondaries
Which is worse from a stroytelling point writing yourself out of a corner you wrote yourself into or ignoring the corner you wrote yourself into as if it had never occured. Whilst both may not be ideal the former at least treats your audiance with some degree of intelligence whilst the later does not.
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