I believe Voyager was shrunk to molecular size once, bombarded by particles.
Or was that the Defiant on DS9?
I believe Voyager was shrunk to molecular size once, bombarded by particles.
No, Q sent them back to the Big Bang in the same episode.I believe Voyager was shrunk to molecular size once, bombarded by particles.
Or was that the Defiant on DS9?
Plotholes are part of the scriptI really think deleting that was a big mistake, they created a bit of a plothole without it.
Plotholes are part of the script
As for why the Klingons didn't raid the Narada and take it apart: Maybe it had self-defense mechanisms.
No, it was Voyager. I remember Kim commenting that they were bombarded by protons (You have to be incredibly small to see protons coming at you!!!) It's Q that reduced them to that size.
Or maybe he cloaked it with futuristic cloaking technology that made it impossible for a Klingon ship to detect it.We have to assume Nero turned everything off and locked it down, So the Klingon would be able to physically examine everything but couldn't turn anything on, unable to hack through 24th century security measures. Eventually they would lose interest. The real question is why it was brought into orbit of Rura Penthe in the first place. Surely the Klingons would have towed it to an R&D outpost. Although, since the scenes are deleted, maybe it was too big for them to tow, and Nero hijacked a different ship and went back to the Narada which was still drifting in the same area of space.
There are many, but one that I've been thinking about:
When a show does time travel to a bad alternate future that you know is going to get reversed at the end of the episode/season. It is never compelling, and is always a waste of time. The only exception is shows directly made to make this work from their very premise (like Doctor Who), and only do it for a single episode or a specific story like Days of Future Past.
As yet, no TV show has done a very special time travel episode - only to turn the situation on its head and there is no reset button or return to normality. .
They did. And it was all Gaius Baltar's fault.Didn't EUREKA do something like that? Where they seriously changed the status quo (oops!) and then stuck with the altered timeline.
There was one where a runabout was shrunk ("One Little Ship"), but I don't remember the Defiant being shrunk.Ah, I remember the DS9 episode where Defiant was shrunk. Forgot about that bit from Voyager.
There was one where a runabout was shrunk ("One Little Ship"), but I don't remember the Defiant being shrunk.
As yet, no TV show has done a very special time travel episode - only to turn the situation on its head and there is no reset button or return to normality...
Didn't EUREKA do something like that? Where they seriously changed the status quo (oops!) and then stuck with the altered timeline.
They did. And it was all Gaius Baltar's fault.
The alternate time line episode where no one makes it out alive. They all meet some demise at the conclusion of the episode
TNG-Yesterday’s enterprise
Enterprise- twilight
Voyager- Year of hell
Stargate SG-1 “2001”
No writer has found a solution to end the episode differently
I thought TNG was especially egregious with that one, every time there was an "alternate timeline" everyone dies!
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.