I will give "FURY" credit for one thing... it actually explained why Wildman was pregnant for almost a year and a half.
"Fury". I understand people reacting negatively to Old Kes guess being the Bad Guy and trying to sabotage Voyager to help get Young Kes back home. But I also understand Old Kes feeling alone, upset, like she's lost her way, and that she doesn't belong anymore. All a recipe for anti-social behavior; and someone with nothing left to lose will go to any extreme. Then, in the end, Janeway gets through to Old Kes and she decides to return to Ocampa.
I think the reaction to "Fury" was more about Old Kes lashing out and Kes' story ending with her going back to Ocampa. I can understand both of those story elements so, while it's not what I would've done, I can't say I had a problem with it.
Everything else in the episode feels like Voyager as usual. The highlight was Janeway wishing Tuvok a happy birthday.
So, I can say -- Controversial Opinion -- that I don't think "Fury" is a bad episode. Like with everything, the Internet blew it up out of proportion.
"The Disease" isn't so lucky. I can still say I think that's a piece-of-shit episode. It makes Kim look like he's in high school and it contradicts so much of what we've seen in Star Trek before and since. How many times has Kirk had a romantic or sexual encounter of the week with an alien? Rhetorical question, don't answer that.
I never understood this argument. Main characters get no promise of a happy ending.But contrary to Star Wars, where it felt just cruel to do that to the main hero of the story - I think for an ensemble it works very well if not everyone gets a happy ending.
I never understood this argument. Main characters get no promise of a happy ending.
Same. Heinlein did this quite well.I prefer when they have no ending, when it is just left to the consumers imagination.
I didn't and don't post in the VOY Forum, but that's the general sense I've always gotten from here.I didn't know this was a controversial opinion - it apparently is - but I liked "Fury" a lot!
...
"The Disease" isn't so lucky. I can still say I think that's a piece-of-shit episode. It makes Kim look like he's in high school and it contradicts so much of what we've seen in Star Trek before and since. How many times has Kirk had a romantic or sexual encounter of the week with an alien? Rhetorical question, don't answer that.
Yeah, that was stupid.When it comes to the matter of having "intimate contact with an alien species without medical clearance" from The Disease, at least VOY itself showed some attention to its own internal continuity with this later on in "Prophecy" when the Doctor issued that exact clearance to Harry to deal with his Klingon "problem." Though of course that was just a throwaway joke for the audience to laugh at. And rather silly, since Klingons were allies that closely worked with the Federation all the time and their species was completely familiar to Starfleet medical science, so authorization shouldn't have been needed at all.
Kor
The night after, actually, but that's splitting hairs. It was okay. But the main kicker I got was comparing Voyager's very-early-25th Century to Picard's.And tonight, I'll put on "Endgame" again now that I've reached it. No comment until later.
I think "COURSE: OBLIVION" was a really, really good one.
I agree.
Very depressing, but it's a good story.
Not all stories have a cheerful ending.
Yeah, quite a few had endings that were not exactly happy...
If City on the Edge of Forever had been the finale of a 10 year project it probably would have been different, yes.Had City on the Edge of Forever been written in Endgame style, Kirk would've found a way to save the woman he had fallen in love with and save human history as well, that's for sure.
Indeed.Indeed. In fact, a lot of TOS episodes didn't have a happy ending.
Indeed.
The "happily ever after " aspects really need to be let go. Trek didn't always do such endings.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.