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Why is the Trek community so negative about Voyager?

First Contact and Voyager did awful things to the Borg....just Awful. The Borg used to be an inevitability and a powerful Force

TNG made the Borg too powerful, there wasn't anywhere to go but down from where they were if they were going to keep using them. They should have either killed them all after BOBW, or had them all killed in "Scorpion" (taking the 8472 all with them, wiping both out and neatly wrapping everything up in a totally final way).



Oh I don't agree with that at all.
They put the Borg far enough away to not be a factor if they never wanted to use them again.

Notice how TNG dealt with them...Descent, Qwho and I Borg....always dealing with one or a segment, a scout ship a rogue ship. The story line dictated that strength on a one on one basis.

Voyager and First Contact tackled the borg on a stupendously large scale. That wasn't very realistic for the sole hero arc of Trek.

TNG did it right.
 
VOY didn't much choice, seeing how they were in the Borg's backyard. It wouldn't have made any sense for them to just run into one ship at a time anyways. If they didn't want to run into the Borg, then they should've just said that the Borg weren't from our galaxy at all or something.

And FC only had them fight two Borg ships. One of which was pathetically weak, basically an escape pod.

It was a bad idea to make the Borg so strong to begin with.
 
Early voyager showed amazing promise despite Berman's "we're all one Starfleet crew" edict in Caretaker. The very next ep they showed that it was NOT going to be that easy. I just wish they'd maintained that momentum, and not had to resort to Seven of (Sixty-)Nine and bollixing up the Borg.

Michael Piller was interviewed a few years before his death, and he stated that the people above he and Berman (i.e. Paramount bigwigs) gave the order for the crew to get along post "Caretaker". IIRC, he added that this was one of the core reasons why he left "Voyager" and as a regular creative contributor to the franchise.

I think Trek fans sometimes have the false belief that Berman operated in impunity with Trek, and that he answered to noone. The truth is is that Berman had people who he had to answer to.
 
B5 was better plotted, better written and generally better acted than Voyager.

I wouldn't go that far. While I do believe that B5 is the overall superior show, VOY hands down wins in the acting department.

Speaking of actors, the casting was massively impressive vis a vis the primary cast (esp Jurassik and Katsulas, with honorable mentions to Doyle and Furlan). The secondary cast was also good (esp Furst , Mumy and Biggs), if on occasion underwritten compared to the primaries.

Some of the cast were indeed excellent - Jurassik and Katsulas. Some were pretty good - Doyle, Furlan, Mumy, and Tallman.

But the majority of the main cast were freaking AWFUL - Boxleitner, Adams, Conaway, Monaghan, O'Hare, Thompson, Scoggins and especially Christian.

I'll gladly take the acting talents of anybody on VOY over those eight.

If it wasn't for the characters like Londo & G'Kar, I'd have found the whole thing a waste.

There were other worthwhile characters like Delenn, Marcus, and Lennier.

The problem was that they were outnumbered by bad actors. VOY, on the other hand, had everyone fairly well balanced in terms of acting abilities.

A lot of the rest of the dialog really belongs in a book and not TV because it just doesn't translate that well. Ivanova's "I am your death" speech was ESPECIALLY painful. I'm surprised the Earth Captain didn't open fire on her halfway through!

But God sent her. :barf:

Seriously, I hated that character.
 
If it wasn't for the characters like Londo & G'Kar, I'd have found the whole thing a waste.

There were other worthwhile characters like Delenn, Marcus, and Lennier.

The problem was that they were outnumbered by bad actors.
I like Mira Furlen, I think she proved her skills as an actress on LOST. However, I found Delenn a huge disappointment as the series played out. All she ended up being was Sheridians concubine. I was even expecting him to make her walk 3 feet behind him anywhere they went.

Marcus was ok but cliche.
I kept expecting him to pull out a deck of cards and charge them with kenetic energy.

Lennier & Vir were awesome, so I agree with that.

B5's with me was like Voy. were they underwrote characters, however I found B5 was way worse. B5 didn't just underwrite for them but forgot about them completely. They had characters in the opening credits that you saw only once a season and then never again. It's a good thing Robert Beltran didn't work on that show, he might have burned down the set.:lol:


...and the Shadows & Vorlons being like children.:wtf:
Seriously??
 
B5's with me was like Voy. were they underwrote characters, however I found B5 was way worse. B5 didn't just underwrite for them but forgot about them completely. They had characters in the opening credits that you saw only once a season and then never again. It's a good thing Robert Beltran didn't work on that show, he might have burned down the set.:lol:
That was partly due to the show having such a low budget, there was a core group of characters contracted for all 22 episodes per season (Sheridan, Ivanova, Garibaldi and Delenn) while most were on 13 episode contracts. JMS had to plan at the start of each season which characters would appear in which episodes, he couldn't waste the likes of Lennier and Franklin in superfluous roles if he needed them for an important arc episode later in the season. As a result, there's only one episode in the whole show where the entire main cast (as listed in the openeing credits) appears.

There was only one situation where a main cast-member only appeared in two episodes, and that was Na'Toth in season 2. The original actress left, he didn't like the new actress, so the character was pretty much dropped even though she appeared in the title sequence.


EDIT: Regardless, JMS did more with characters like Lyta and Franklin than Voyager's writers did with characters like Harry and Chakotay, even though they had less screen-time. Just look at Vir, a character I absolutely loathed at the start of B5, I was shocked to realise in season 4 that I really liked the guy because of how well his character was developed. Compared to Harry Kim, Vir is a masterpiece of character-development, and it doesn't matter that he only appeared in 60% of the episodes because most of his appearances were used wisely.
 
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It helps that Vir was a very sympathetic character to begin with, despite being a sort of bumbler, was played by an actor who was easy to like, and Londo became more militant and aggressive/darker as the show went on so it was easier to see Vir's goodness compared to Mr "Deal with the Devil". Plus being the aide to a major ambassador of a major Empire involved in the show is a good part to play.

Kim, on the other hand, was just some random ensign played by a substandard actor who really didn't have much of a role in the crew to begin with. He should have been a recurring character, not a central.
 
B5's with me was like Voy. were they underwrote characters, however I found B5 was way worse. B5 didn't just underwrite for them but forgot about them completely. They had characters in the opening credits that you saw only once a season and then never again. It's a good thing Robert Beltran didn't work on that show, he might have burned down the set.:lol:
That was partly due to the show having such a low budget, there was a core group of characters contracted for all 22 episodes per season (Sheridan, Ivanova, Garibaldi and Delenn) while most were on 13 episode contracts. JMS had to plan at the start of each season which characters would appear in which episodes, he couldn't waste the likes of Lennier and Franklin in superfluous roles if he needed them for an important arc episode later in the season. As a result, there's only one episode in the whole show where the entire main cast (as listed in the openeing credits) appears.

There was only one situation where a main cast-member only appeared in two episodes, and that was Na'Toth in season 2. The original actress left, he didn't like the new actress, so the character was pretty much dropped even though she appeared in the title sequence.


EDIT: Regardless, JMS did more with characters like Lyta and Franklin than Voyager's writers did with characters like Harry and Chakotay, even though they had less screen-time. Just look at Vir, a character I absolutely loathed at the start of B5, I was shocked to realise in season 4 that I really liked the guy because of how well his character was developed. Compared to Harry Kim, Vir is a masterpiece of character-development, and it doesn't matter that he only appeared in 60% of the episodes because most of his appearances were used wisely.
It still doesn't make me like the show any better.
 
My aim was not to change your opinion, but to explain why things were so.

Personally, I don't think that a character needs to be on screen every week to be a good character, my favourite character in Star Trek only appeared in 33 episodes; Garak. And I've said in the past that one of the best character-arcs in the franchise is Nog's, but he was only in around a quarter of the episodes. What I don't like is when main characters appear in an episode, have a line or two, and then cash their pay-check, because you can sometimes see the writer pulling the strings in getting the character into the episode. The worst case of this I've come across is Mandy Hampton on The West Wing, a character that Aaron Sorkin clearly had no interest in writing for, but he kept having to find ways to include her in episodes because she was in the titles. Luckily, she was excised from the show in the second season (although I do wish that there had been an explanation as to where she went, as it is she just disappeared).
 
^The writers said it was constrained by GR's unrealistic notions of "enlightened" humanity.
I know that. It doesn't change the fact that comments like "straight jacket" and "stiff as a board" are pure exaggeration. What you're expecting of the characters is far more unrealistic. Technological and social development may not be linked, but they are both real. To say that people will think and act the same in the 24th century is as ignorant as saying there won't be any technological development either.


People like Behr and Moore and Piller who rant about flawed people really come off like ignorant bigots.
Uh huh... and people like stj who rant about DS9 come off as missing the point. But let's not get into that here.
 
I wouldn't put Piller into the "ignorant" box, Moore and Behr maybe but not Piller. It was HIS deliberate choice that they go for a more diplomatic approach instead of the swashbuckling adventurer method.
 
This thread is something else.
:lol:
I like this thread, but for it to become legendary we need to create a Captain Robau style mascot for it. I nominate we use Lt Ayala:

Lt Ayala is so badass that he doesn't need to speak, he communicates through facial expressions, and he only has two facial expressions; badass and harder badass.
I agree. It needs a mascot. How about this.
purpleav.jpg
 
i think the main reason is Brannon Braga. other than him many love and loved Voyager even my friends who doesn't know Star Trek. just like
me, they started to appreciate and love Star Trek because of Voyager.
 
Braga doesn't even deserve most of the flak he gets. He was only a showrunner on VOY for 2 seasons.
 
But the majority of the main cast were freaking AWFUL - Boxleitner, Adams, Conaway, Monaghan, O'Hare, Thompson, Scoggins and especially Christian.

Adams and Monaghan were bit players at most, hardly "main cast".

Conaway was fun. He was just your general easygoing, everyday guy who had the "fortune" to work in a place where the extraordinary was a daily occurance, and the environment was anyting but easygoing.

Thompson (I'm assuming you mean Andrea [Talia Winters]) did a lot to bring warmth and empathy to a character who is all about control control control (like most Psi Corps members). Her story arc about bridging the gap with Susan over their differences about the Corps was well developed, which made what happened to Talia in the end all the more tragic.

Never have understood the Boxlightner hate. Sherridan is a great character and a great Captain. He's Kirk without the overabundance of swagger and without the "fooling around" factor.

Same with Christian. Everybody wants to take "I am death..." and toss the entire character on the scrap heap because of it. I just got done rewatching S2, where we get the big reveal as to exactly why she feels so passionately about Psi Corp. Great stuff. Later, when she mourns Marcus, more great stuff. Her arc with Talia likewise. Furthermore, her Russian/long-suffering Jew stoicism was a nice ethnic touch that JMS points out in one of his commentaries just isn't a common portrayal in much drama, let alone sci-fi.

O'hare the actor is good, but the low key nature of Sinclair means he's going to look stiff and bad compared to the much more colorful characters all around him.

Scoggins is the weakest of the bunch, but she was at a minimum good pretty much all of the time.

If it wasn't for the characters like Londo & G'Kar, I'd have found the whole thing a waste.

There were other worthwhile characters like Delenn, Marcus, and Lennier.

Vir, Franklin, Lyta need to go on that list as well.

And that's aside from the raft of bit characters and occasional show ups like Neroon who are always fun to watch.

The problem was that they were outnumbered by bad actors. VOY, on the other hand, had everyone fairly well balanced in terms of acting abilities.

Voyager had three stand-out actors: Russ, PIcardo and Mulgrew. (My problems with the Doctor [later seasons] and Janeway are writing based, not acting based.)

Beltran and Biggs-Dawson were OK (though I never really bought B-D as a "genuine" Klingon...she's just too girly and soft).

The rest of the primary cast was mostly adequate, but no more than that.

Hardly a "balanced mix".

A lot of the rest of the dialog really belongs in a book and not TV because it just doesn't translate that well. Ivanova's "I am your death" speech was ESPECIALLY painful. I'm surprised the Earth Captain didn't open fire on her halfway through!

But God sent her. :barf:

Seriously, I hated that character.
[/QUOTE]

ONE bad speech does not a shitty character make. (see above)
 
Neither would I . B5 was a hack show written by a hack writer.

Factual basis for this?

B5 won multiple Hugo awards, frequently beating out Trek episodes to do so. You don't get the Hugo by being "hack".

and Hugos weren't the only awards B5 won either

http://www.isnnews.net/babylon5/info/b5awards.shtml

Here's the best list I could find quickly on Voyager's awards:

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0112178/awards

Most of them are technical awards (music, editing, costuming, etc), most of the rest are best supporting actor/actress types. VERY few "best show" or "best story" noms, let alone nods.

Caveat: this list doesn't include the Hugos.
 
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Kim, on the other hand, was just some random ensign played by a substandard actor who really didn't have much of a role in the crew to begin with. He should have been a recurring character, not a central.

What he SHOULD have been was developed. The "episodic mandate" killed off any chance for him to be anything more than the "wet behind the ears ensign". I esp liked him in Caretaker, and clearly saw them setting him up for the "rookie officer gets seasoned" story arc, but that damned mandate cut it off at the knees, reducing him to the status of bit player akin to TOS Uhura.
 
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