I wonder how Voyager would have continued had they not that "TNG was 7 seasons, so all other shows have only 7 seasons" thing.
I think if there had to be more continuity in VOY, it should have been done in a similar fashion as BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER where each season has a unique story arc.
I wonder how Voyager would have continued had they not that "TNG was 7 seasons, so all other shows have only 7 seasons" thing.
To narrow it down, this is probably how I would have approached each season:
S1: Kazon
S2: Vidiians
S3: Hirogen
S4: Borg
S5: Krenim (Year of Hell)
S6: Malon
S7: A new antagonist.
But you do understand I just said that you believe that Voyager is a 200 pert story and you just proved that? And I believe in most of the continuity that you found, but I don't think it's good enough or enough to be compared to Buffy or Babylon 5 or Battlestar Galactia where 90 percent of the episodes seemed seemless like between Scorpion and the gift, or between Day of Honor and Revulsion.
I have never once compared Voyager to the shows you just mentioned.
Every time I've brought up anything else in relation to Voyager, the term I've used is 'serialized procedural', which is the genre into which shows like Bones, The Mentalist, the new Hawaii 5-0, Elementary, the CSIs, and a plethora of other similar shows fall.
Voyager takes that formula and applies it to Star Trek and Science Fiction. Enterprise does as well, but it does it in a different fashion than Voyager did.
One argument that I have made and tried to demonstrate is that there's not quite as much 'episodic flexibility' as the producers intended there to be simply because of the show's nature as a 'serialized procedural'.
Voyager isn't something you have to be religiously watching in order to avoid being lost, but there IS a 'proper' order in which to watch the show in order to get the very most out of it, just as there is with the other 'serialized procedural' series I mentioned.
To narrow it down, this is probably how I would have approached each season:
S1: Kazon
S2: Vidiians
S3: Hirogen
S4: Borg
S5: Krenim (Year of Hell)
S6: Malon
S7: A new antagonist.
I like this idea, although I would have been royally pissed if we had an entire season "Year of Hell," which turned out to be a total reset at the end of the season. Without reset, perhaps killing off a major character (or having them in a coma for a few episodes, or something), plus a badly damaged USS Voyager (that still looks in bad shape) with depleted supplies at the beginning of the next season? Now that would have been awesome.
I just finished "In the Flesh" toward the beginning of S5. Species 90210 (or whatever they're called) was shaping up to be a Dominion-like foe, at least until the end of this episode. I think if they kept the species more mysterious and made them the S7 antagonist, perhaps also popping up here and there in prior seasons, that would have been possibly interesting. Then perhaps at the end they could figure out a way to use fluid space to gush their way back to the alpha quadrant without turning into lizards.
But as others have said it's not that VOY didn't have any serialisation is just that it should have been more heavily serialised. VOY differs from the other Trek shows (well at least the ones that preceeded it) by having a distictive goal. To get home. So each episode is a sense is a chapter in a book telling that story. If when reading a book you are told something in chapter 3 (episode 3)then when watching chapter 101(episode 101), you expect it to remain consistant with chapter 3 (episode 3) unless you are told why something has changed.
A fair few of VOY critisims could have been avoid by a line or two of dialouge, background extras repairing parts of the ship etc.. Give us a sense that without access to a starfleet repair yard they are struggling to keep the ship in top spec, it nearly always just seemed too easy, a seemingly endless supply of shuttlecraft, the crew number flucturating up and down from one episode to the next. Didn't they think they had killed Carey off before brining him back (just to kill him). It's all these little details that detract from the show. Sometimes the little details are important.
Characters (at least) giving the perception that they are flip-flopping from upholding the regs to screw the regs. Upholding your principals sometimes makes thinks harder for yourself. My view is pick one and run with it but be consistant, if you want to change have something meaningul happen to the character to cause the change.
VOY did have some great episodes, but it had far more average episdoes. Sure the FX is good, but good FX cannot replace a so-so story. Conversely a good stroy can overcome bad FX. It's almost as if it was playing it safe, sure the network might want TNG 2.0 (or in some regards TOS 3.0), but VOY unlike TNG was competeting against other genre shows.
Now as I said VOY wasn't all bad, but for this viewer it could have been so much more. For those that enjoyed it for what it was, great for you. We all have different tastes, and sometimes what we've watched before can impact on what we expect from a show, for someone who thinks this story line is recycled from X, Y and Z show, to someone else it might be something more fresh. After all VOY might be many's first introduction to ST whilst for others their second or third.
I do like the idea of Chakotay being a captain, he was so underdeveloped over the whole series that a change like that might have helped him step up, making Tuvok the first officer.
Funny thing, I just finished "In the Flesh" last night as well. I'm not sure how 8472 would have worked if they kept them as antagonists. It was very expensive back in the 90s to pull that off
The series really would've been more interesting if they had to settle down somewhere because the ship was too damaged. Build a home, establish relationships with the locals, even tenatively start building a "new Federation." That kind of stuff would've been interesting than "will they get home?" when you know the answer is always "NOOOO!!!"![]()
But if they land on a planet and just stay there, that's not "Star Trek!"
The series really would've been more interesting if they had to settle down somewhere because the ship was too damaged. Build a home, establish relationships with the locals, even tenatively start building a "new Federation." That kind of stuff would've been interesting than "will they get home?" when you know the answer is always "NOOOO!!!"![]()
Never watched either actually.
But you saw what happened when they tried that one Battlestar Galactica or Star Gate Universe... The other shoe dropped.
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