I said I would, and now I have.
Fury
Elderly Kes transwarps her little shuttle all the way from Ocampa to USS Voyager about 35kly away, boards it by crashing, touches the warp core and uses it to transport herself six years back in time... as well as 35kly back the other way in space again. She then disguises her old self as her young self while sedating her actual young self, and concocts a plan to betray the ship to the Vidiians to allow her young self to be transported back to Ocampa.
What the hell?!
How does Kes find Voyager again? How does touching the warp core send her back in time and space? How does she control that? If she still has the ability to hyperwarp that distance at will, why after coming to her senses does she not give the ship another push the rest of the way to Earth? Why doesn't she go all the way back to Caretaker and stop her young self ever leaving in the first place. Why doesn't she meet up with either of the Nacene to help hone her abilities and slow her ageing? Also, since when can you not change direction at warp speed?
Not only does this episode trash a beloved character, it doesn't make any sense!
Latent Image
The Doctor has a repressed memory of Ensign Ahni Jetal, whom he allowed to while keeping Harry Kim alive, seemingly just because the latter was closer to him socially. It's a fascinating character study, but there's one niggling flaw:
Was it really necessary for Jetal to be unpersoned entirely? This entails not just erasing the EMH's memory, but also removing any trace of her from the ship's logs and forbidding mention of her by the rest of the crew. Given that the crux of the Doctor's madness was the equality of injury between Jetal and Kim, it would have been much simpler to say that Jetal was actually injured worse (perhaps shot twice instead of once, or standing closer to the gun?). It could even have been argued that Kim took priority because he was a bridge officer and therefore had priority over a lower deck grunt. Janeway's solution strikes me as greatly excessive.
Maneuvers
This one doesn't come down to any single specific flaw so much as death by a thousand small cuts. Seska gets through Voyager's shields because she remembers their access codes - didn't the remaining officers think to change the passwords in the months since she fled? Two Kazon infiltrators steal transporter parts - how does stealing parts from one transporter break all the others on the ship (including shuttles), and how do they beam themselves away after they've sabotaged the system? At the end Janeway successfully kidnaps a group of Kazon Majes and trades them for Chakotay, but doesn't think to ask for Seska's custody as well. There are probably a few others I've forgotten but basically the whole episode is a long chain of "because the plot demanded it" contrivances.
Do you have any suggestions? They don't all have to be from VOY, or even Star Trek as a whole.
Fury
Elderly Kes transwarps her little shuttle all the way from Ocampa to USS Voyager about 35kly away, boards it by crashing, touches the warp core and uses it to transport herself six years back in time... as well as 35kly back the other way in space again. She then disguises her old self as her young self while sedating her actual young self, and concocts a plan to betray the ship to the Vidiians to allow her young self to be transported back to Ocampa.
What the hell?!
How does Kes find Voyager again? How does touching the warp core send her back in time and space? How does she control that? If she still has the ability to hyperwarp that distance at will, why after coming to her senses does she not give the ship another push the rest of the way to Earth? Why doesn't she go all the way back to Caretaker and stop her young self ever leaving in the first place. Why doesn't she meet up with either of the Nacene to help hone her abilities and slow her ageing? Also, since when can you not change direction at warp speed?
Not only does this episode trash a beloved character, it doesn't make any sense!
Latent Image
The Doctor has a repressed memory of Ensign Ahni Jetal, whom he allowed to while keeping Harry Kim alive, seemingly just because the latter was closer to him socially. It's a fascinating character study, but there's one niggling flaw:
Was it really necessary for Jetal to be unpersoned entirely? This entails not just erasing the EMH's memory, but also removing any trace of her from the ship's logs and forbidding mention of her by the rest of the crew. Given that the crux of the Doctor's madness was the equality of injury between Jetal and Kim, it would have been much simpler to say that Jetal was actually injured worse (perhaps shot twice instead of once, or standing closer to the gun?). It could even have been argued that Kim took priority because he was a bridge officer and therefore had priority over a lower deck grunt. Janeway's solution strikes me as greatly excessive.
Maneuvers
This one doesn't come down to any single specific flaw so much as death by a thousand small cuts. Seska gets through Voyager's shields because she remembers their access codes - didn't the remaining officers think to change the passwords in the months since she fled? Two Kazon infiltrators steal transporter parts - how does stealing parts from one transporter break all the others on the ship (including shuttles), and how do they beam themselves away after they've sabotaged the system? At the end Janeway successfully kidnaps a group of Kazon Majes and trades them for Chakotay, but doesn't think to ask for Seska's custody as well. There are probably a few others I've forgotten but basically the whole episode is a long chain of "because the plot demanded it" contrivances.
Do you have any suggestions? They don't all have to be from VOY, or even Star Trek as a whole.
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