Re: First-timer's impressions of season 5
Season Analysis
Season 5 is for me one big contrast. On one hand, season 5 probably produced more "my most favorite episodes" than past seasons together. On the other hand, season 5 is getting really formulaic. It doesn't do anything new, it just repeats the past seasons. Just more entertaingly I guess. For example, B'Elanna has been reduced to a formula. B'Elanna has problems, she goes on an abandoned/destroyed/talking/suspicious ship, she fights monsters there and then finds peace. B'Elanna was one my most favorite characters in Voyager, so I did not really like that she had been reduced to a simplistic formula.
But my biggest grife is with Tuvok. He also was one my favorite characters for a while. But now – he's just an extra. "It's amazing what attention this Trek show shows towards mere extras" as I said in one of my mock reviews (The Captain, The Doctor and The Borg show reviews). He got only one episode. And, imo, the stupidest episode in season 5.

Once he was the friend of Janeway, but now Chakotay fills that position. Tuvok is just a guy who misses his wife. That's all. There was nothing done with his character. Even Harry Kim has gotten a change. But Tuvok just got fleshed out from a mere basic traits figure and was then forgotten. Which is sad, because I felt that the early season 4 pairing with him and Seven worked brilliantly. There was certainly something that could be built upon it.
The greatest thing that season 5 did was to give us Captain Proton. Now Bride of Chaotica bordered on untolerable, but all those other clips in various episodes brought much enjoyment and refreshment. And we finally got to see Delaney sisters. Captain Proton was the greatest thing about season 5. And Naomi. Naomi was also great. I liked Naomi's fairytale holoprogram too.
Season 5 lost the flowing feel of season 4. Season 4 seemed to grow naturally towards it end, while season 5 is more clearly cut. Season 4 is like a river, while season 5 is a collection of individual stone blocks that all sit somewhat apart from each other. The same with characters. With season 4 introducing Seven and then having her interact with all the people on the ship, made that season feel like very crewish. Suddenly there was more crew banter and interaction than ever. However in season 5 that crewish feel is eliminated. A character get's an episode and then dissappears into the background for 15 episodes and then gets another episode. Also, season 5 starts to lean clearly towards the The Captain, The Doctor and The Borg show.
Season 5 is also the season where Voyager just stops caring about Delta Quadrant completely. Suddenly every second episode features some Alpha Quadrant element to it. Actually, season 5 is where Voyager stops caring about Voyager completely. It's in season 5 that suddenly in every episode 13 torpedos are fired, while season 4 still tried to maintain the idea that torpedoes are numbered and their usage does not come lightly.
Season 4 also still had a feeling of growing amongst characters too, though many were still not been fleshed out from basic traits yet. But there was still a feeling that it would happen. However season 5 makes it clear that the feeling of growing is history. Season 5 actually takes those basic traits and enlarges them and focuses extra intensly on them and then calls it a character. For some reason, it works quite effectively sometimes (30 Days)... but since many characters weren't yet fleshed out yet... well it's a bit sad. Basically this time the character analysis is pretty much conclusive since it's obvious they're now going to remain the same for the rest of the show.
First-Timer's Voyager Character Analysis
Janeway
Janeway's a lot more darker in season 5.
Doctor was cynical and bitter in the first season, because that was his defense mechanism against people treating him as an object. And also part of original programming. However, for a long time he has been a happy, peaceful, flamboyant man. Janeway on the other hand was more flamboyant, innocent, cheerful in the first seasons. For example in Phage, she was on the verge of tears when talking to the Vidiians. She had to bit back her tears to try to be angry. In season 5 she is bitter, cynical, sarcastical, on edge, dismissive and more capable of killing. Part of the reason why I enjoyed 11:59 so much was that it was a relief to see Kate in a more lighter and positive role. It's not so much as a natural progress through series than Taylor's Janeway vs. Braga's Janeway. Hard to say without re-viewing all the episodes again, but I believe there is a moment between season 4 and season 5, where this change pretty much happens overnight. Cause I remember Janeway being much more innocent in season 4 (the whole Da Vinci thing).
However it manages to feel like natural character progression (well, after this many seasons it all starts to blend together). So Mulgrew herself might have flirted with this darker Janeway in past seasons while delivering run-of-the-mill lines. Anyway, Janeway in season 5 is a dark character. Dark's a word that might be ruined by all that „darker and edgier“ phenomen. Dark means now that Harry Potter sits in a lonely room, emoing in sadness and silence while people get killed. It's not this „dark“ I'm talking about. But Janeway is dark... there is darkness inside her. Once on the verge of tears whenever someone was sad, she now.... Something is eating her from inside.
The way she treated Tom and Kim for example. I don't see it as an inconsistency, but rather she did it because she could. She's unhappy. And unhappy people tend to be abusive. Especially when they have authority over someone. And then they live out their inner grief on that someone. Which was what happened. On the other hand, season 5 does it's „reducing every character to basic trait and refocusing on it extra large so everyone can pretend it's a character“ business, which means, that it's a Braga Janeway who probably won't change that much anymore. As in, this is the Janeway of season 5-7. But, season 7 has a new lead writer so I don't know. But I assume season 6 Janeway is pretty much the same season 5 Janeway.
Harry Kim
Harry has changed. Recently, I've been doing some retro-views of early seasons, so I noticed that. It's not a major thing. But there has been a change. He's not so awkward anymore. That's all I can say. He was pretty creepy in season 1. There is much more common sense to him. He's still the same "young guy". But not the same. I can see different person in Disease than in and in Emanations. But this might be because Garret is now much more comfortable in the role. Basically, Harry in early seasons is a creepy young guy while now he's a normal young guy.
Harry actually has gotten a lot of love from season 5. In fact, for Kim season 5 has been the best season. His episodes are much more interesting than ever before.
Tom Paris
Tom Paris likes early 20th century pop culture. In the first season, Tom practically is Nick Locarno. He's more dangerous in season 1. A nice guy deep inside, but hurt and on edge. Season 1 Tom Locarno was looking for friendship because he was lonely and was probably attracted to Kim because he had a similar innocence to him like Wesley Crusher did.
However in season 5 everything that Nick Locarno has completely gone from Tom. He's just a nice goofy
guy who hangs out with Kim and who makes pretty wild holodeck experiences. He has a girlfriend and he loves the sea.
Tuvok
For a while there Tuvok was a pretty nuanced character. He wasn't just a vulcan, but a potential mass murderer waiting to happen. He owes his life to vulcan tradition of suppressing emotion. Once he thought he didn't understand a certain murdering betazoid. But then he discovered that he was that murdering betazoid. Once he was Janeway's most trusted man. But now Chakotay serves that purpose and he's just an security officer.
Now Tuvok is just some vulcan guy. He's all about proper and security, and quick to shoot people. He also misses his wife. Once he had a "hate at first sight vs I wowses you, mr Vulcan" relationship with Neelix, whom he always mistreated and humiliated when he could. Now he hasn't even that.
Chakotay
Chako's gone. He was yet to be properly fleshed out, so I have to take all those small fragments of attempts at character and piece a wholesome picture of them. Chako has a strong sense of right and wrong. Well Janeway does too, but whereas Janeway's right and wrong is in rules and other things that people have made up over the years, then Chako's right and wrong is in respect towards life.
Chako prefers to be a knight for King Arthur rather than King Arthur himself. So when finding himself in a situation where he has to submit himself to another he tends to idealize his leader. Usually it happens like this. Chako gets captured, capturer makes some nice deed and Chako goes all "You have returned from Avalon my noble liege!" This can be seen both in Caretaker and Year of Hell.
However usually the idealized leader turns out to be not so King Arthur after all. And then Chakotay either accepts it, or when the leader goes beyond good and evil, goes all rogue on the leader.
It can be seen in season 1 that Chakotay see's Janeway in a more noble manner than she actually is. In Caretaker, his eyes when Janeway decides to destroy the Caretaker's Array so the Kazon couldn't use it against the Ocampa, say that he's mightily impressed by this noble deed. And in Time and Again, he expresses the opinion that perhaps Janeway wants to stop the explosion because that's what he would do, to which Tuvok pretty much replies "You don't really know Janeway, do you?"
Of course now Chakotay no longer thinks of Janeway as some sort of King Arthur like figure. But when Janeway's not completely wrong, her ways help to maintain some sort of imagined security and stability and peace... and by now everyone's already used to her ridiculous protocol, so why break it. After all, the devil you know is better than the one you don't. Only when Janeway's completely wrong Chakotay goes independent – Scorpion and Equinox. Course: Oblivion and The Disease also show some of that aspect.
Like with leaders, Chako tends to idealize women, his interested in, too. Chako falls quite quickly. However when a love interest uses him for her purposes and Chako realizes that, then Chako gets angry. Chako has a thing with being used.
So now in season 5, Chako is actually all that. Or some of that. It just that he spends too much time in the background.
B'Elanna
B'Elanna is now such a formula. From all of the characters she has suffered most from the "enlarge and focus extra intensly on basic traits" approach. Because she was just so much more than "get's angry, goes to a spooky looking ship, fights monsters, come's back one step closer to Nirvana." And I don't get her dislike for Seven at all.
Chakotay-B'Elanna relationship. By the way, did anyone notice that B'Elanna waited for a bit to make certain that Chakotay is okay before she allowed herself to unleash her fury at that Malon guy in Juggernaut. Chakotay is actually the only guy she respects. Sure she loves Tom... but she doesn't look up to Tom, nor listen to him. Tom's nice to love, but when it comes to life and it's issues then B'Elanna knows better. But with Chakotay, it's Chakotay who knows better. With Tom it's modern-day relationship, but with Chakotay it's kinda like the old marriage ideal where the woman actually submits her will to her man. Because she does only to Chakotay her will submit. It's deeper with Chakotay. She's more bare in his presence.
Tom's and B'Elanna's relationship has been pretty much non-existant. And she had stupid hair in this season. In Equinox the hair was finally improved upon.
Neelix
In the beginning Neelix definitely was a shady guy. He joined Voyager for safety reasons. His space was a chaotic region and Voyager was advanced and seemingly safe and stabile. You can see his anger in The Cloud, where he discovers that Voyager always goes looking for trouble. And the way he played Voyager around in Caretaker where he used them to save Kes from the Kazon.
However now he's a nice guy who spends time with kids. Not even any Tuvok "hatred at first sight vs I wowses you, mr Tuvok" thing. He was also much thinner in season 1.
Seven and Doctor
Seven and Doctor are the only characters who have had some growth in this season. Someone to Watch Over Me didn't just happen, but there was a build-up to it. Hints that the Doctor considers Seven more than she him were all over there. And somewhere Seven started to consider the Doctor back. Just not the same way. And that leades us to SWOM. Doctor gets love all the time, but Seven is the one who gets the most love. She even got herself a 90 minute episode. With Susanna Thompson who was awesome. The episode itself not that much.
Doctor has become somewhat of a comic relief. He's a happy flamboyant man with good bedside manners. He likes to sing. While he now considers hismelf somewhat of a human being with rights. He's very sensitive towards AI rights. Other's don't really to that extent. Latent Image shows that in the end he's just considered a program. Seven on the other hand is kinda seeing him as an unique individual. Sort of like Kes once did, though Doctor is Seven's Kes.
Seven's got issues. She's also Naomi's friend. She's getting a bit into the wonkerkid of Voyager. She alienates people yet she feels ashamed when she misses perfection. Obviously she wants to be liked. She just doesn't do that very well.