I think Enterprise is more rewatchable than the earlier seasons of Voyager. The kazon ogla storyline s were really boring.
I never watched Enterprise beyond season one so can't really comment on that.
I did recently watch all seasons of Voyager and other than an episode here and there, I don't think I never need to watch it again. There's something about Voyager that just doesn't sit right with me. I don't know why. VOY, as opposed to TNG, just doesn't give me the warm fuzzies when I watch it. However, I don't think it was intended to do that. Some of the episodes and themes would never have been done on TNG. Can you imagine Tuvix being done in TNG? I can't. Maybe that's why it bothers me. I don't know and I may not be communicating it very well.
No forward momentum?I rewatched both a few years back. I pick Enterprise.
First, there's less of it - only four seasons versus seven. Thus it's a smaller commitment to watch the whole darn thing.
Second, Enterprise experimented more with serialization. Everyone knows that the third season was one long arc, and the fourth season was mostly a series of mini-arcs. But even as early as the first season they were making an attempt (even if it often failed) to have some sense of forward motion, with events in earlier episodes referenced in later ones.
In contrast, the utterly disconnected way that Voyager is written makes it almost physically painful when i try and binge watch it on Netflix. I can handle one, maybe two episodes a night. But I often needed to mix in other shows in order to not lose interest entirely. Voyager basically only had three plots:
1. We found a way home! Oh, wait, we didn't!
2. Some sort of conflict endangers the ship and/or members of the crew, which is resolved three minutes before the closing credits.
3. We'll have a slow-paced, focus episode on one character (invariably the best episodes, but sadly infrequent).
The formulaic nature of the writing becomes very, very clear if you try and watch a lot of Voyager in one sitting. It probably played a lot better when it was first broadcast. But considering how little forward momentum there is for any characters in the series, there just isn't any sort of payoff for sitting down in a weekend and binging a season.
I rewatched both a few years back. I pick Enterprise.
First, there's less of it - only four seasons versus seven. Thus it's a smaller commitment to watch the whole darn thing.
Second, Enterprise experimented more with serialization. Everyone knows that the third season was one long arc, and the fourth season was mostly a series of mini-arcs. But even as early as the first season they were making an attempt (even if it often failed) to have some sense of forward motion, with events in earlier episodes referenced in later ones.
In contrast, the utterly disconnected way that Voyager is written makes it almost physically painful when i try and binge watch it on Netflix. I can handle one, maybe two episodes a night. But I often needed to mix in other shows in order to not lose interest entirely. Voyager basically only had three plots:
1. We found a way home! Oh, wait, we didn't!
2. Some sort of conflict endangers the ship and/or members of the crew, which is resolved three minutes before the closing credits.
3. We'll have a slow-paced, focus episode on one character (invariably the best episodes, but sadly infrequent).
The formulaic nature of the writing becomes very, very clear if you try and watch a lot of Voyager in one sitting. It probably played a lot better when it was first broadcast. But considering how little forward momentum there is for any characters in the series, there just isn't any sort of payoff for sitting down in a weekend and binging a season.
No forward momentum?
Let's see... the Doctor becomes a sentient, legal person, Tom Paris develops from a cocky screwup to a responsible officer and dedicated husband and father, B'Elanna sheds a ton of chips on her shoulders and takes on the responsibilities of marriage and motherhood, Seven takes significant steps to regaining her lost humanity, Kes becomes a deus-ex-machina whatever the hell she turns into, Neelix develops from a dishonest rogue to a valuable member of the crew who also takes on marriage and fatherhood, and even Harry (while always an ensign) does mature a little by the end of the series.
Tom Paris had a real arc, albeit an understated one. The rest of them periodically had episodes which seemingly deepened their characters, only to be completely ignored in the future.
Take Torres for example. Barge of the Dead from Season 6 is one of my ten favorite Voyager episodes. The end of the episode basically establishes her as being "born again" in the Klingon religion. The series not only ignores this, it actively tramples all over it in the Season 7 episode Prophecy, where she meets the religious Klingons and tells them outright she is a non-believer.
More broadly, while Seven and The Doctor are - by far, the best developed characters in Voyager, they are also inconsistently developed. Both of them will become more human or less human as the plot requires. The writers even admitted that they did this - feeling like they made a mistake with Seven having her "integrate" into the crew too rapidly, potentially destroying what was interesting regarding her character - and then they purposefully regressed her a bit so her climb to normalcy would never be finished.
1. I thought the real Harry Kim died.None of these hold a candle to Harry Kim who remains strictly identical to himself throughout the series. I mean he sounds even more like a rookie in the last episodes than he does earlier! You could picture him leaving Voyager after the last episode and get swindled by the first Ferengi he meets.
Voyager, no contest. I never really cared for Enterprise.
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