Very well put. I also believe that there was a phenomenal premise with so much to work with... the Maquis and Federation crew mix, as someone else pointed out, could have been a great dynamic to keep going with. No, not one of those "well, any time now the Maquis are going to take over the ship again" ideas... Paris wouldn't have become Star Fleet so quickly. The Maquis would eventually realize that they do need to closely cooperate so they all get home. But once in a great while, there would be tensions because of the two different mixes.Really, my main 'Voyager' quibble (the thing that keeps it from being 'best' in my eyes no matter how much I like it) is that the premise was so clever that it just ended up not living up to it.
Here you essentially had an opportunity for a largely 'clean slate' approach equal to that of TOS without wiping out the Trekverse (ahem) with the creation of a new environment, races, and so forth, and also the angst and excitement of doing a 'Star Trek: Lost in Space' show. (The historic irony of that alone is delicious.)
The would-be writer and television viewer/critic in me is appalled that so much of 'VGR' felt like 'TNG Part II,' but the kid in me (who grew up on TNG) can't help but like it because of this, as well as its own unique virtues.
One key issue I had with Voyager was the whole start of it. The CareTaker could have easily been handled to allow the crew to get back to the Alpha quadrant. Instead, they make it Janeway's decision to stay, rather than a technical limitation. I really think that was a bad choice. The first season was really under par for me... then things slowly got better.
I also appreciated the fact that they were in the Delta quadrant far from Star Fleet space, so that new beings could be encountered without compromising the integrity of Star Trek canon. It even made sense for the Borg to be out there, running about completely out of Star Fleet radar.
But the show was becoming tired. The rehashed TNG format was indeed catching up with them. Same old thing, week after week. Then came Seven. Despite all the sex appeal of Jeri Ryan, I really do think it was a great "jumpstart" for reviving the series. It certainly gave the writers a heck of a lot more material to work with and they did exploit a lot of it rather well.
Voyager had a lot of great episodes, plenty of mediocre ones, and some lousy ones. I really don't consider it the all out best. The original series was probably the best, from the perspective of it being the boldest for its time and making due with very limited budgets. The remastered verisons with new effects helped tremendously at lifting it up (the Enterprise bobbing back and forth on a string just had to be dispensed with!). But all that followed contributed so much to the Star Trek franchise. I'd say that VOY and TNG come in at a close second.
