Thanks for the nice comments you guys...
Season 7 simply ran out of time to flesh out some of its ideas (Seven becoming more human, her relationship with Chakotay, Tuvok's illness etc.). There was a few good episodes that could have been done in earlier seasons and helped to evolve the characters by the time we got to Endgame.
Endgame's problem was future Janeway and all the scenes that took place in the future. Two of Voyager's best episodes were Scorpion and Dark Frontier, both Borg stories where Voyager only escaped by the skin of their teeth. There was really gravitas. Here, future Janeway shows up and gives them so many upgrades that there is no tension in getting them home. If the stuff I mentioned above regarding Seven, Chakotay and Tuvok had been fleshed out earlier in the season, it would have left more room to build some tension. Have the crew come up with their own plan to get through the hub or perhaps, have Janeway, who has been broken by decisions she has made (as she was in Night, the Season 5 premiere) make the ultimate sacrifice to get her crew home, her driving force for the entire series.
Voyager suffered from not getting the DS9 treatment, to put it simply. DS9's final season had several storylines building toward the finale. Endgame feels like it took a bunch of sticky notes in the writer's room and tossed them into a script.
I agree on all counts, Danny99... I haven't yet seen DS9, but it's on the agenda (need to watch TNG first though). But I have heard this stated before by a few people here. Particularly with regard to the development of certain characters and their relationships to each other I found season 7 lacking. And I most certainly concur with your statement regarding the future Janeway and future events in Endgame. Those were by far the weakest points of that ep and some of the weakest points of s7 in general for me (as I mentioned before the role that Janeway plays in the final season could have been improved upon tremendously imo).
Objectively, I agree with most who had some criticism for the writing in this series overall. It was one of the weakest factors of Voyager as a whole, which isn’t to say that are
not great moments and great episodes (subjectively, I pretty much loved every minute, but I am an objective analyst, so... yeah). But the writers (or some combination of the creative forces at work) did not seem to have an overall, far-reaching view or plan of where they envisioned the characters going and there was not really a consistent uniformity that tied events together throughout the 7 seasons. There
were times when this happened, but it didn’t seem to happen with any sort of consistency or in a broader-reaching scope. Staying in the safe zone also possibly hindered some more interesting material that could have been explored. I would have preferred to see the writers take on more risqué material versus “playing it safe”, which seemed to turn into the norm as the series progressed.
Ironically, despite lack of character development in certain areas, the biggest positive this series has going for it is the camaraderie of the crew members (this is aided by the premise and setting of being adrift and lost in space). Add to this the fact that certain individual characters
were developed greatly and the sense of crew as family (complete with humor and lighter situations, awkward/embarrassing moments that most people can relate to, etc.) was generally successful imo. This is what kept me watching the show…. and on a tremendously superficial (and wholly subjective) note the beauty of some of the actors/characters was another factor in keeping my eyes on the screen.
So I actually loved watching this series and I really just lament the lack of a more “global” view with regards to story trends , the poor development of a certain few, and the whole “playing it safe” thing…