Like every Star Trek show
Not exactly. Every show had technobabble, but Voyager seemed to rely on it more, and I can't think of one TOS reset ending.
Like every Star Trek show
It's heavy on it in the first two or three seasons, when Michael Piller was running the show, but so was DS9 when he was running that show, and especially TNG under Piller.Not exactly. Every show had technobabble, but Voyager seemed to rely on it more, and I can't think of one TOS reset ending.
Sounds like Picard.Chakotay grew up hating his backwards tribal traditions, left his father as soon as he could, and fully embraced modern culture. And then one day(we assume some 20 years later), his father and family are all killed. Chakotay is racked with guilt over this.
Sounds like Picard.
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What do you mean by "reset ending"?
The "it was all a dream" type crap or the timeline will be reset to how it normally was after the time travel and nothing that happened will have any meaning is what he means by reset.
I wish the final episode of Voyager would have had Harry Kim wake up and be back on Earth getting ready to ship out on his first mission on Voyager and he tells some dude about a troubling dream that he had, and then we find out the entire series never really happened. Of course the final episode would have had to have the typical Braga junk where someone was drifting back and forth through different time periods.
Apparently, beating the crap out of his brother makes Picard a better man than Chakotay!Except that Picard never asks his dead father for advice.![]()
Apparently, beating the crap out of his brother makes Picard a better man than Chakotay!
So let me get this straight:The "it was all a dream" type crap or the timeline will be reset to how it normally was after the time travel and nothing that happened will have any meaning is what he means by reset.
I wish the final episode of Voyager would have had Harry Kim wake up and be back on Earth getting ready to ship out on his first mission on Voyager and he tells some dude about a troubling dream that he had, and then we find out the entire series never really happened. Of course the final episode would have had to have the typical Braga junk where someone was drifting back and forth through different time periods.
First of all, the finale being all a dream was sarcasmSo let me get this straight:
You don't like "It was all a dream type crap." I don't believe Voyager ever did this.
...but, your preferred finale is that "It was all a dream."
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So when you make a comment about Braga followed by "for 7 years of Voyager," you aren't making sense.
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I apologize. You started talking about the finale and I must have confused the threads, but you said this:First of all, the finale being all a dream was sarcasm
Secondly, if you can find anywhere that I ever made a comment about Braga followed by "for 7 years of Voyager" please point it out to me. I have never said anything remotely close to that in any of my comments...and since you put it in quotes, you are either making it up or have me confused with someone else.
I would have had Braga appear on screen as himself at Paramount studios and have the plot about how his brain was stolen for the last 7 years and that was the reason for the shitshow known as Voyager.
So let me get this straight:
You don't like "It was all a dream type crap." I don't believe Voyager ever did this.
...but, your preferred finale is that "It was all a dream."
As for a time travel episode where the timeline is reset, this is like the basics of a conventional time travel story. TOS does it at least twice.
City on the Edge of Forever- McCoy goes back in time, screws up the timeline. Kirk and Spock then go back and fix it. All is reset. All is restored, and everyone else has no clue what happened.
Return to Tomorrow- The Enterprise accidently goes back in time, is forced to abduct an air force pilot. The whole episode is spent trying to remove any evidence of their being there, but in the end, they go back one or two days earlier, restore the timeline, then go back to the future. Everything is Reset, none of it ever happened.
This also takes place in time travel episodes on TNG, DS9, and ENT multiple times.
I listed Voyagers 10 or 11 time travel episodes a page or so back. Out of those, only a few of them do the "reset" ending, and they are highly praised episodes anyway, like Year of Hell, and Timeless. And this is out of 170+ episodes...7 years of a show.
I'm not sure why you keep mentioning Brannon Braga. He wrote some of the very best episodes on TNG and VOY. No writer can hit a home run every single time. For instance, Ira S. Behr wrote Let he who is Without Sin. But besides all that, Brannon Braga was not Voyager's showrunner until season 4, and not its sole showrunner until season 5 & 6. Then he left the show at the end of Season 6.
And Voyager's strongest and most consistently high quality seasons, I think most would agree, are seasons 4 and 5, when Braga was in charge, or mostly in charge.
Seasons 1-3, and 4 were run by Michael Piller and/or Jeri Taylor. Season 7 was run Kenneth Biller. By "run," I mean in charge of the writer's room, and the creative vision of the show.
Besides sharing head writers with TNG and DS9, Voyager shared many other writers with those shows, not to mention directors, crew, and guest actors.
So when you make a comment about Braga followed by "for 7 years of Voyager," you aren't making sense.
Edit: I don't remember Chakotay ever beating up his dad. Did this happen? Though, he was jerk to him as an angsty teenager
What's wrong with a linear direction? Anyway, they often didn't go with a direct route. What's wrong with a "species of the week" format?The premise had some interesting ideas, but it was also seriously flawed from the beginning. Moving in a linear direction towards the Alpha Quadrant, the ability to have recurring characters (outside of the crew) and even recurring species was seriously affected. It was almost doomed to species-of-the-week formatting from the get-go.
But there were other serious issues:
- the very concept of going to a distant part of the galaxy immediately lost its luster when we found that the Delta Quadrant was almost exactly like the Alpha Quadrant. Very little about it felt distant or alien. Comparable technology, comparable ideals, etc. We traveled across the galaxy to find more of the same.
Whut? no....- by my estimates, the writers only put serious effort into writing for 1-in-4 episodes. Many of them go down as some of the absolute worst episodes in the entire Star Trek franchise's history. The few that had serious effort behind them were memorable and a reminder of what could've been.
A valid point- all of the tension between the 2 crews melted away in no time, and that entire concept was virtually forgotten and wasted.
This makes no sense...- Voyager was a time capsule that eventually became a pleasure cruise in the latter seasons.
No. The use of Borg has nothing to do with "need for recurring characters/species.- the need for recurring characters/species led to the Borg being overused and looking more like a nuisance than the foreboding menace that almost brought down the entire Federation. Voyager always bested the Borg, but somehow the Kazon had been their biggest threat?
The VisitorDS9 never hit the reset button, at least with their time episodes. (DS9 and TOS are the only series NOT to use the reset button with time travel stories.
If these are good examples of the "reset button," add to that The Visitor, then surely the reset button is a good thing, and should be spoken of highly. Besides Time and Again, the rest of these are some of the most beloved episodes in all of Star Trek, even Twilight, one of ENT's greatest stories.Good examples of this would be "Yesterday's Enterprise", "TIME AND AGAIN", "YEAR OF HELL", "TIMELESS", and "TWILIGHT".
What's wrong with a linear direction? Anyway, they often didn't go with a direct route. What's wrong with a "species of the week" format?
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