Star Trek: Voyager
 
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Star Trek: Voyager (1995)

Kate Mulgrew , Robert Beltran  |  DVD
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (64 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Actors: Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Robert Duncan McNeill, Ethan Phillips
  • Writers: Jeri Taylor, Michael Piller, Rick Berman
  • Format: PAL
  • Region: Region 2 (Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 6
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (64 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0001WNSL0
  • For more information about "Star Trek: Voyager" visit the Internet Movie Database (IMDb)

 

Customer Reviews

64 Reviews
5 star:
 (28)
4 star:
 (19)
3 star:
 (8)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (6)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (64 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

56 of 60 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellet season, March 2, 2004
By 
Ted "Ted" (Pennsylvania, USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
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Great season for voyager.

Season 2 of Voyager was a good one in my opinion. With some great episodes

The 37's
Voyager encounters a trail of rust leading to a 20th century Earth pickup truck. The trajectory comes from a planet where the crew find humans cryogenicly frozen, one of which is Amelia Earhart and her co pilot Fred Noonan! It is later discovered that there are many thousands of humans living on the world.

Initiations.
While Chakotay is performing a ritual for his dead father while alone in a shuttlecraft, he accidently encroaches Kazon space and is attacked by a kazon adolescent. He fires on the kazon ship and beams aboard the youth, but is taken hostage when returning him to his people.

Projections
The doctor's program is activated during an emergency and the doctor learns the the crew has abandoned ship. Torres, Janeway and Neelix are still on the ship and when they vanish, the doctor thinks he may be dreaming.

Elogium
Kes prematurely ungergoes elogium, the ocampa equivelant of puberty. This is the only time her species is capable of reproducing and she considers the possibility of having a child with Neelix.

Non Sequitur
Harry Kim wakes up on Earth and discovers that he never served on Voyager.

Twisted
During Kes' birthday party, Voyager encounters a spatial distortion which envelops the ship disables the propulsion system and then starts to distort the ship. The crew believe that it will destroy the ship within hours.

Paturition
While on a mission to look for food, Paris and Neelix crash land on a planet. While voyager is searching for them, Neelix and Paris discover a nest with eggs in it. One of the eggs hatch and a humanoid life form emerges.

Persistence of Vision
While preparing for a meeting with the Botha, Janeway suddenly believes that she is a character from a holonovel

Tattoo
Chakotay discovers very familiar symbols on an alien moon which remind him of ones he saw as a child in the Amazon rainforest. He later discovers the same race of aliens that visited his people thousands of years ago.

Cold Fire
The Caretaker's remains begin to show signs of activity and suspect that his 'widow' may be nearby. They later encounter a space station with Ocampa living on it.

Maneuvers
A former crewmember and Cardassian spy, Seska returns to Voyager and announces plans to unite the Kazon to make an attack on Voyager.

Resistance
While searching for a fuel source, Janeway encounters a strange man who thinks she is his daughter.

Prototype
After the crew discover a dormant humanoid robot. When Torres reactivates it, the robot kidnaps her.

Alliance
After repeated attcks on Voyager by the Kazon, Janeway comsiders the possibility of a parley.

Threshold
After Tom Paris becomes the first human to pilot a ship past the speed of warp 10, he mutates into a strange life form.

Meld
When the body of a crewman is found, and an autopsy reveals it was murder, an investigation implicates a Voyager crew member as the prime suspect.

Dreadnought
The crew find a massive WMD with a Cardassian design. Torres disovers that it had a program malfunction straying it off course and it is headed toward a heavily populated planet.

Death Wish
A sucidal member of the Q continuum seeks asylum on Voyager and requests that he be permitted to kill himself.

Lifesigns
A dying Viidian scientist is brought aboard Voyager and the doctor transfers he memories into a holographic body.

Investigations.
When Paris is kidnapped from a Talaxian freighter by the Kazon, Neelix discovers that a traitor on board may have tipped them off.

Deadlock
Voyager is attacked by a Vidiian ship, killing several people. Janeway later finds that they are unharmed and suspects the ship and its crew were somehow duplicated before the attack.

Innocence
After crash landing on a small moon, Tuvok finds some frightened children who are stranded there.

The Thaw

Voyager encounters some dead aliens who died of fright. Soon after the crew encounters what scared the aliens to death and may be the next victims.

Tuvix
A transporter accident fuses Tuvok and Neelix into a single person with a unique personality. He refuses to let the crew restore the other two because it would kill him.

Resolutions
After Janeway and Chakotay contract a incurable contagious disease they have no choice but to be left behind on an alien planet.

Basics Part 1
In the season cliffhanger, Seska returns, hijacks voyager and intends to maroon the crew on a nearby planet.

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91 of 102 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Stellar Season of Television, March 11, 2004
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Voyager's second season combined everything we like about Star Trek and took it to new heights. This season is, in my mind, the show's best; it is certainly the last one where the writers had any kind of focus as to what was going to happen on the show. One great episode after another is what this season delivered, along with a deeper sense of the crew of this little ship, not to mention fantastic science-fiction. What more could a fan ask for?

This season pulls off all of the exposition that the truncated first season did not. We only gleaned general facts about the crew from the first year, but everyone had an episode to shine here. My favorite episode here is "Projections." I'm a sucker for those "what-is-real?" storylines. It is a solid episode, with the Doctor being more than just smug and surly (although I love it, it can only go so far). Robert Picardo plays disturbed and confused, and Reg Barclay makes a guest appearance. Next is "Non Sequitur," a high-concept episode in which we see an alternate reality where Harry is an engineer on Earth and Tom is a billiards-shooting loser. Like the season that it is a part of, it is a great synthesis of sci-fi storytelling and character exposition. I also loved "Meld," a great Tuvok episode that guest-starred Brad Dourif as a psychopathic killer that Tuvok is obsessed with understanding. The episode examined the enigma of sociopathic killings and it did it in a very effective way. Dourif is one of the highest-caliber guest actors ever to appear on any Trek show, and he is able to be so completely menacing and convincingly psychotic, yet at the same time calm and rational, his performance is reminiscent or Anthony Hopkins' turn as Hannibal Lecter. He is completely mesmerizing. "The Thaw" metaphorically looked at how people allow fear to control their lives, with a surreal, Kafka-esque perspective that made it distinctive. "Resistance" added more dimension to Janeway by showing how far she was willing to go to save her crew, plus a genuinely potent emotional payoff at the end. The Kazon remain a persistent enemy, leading to the best Star Trek cliffhanger ever (Basics, Part I) that makes things really look hopeless for the crew. There was also a visit from Q in "Death Wish" to round out the season.

In addition, there was lots of science fiction here, rather than the sprawling space opera the show would turn into later. Now, don't get me wrong, I love space opera, but not of the sprawling variety. The sci-fi episodes included "Twisted," with Voyager being reconfigured by an unknown force, "Prototype," a look at cyber ethics, "Threshold," which had Tom breaking a seemingly impossible barrier, with disastrous results. "Tuvix" is one of the most powerful episodes of the season, and although the setup sounds cheesy, even ridiculous, it is a fine morality play of the highest order. Basically, Neelix and Tuvok get infused due to a transporter accident, giving birth to a new, fully realized and sentient creature. The bulk of the episode's portent has to do with Janeway's decision: can she deny this new entity existence, effectively kill it, just to save her crewmen, and if not, will she be killing them? I hope it is obvious that this would bring up all sorts of moral questions that the episode sets out to answer. Although the ending is obvious, it actually makes the whole episode more agonizing. In the end, though, what impressed me the most was that there wasn't an ending where everyone was happy, or where they were even sure that they had done the right thing. This was (unfortunately) a rarity in TNG and TOS, where a Deus ex machina would often present itself at the last second, leaving the captain not to have to make a difficult and costly choice. It was here that I began to think that Voyager might become an equal to Deep Space Nine: it had here the maturity to allow its characters to have to make the hard choices, no tricks, no Q to rescue the planet from disaster, no Ensign Wesley to save the ship, no pressing the old reset button and turning back the clock, no easy way out. And for the time being, it did.

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12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Long awaited and well worth it., March 2, 2004
By A Customer
Voyager was a new direction for Star Trek- away from the Federation, with none of the usual aliens, and without the possibility of help from home. That makes for some very interesting plot developments.

Some of the best examples of which are in the second season. Most of the episodes of this season were great, and particularly noteworthy mention are "The Thaw", "Tuvix", "Cold Fire", "Threshold", "Non Sequitur", and of course the season finale "Basics,p.I".

If you're already a voyager fan, you know what I'm talking about. If not, I think you'll be one after seeing a few episodes. I highly recommend the second season to help get you addicted!

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