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Cathexis (episode)

  • View history
  • 1.2 Act One
  • 1.3 Act Two
  • 1.4 Act Three
  • 1.5 Act Four
  • 1.6 Act Five
  • 2 Log entries
  • 3 Memorable quotes
  • 4.1 Title, story, and script
  • 4.2 Cast and characters
  • 4.4 Production
  • 4.6 Reception
  • 4.7 Continuity
  • 4.8 Video and DVD releases
  • 5.1 Starring
  • 5.2 Also starring
  • 5.3 Guest Stars
  • 5.4 Co-Star
  • 5.5 Uncredited co-stars
  • 5.6 Stunt doubles
  • 5.7 Photo doubles
  • 5.8 Stand-ins
  • 5.9 References
  • 5.10 External links

Summary [ ]

Chakotay's out of body experience

Chakotay having an out of body experience in the corridor

Captain Kathryn Janeway is taking part in a holonovel set in "ancient England " when she is called to the bridge by Harry Kim , who announces that the shuttle Chakotay and Tuvok are in has appeared on long range sensors but has not answered hails . The shuttle has taken damage with multiple hull fractures and life signs are faint; Janeway orders the two to be beamed to sickbay when they are within range.

In sickbay, The Doctor says that both Chakotay and Tuvok have taken blows to the head by an energy discharge of some kind. Tuvok incurs a concussion which is treatable, but Chakotay had been drained of all bio-neural energy from the brain and is in some form of coma . Although The Doctor can keep the commander on life support, he declares that there is not much he can do because he is brain dead.

Act One [ ]

Tuvok explains what happened on the shuttle when they were attacked. After conducting a trade mission with the Ilidarians , they had an unexpected encounter with a dark matter nebula , where an unknown vessel attacked them. He says that he was barely able to set the shuttle on autopilot to return to Voyager . Janeway decides to return to the nebula to investigate and find the ship that attacked them.

In sickbay, B'Elanna Torres uses a medicine wheel to aid Chakotay through a healing ritual he had previously taught her. Chakotay has always been a very spiritual man and she believes the wheel and its grander meaning might be Chakotay's only chance now. She explains that when a person is sleeping or on a vision quest , it is said that he is walking the wheel and the placement of each stone acts as a signpost to help point the way back home.

Kes , having a strange feeling that someone else is in her quarters , goes to the mess hall to tell Neelix .

Janeway notes the nebula is emitting intense electromagnetic radiation that is preventing the sensors from detecting anything. Attempting to change the sensors to utilize a multiphasic bandwidth to penetrate the radiation , she suddenly "loses" the nebula and discovers that Voyager has been put on a course away from it. They wonder who turned the ship around and find that the course change came from Tom Paris ' station at the conn . Paris denies doing anything and faults the console. The captain orders Kim to transfer helm control to ops and resume their previous course while she orders Paris to helm control to see if there is something wrong with the ship's systems.

After the ship shudders, however, Janeway discovers it has changed course once again, and orders Kim to get the ship back on course – but this time the helm doesn't respond because it has been locked out.

Act Two [ ]

Tuvok investigates the source of the lockout and finds it came from navigational control on Deck 12. Paris returns to report he checked every ODN junction in helm control and found no problem. Tuvok establishes helm control once again and resumes course. Janeway asks Torres if anyone is currently at the navigational controls. Torres says that she in fact saw Paris there only a few moments ago. Paris is surprised and once again denies having been there and everyone is dumbfounded at the fact that he was at the navigational controls in both instances when the ship changed course. However, Janeway gives him the benefit of the doubt, ordering him to report to sickbay to check his memory.

The Doctor runs some scans on Paris and reports to Tuvok that nothing out of the ordinary has been found. Tuvok, however, reports that his scans of the navigational controls reveal traces of Tom Paris' DNA .

As the ship continues on course to the nebula, Tuvok indicates that he believes he has found the ion trail of the ship that attacked the shuttle leading back into the nebula. Noting the highly erratic flight path, Janeway suggests that the planetoids the trail bends around could be generating gravitational effects that cause currents within the nebula. She hypothesizes the route the unknown vessel took may be the only safe way through the currents. Before Janeway can order the ship to follow the ion trail, however, there is a massive energy drain throughout the ship. The warp core begins to shut down, causing Voyager to drop to impulse power . After getting no response from engineering , the captain and Tuvok head down to investigate.

Janeway finds Torres at the warp core controls, where Torres has initiated an emergency warp core shutdown leaving the ship unable to regain warp drive for at least two hours. Janeway explains to a baffled Torres that the engineer has just crashed the main computer, locked out the bridge, and stopped the ship cold, for which Torres has no explanation. She cannot recall having done any of that. Janeway finally realizes that there is something very odd going on here, as Torres – after Paris – is the second person not remembering having input commands into the ship.

In sickbay, The Doctor shows the captain the results of his scans of Torres' and Paris' memory engrams . The results show a different memory pattern during the exact time Paris allegedly changed the ship's course and lost recollection, and again when he was tampering in navigational control. Further, the same disruption has been found in Torres when she shut down the warp core. The Doctor explains further that the signature is bio-neural and he believes it to be another brain wave that has been superimposed onto theirs, believing an unknown alien entity having temporarily taken control of their bodies.

Janeway observes that the alien seems intent to prevent Voyager from getting to the nebula, and that it possesses the ability to take control of anyone at any time, except for The Doctor. She decides it would be best to transfer all command codes to The Doctor for fear of the alien taking over any of the senior staff using authorization code, "Janeway 841-Alpha-65".

Later, Kes catches up with Tuvok in the corridor, and reports that she has been sensing some strange things on the ship. Tuvok offers to mind meld with Kes to see if they can find the entity with Kes' telepathic abilities. But the two get no further than the turbolift , where Kim and Lieutenant Durst discover them unconscious.

Act Three [ ]

In a darkened conference room, Tuvok explains that an energy discharge came out of the bulkhead and filled the turbolift, knocking them both unconscious, just as it had happened on the shuttle. Torres reports that they picked up no unusual readings from the internal sensors.

Paris suggests the use of a magneton scanner in hopes that a more detailed scan may reveal the source of the discharge. Torres, however, proposes to use the magneton scanner on the entire ship all at once in order to detect the exact location of the entity. She asks Kim for his thoughts on the matter, when she notices that he is motionless and staring out into space. Nervous that he might be possessed by the alien, Tuvok pulls his phaser out, while Torres conducts a personal scan via tricorder . Kim finally snaps out of his thoughts, explaining that he was merely pondering about a possible way to solve this and that he is not possessed. Janeway, disturbed by what just happened and the increasing paranoia, orders preparations for the magneton scan.

While scanning Kes, The Doctor finds himself in the company of Neelix. Neelix recounts the strange behavior of every crewman on board, noting that Ensign Parsons ordered his pejuta cold instead of hot. After a brief debate on who really is paranoid, The Doctor explains that Kes hasn't suffered any permanent neurological trauma and that he will notify Neelix when she is revived. After Neelix leaves, Tuvok enters to modify the sensor array in sickbay for the magneton scan. The Doctor tells Tuvok that Kes' injuries don't match Chakotay's, pointing out contusions on her neck and shoulder that are consistent with something similar to a physical struggle.

Tuvok informs the Captain that the magneton scan will be ready in two hours, and that its use will cause dizziness and disorientation throughout the ship. He further reports that The Doctor has found evidence that Kes' injuries were a result of a physical assault. Janeway suggests that because Tuvok wasn't assaulted, it is possible he injured Kes while under the influence of the entity. She calls sickbay to notify The Doctor to conduct a scan on the security chief, only to get no response. Janeway tries to activate the EMH and finds it has been disabled, and that the initialization routine has been locked with an encryption.

It is proposed that by deactivating The Doctor, the alien forced the command codes back to Janeway. The captain suggests that because it is too dangerous for one person to have the command codes, they will be grouped and divided between herself and Tuvok. The two go back to the bridge to explain the situation, when the entity takes over Janeway and attacks Tuvok. A fight ensues. Tuvok tries to use his phaser but it is kicked from his hand by Janeway. Paris stuns the captain, and the entity jumps over to Kim, who pulls out his phaser to shoot Tuvok, but Paris knocks the phaser away from Kim and manages to subdue him. The alien then jumps to Durst, who manages to get a miscalculated shot off at Tuvok before being pulled back by another crewman. Tuvok then stuns everyone on the bridge with his phaser set to full spread.

Act Four [ ]

In sickbay, Paris treats everyone's wounds with a hypospray while Kim tries to get The Doctor's program back on-line. Torres requests the captain's presence in engineering to explain that she found a discrepancy in the shuttle's internal sensor logs. After reviewing them, Torres explains that the logs weren't destroyed; rather, someone erased them then overloaded the sensor matrix to make it appear they had been damaged. Further, Torres says that she was able to reconstruct the events in the shuttle. She was able to confirm that they were at the dark matter nebula, and that there was an energy discharge that came from the nebula itself, but that there was no ship. Janeway wonders why Tuvok would lie about that. She orders Torres to transfer controls for the magneton scan to the bridge once the sensors are ready to initiate the burst.

On the bridge, Janeway asks Tuvok to locate the ion trail once again. Paris enters the bridge and tells the captain he has been studying the data The Doctor had been working on to discover the cause of Kes' injuries and relays to her that they were actually caused by a Vulcan neck pinch . Janeway asks Tuvok to explain, and he says that he has no knowledge of the event and offers the entity as an explanation. But Janeway confronts him with the fact that the entity keeps attacking him, even on three different occasions. Tuvok blames Janeway's questions on paranoia, but she elaborates further that she is unable to pick up the ion trail he says he found. He directs the captain to search the alpha k band, where she finally finds the trail, but also notices the lack of any subspace distortions in the trail's wake, and notes that according to the readings it would have come from a ship without engines.

Tuvok confronts the captain, suggesting that she is under the influence of the entity and that it is trying to prevent Voyager from entering the nebula. Relieving Janeway of command, he orders Kim to take the ship in, but Kim refuses. Tuvok then warns everyone that his phaser is set to wide beam dispersal and to kill, before taking command of the bridge and huddling everyone in a group where he can see them.

Act Five [ ]

Kim notices from a secondary console that the sensors are picking up highly coherent energy pulses with a biomatrix inside the nebula, suggestive of lifeforms , and that they are heading in Voyager 's direction. Janeway asks Tuvok if the beings in the nebula are his people, assuming he is under the control of one of them, and Tuvok introduces them as the Komar and the nebula as their domain.

USS Voyager travels deeper into the Komar nebula

" Captain, we're going deeper into the nebula "

Torres, in engineering, falls under the influence of the entity and ejects the warp core. She informs Janeway of what she has done, and Paris questions how it was possible of the alien to control Torres while it was controlling Tuvok at the same time. Kim suggests there may be two aliens on board. Then, Janeway realizes that Torres isn't authorized to eject the warp core on her own because that requires a command code authorization. She asks the computer who authorized the ejection of the warp core, to find it had been authorized by Commander Chakotay. The captain puts two and two together and realizes that the alien in Tuvok wants them in that nebula but that there is another presence that's been trying to keep them out and that it must be Chakotay who knows that they will be in danger if they go in there. She believes his neural energy has been displaced somehow and that as a result, he is able to move from person to person. Tuvok, upset at the turn of events, engages emergency thrusters . Janeway asks him whether the reason the Komar want Voyager is to extract everyone's neural energy. Tuvok explains that the collective neural energy of the crew would sustain his people for years to come. Janeway tells him that he doesn't have to do this and that maybe they can help them find another source of energy. But the ship keeps getting bombarded by the energy beams and, realizing that reasoning won't get them anywhere, Janeway uses this time to activate the magneton burst from the command console, disabling Tuvok and releasing the alien controlling him. Paris tries to steer the ship out of the nebula but can't be sure which direction they are really going because of the complex course Tuvok had been following. Kim goes to tactical to reconstruct Tuvok's navigational logs.

USS Voyager escapes the Komar nebula

Voyager escapes the nebula

The entity, now identified to be the displaced neural energy of Chakotay, inhabits Neelix in sickbay, who approaches the medicine wheel and rearranges the stones into a pattern that Paris is able to recognize as a map of the dark matter nebula, allowing them to chart a way out.

After The Doctor successfully reintegrates Chakotay's consciousness, Janeway inquires as to what really happened in the shuttle. He explains he had the sensation of floating over his own body and thought he was dead. He couldn't speak or touch anything, but realized that if he could concentrate on someone in the same room with him, he could share their consciousness. He apologizes to Tuvok for having had to knock him around like that. Janeway welcomes him back but Chakotay says that he actually never felt like he had ever left.

Log entries [ ]

  • " Captain's log, stardate 48734.2. Sometimes it's a good idea to get away from being a captain for a while. To that end, I've started participating in a new holonovel. The setting is ancient England. "
  • " Captain's log, supplemental. It appears that Mr. Tuvok and Kes were both hit by an unidentified energy discharge. Tuvok was not badly hurt, but Kes is in a coma. "
  • " Captain's log, stardate 48735.9. We have returned to the coordinates where we ejected the warp core and have successfully retrieved it. Now we're hoping The Doctor will be able to successfully reintegrate Commander Chakotay's consciousness. "

Memorable quotes [ ]

" You might have asked before adorning my sickbay with animal remains. "

" Find your way home, commander. "

" If you feel at any time, that any of us are under the influence of the alien, you can countermand our orders and take control of the ship. Do you feel up to it? " " Well of course, I make life and death decisions every day. " " I feel better already. "

" Mr. Neelix, just because a man changes his drink order, doesn't mean he's possessed by an alien. "

" Nevertheless, don't you think you should scan him or dissect him or something? Just to make sure. " " I could examine every crewmember you've mentioned so far, every person on board for that matter and it wouldn't do any good. From what we can tell the alien can jump from person to person at will. " " Sounds to me that you're defending Ensign Parsons. " " I'm not defending him, I'm just pointing out that you're acting a little paranoid. In fact, one could say that you're acting a little too paranoid. "

" Captain I believe you are having a typically Human response to circumstances which are frightening and inexplicable; commonly known as paranoia. "

" According to these readings, it's a ship without engines... "

" How did you manage to reintegrate his consciousness? " " It involved three neural transceivers, two cortical stimulators, and fifty gigaquads of computer memory. I would be happy to take you through the process but it would take at least ten hours to explain it all to you. Needless to say it was a remarkable procedure. I would consider writing a paper about it, if there were a convenient forum in which to publish it."

Background information [ ]

Title, story, and script [ ].

  • This episode had the working title "Intruder Alert". [1] The term ultimately used as the episode's title, "cathexis," is a psychoanalytical term meaning "investment of mental or emotional energy in a person, object, or idea."
  • The premise of this episode was thought up by Star Trek: Voyager Producer Brannon Braga and former Star Trek: The Next Generation writer/producer Joe Menosky (who was working in Paris , France during the first two seasons of Voyager but later regularly worked on the series, from its third season onward). Regarding how he and Menosky came up with the story idea, Braga explained, " When Joe and I get the chance, which isn't often, we chat on the phone about ideas, and we thought we had a pretty cool variation on the 'alien among us' idea. In this case, the alien among us is one of us [i.e., Chakotay], which I thought was kind of fetching, and so we worked up the story together. What was appealing to us was, at the end, you realize the 'alien' is actually the disembodied consciousness of one of our crew members. What you think is a nefarious presence, and the incidents which you think are due to the nefarious presence, turns out to be one of us trying to warn us away from real danger. That was a really interesting dynamic. " ( The Official Star Trek: Voyager Magazine  issue 5 , p. 49)
  • The experience of scripting the episode was not particularly enjoyable for Brannon Braga. He recalled of the episode, " I thought it was going to be horrible. I didn't have a good time writing it. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 144) He also admitted, " I struggled with that script [....] It was a complex story–as many of mine are–but I never quite had a handle on the logic of what was going on. " ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, p. 63)
  • In common with the earlier first season episode " Emanations ", Brannon Braga and Executive Producer Michael Piller had creative differences over what direction the episode should take. ( Star Trek Monthly  issue 7 , p. 9) Braga recalled, " Michael Piller wanted to make it a story about paranoia, which sounded good at the time, but it's hard to do a show about paranoia on a Starfleet vessel. People don't behave that way. " ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, p. 63)
  • According to Michael Piller, the episode was originally inspired by or, at least, had similarities with the Agatha Christie novel And Then There Were None , which has also been published and filmed under the title Ten Little Indians . Piller noted, " The idea of doing Ten Little Indians with the murderer changing places was a fascinating idea, but it got very complex and dry and was a hard premise to solve. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 144)
  • The plot of this episode facilitated the concept of dark matter . Science Consultant André Bormanis reflected, " We thought it might be interesting to introduce that idea on Voyager with a sort of a dark matter nebula or a 'black nebula,' as I believe we call it in the episode 'Cathexis.' " ("Real Science With André Bormanis", VOY Season 2 DVD special features)
  • The first draft of this episode's script was issued on 7 February 1995 , with revision pages thereafter submitted on 10 February (blue), 13 February (pink), and 14 February (yellow).
  • Janeway's holonovel was originally scripted by Executive Producer Jeri Taylor , for the earlier first season episode " Eye of the Needle ", and was planned to feature in multiple episodes after its initial appearance. In the first draft of "Eye of the Needle"'s teaser , the simulation was planned to be set in the Wild West , rather than a Gothic setting. Janeway was written as playing the part of a pioneer woman who was heading West in a covered wagon and had a husband and children. Her character would lead a rustic lifestyle that included such tasks as building a campfire. Taylor reckoned that the character's situation – finding herself far from home, often having to do things she was unprepared and untrained for, but traveling in a family setting – would provide a good metaphor for Janeway's predicament in the Delta Quadrant and an unusual way of both enhancing and developing the persona of the captain. Kate Mulgrew was dead set against the prospect of working with horses , however, and it was calculated that visualizing this Western scenario would be prohibitively costly. Jeri Taylor offered, " We realized that if we locked ourselves into this Western program for the holonovel, we probably would be saying over and over again, 'We can't afford that this week, we're going to have to do something else.' Because it means going on location, it means horses, it means wranglers, it means a lot of things that are complicated. " It also meant that, due to the time of year, the production crew would likely have only short periods of light to film in. Concluded Taylor, " All in all it seemed not a prudent decision. " ( A Vision of the Future - Star Trek: Voyager , p. 11)
  • The holonovel's final permutation in this episode seems to borrow elements from Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre , Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca , and Henry James' The Turn of the Screw .
  • Jeri Taylor intended for the holonovel to be set at some point between the 1840s and 1850s. ( A Vision of the Future - Star Trek: Voyager , p. 18)
  • The scripted version of the holonovel scene from this episode (as can be found in the shooting scripts for both "Eye of the Needle" and "Cathexis") characterized Mrs. Templeton as "a tall, austere woman in her 40s" and said of Lucille Davenport, " We get a sense of a faded grandeur, of a life that was once more opulent than it is now. " The scene's scripted write-up also described Lord Burleigh by stating, " He is in his 40s, a handsome man who seems to bear the world on his shoulders. He is basically a good, decent person who bears a heavy secret; as a result he is somewhat remote. "
  • Although this episode's depiction of Janeway's holonovel is prefaced with an introductory log entry, no such log was in the shooting script of "Eye of the Needle", whose teaser instead started inside the holographic simulation. Furthermore, after Lord Burleigh warns Janeway that she should never go onto the fourth floor, the script of "Eye of the Needle" continued with Kim abruptly announcing his presence on the holodeck (with the words, " Excuse me, captain "), rather than contacting her from the Bridge. Kim's entrance puzzled Lord Burleigh, as to the newcomer's identity, and Janeway then ended the holoprogram, after which Kim reported the discovery of a wormhole to her. When the scene was still due to be included in "Eye of the Needle", there was some discussion about the transition between the simulated English drawing room and the holodeck interior, pertaining to both the filming of the effects sequence and whether the raindrops on Janeway's gown would remain, following the change of setting; Michael Piller clarified that the rain was to disappear along with the rest of the simulation. Despite the consideration of these minute details, this portion of the holonovel was never shown. ( A Vision of the Future - Star Trek: Voyager , pp. 10, 12 & 20) The final-draft script of "Cathexis" notated the events much as they are shown in the episode, including both Janeway's initial log entry and Kim calling her from the bridge.
  • This episode's narrative originally involved a plot point in which Tuvok was blinded by the phaser flash, disregarding the concept of the Vulcan inner eyelid , which had been established in TOS : " Operation -- Annihilate! " and was referenced years later in ENT : " The Forge ". Tuvok actor Tim Russ and Director Kim Friedman were both concerned about this inconsistent plot point being included in the episode. Russ later reflected, " The whole bridge scene with the phaser battle and stuff was different originally. It didn't make any sense. It wasn't consistent with Vulcan attributes, and we had to change it. I said to Jeri [Taylor], 'You cannot execute this kind of thing in the story because it makes no sense. It's not consistent. It's a physical fact.' In the script, they had Tuvok blinded by the flash, but Vulcans have a secondary eyelid to protect them, and that's been established. Amazingly, the director brought those points up in a story meeting [....] We both were sort of in league for different reasons, but she brought it up in a story meeting, and they just basically dismissed her. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , pp. 144 & 145) Evidently, the producers later decided, however, to exclude the plot point from the episode.
  • The episode's final draft script was submitted on 17 February 1995 . [2]

Cast and characters [ ]

  • Chakotay actor Robert Beltran found that, although he enjoyed this episode, acting as if he were in a comatose state was a memorable part of appearing in the outing, which he described, while laughing, as "my big coma episode." He went on to say, " I just remember people rearranging rocks above my head as I was pretending to be in a coma. I liked the show, especially the little explanation at the end, when Chakotay explains to Janeway what he was going through. It was nice and simple, short and sweet, but full of interesting things about Chakotay. " ( The Official Star Trek: Voyager Magazine  issue 7 , pp. 16 & 17)
  • The set for the English Gothic drawing room in this episode was built on Paramount Stage 16 and had two windows, built into the same wall as each other. The set was under construction by 5 December 1994 . ( A Vision of the Future - Star Trek: Voyager , p. 19) Also by that point, the production crew had dubbed the set "the Jane Eyre set." ( A Vision of the Future - Star Trek: Voyager , p. 10) The set was not yet completed by the next Monday: 12 December 1994. On that day, Production Designer Richard James was videoed being interviewed on the set, a wooden plank was hammered into one of the windows (as part of the window frame) and the border of one wall was being painted. ("A Day in the Life of Ethan Phillips ", VOY Season 2 DVD special features) The set was expensive but was intended to be reused repeatedly, so that its cost could be amortized over the course of the series. ( A Vision of the Future - Star Trek: Voyager , p. 12)

Production [ ]

Winrich Kolbe and Kate Mulgrew

Director Winrich Kolbe and actress Kate Mulgrew in her Gothic costume

  • ↑ Although most of this episode was directed by Kim Friedman (the only director listed in the episode's credits), the Gothic holonovel scene was helmed by Winrich Kolbe – the director of "Eye of the Needle" – who directed the scene as part of that installment's production.
  • On 5 December 1994, Winrich Kolbe surveyed the drawing room set, in preparation for the filming of the holonovel scene that was ultimately included in this episode. Later that day, the scene was discussed at a production meeting about "Eye of the Needle". Kolbe wondered how tea had been made in England, at the time of the holonovel's setting, initiating an unresolved discussion that included Jeri Taylor clarifying the time period in which the simulation is set. The group also contemplated what season the holonovel was set in and what trees were appropriate for outside the window that opens. Since Kolbe liked weeping willows and thought they looked "kind of romantic," they were selected. After a conversation about which of the two windows in the drawing-room set was to be used, Kolbe chose to use the one on the right, since using the left one would cause him difficulty with particular camera angles. Following considerable contemplation pertaining to the window and the specifics of the blustery weather outside it, Kolbe stressed that the important aspect of the scene was the reflection of the female portrait in the window, rather than the window itself. ( A Vision of the Future - Star Trek: Voyager , pp. 18-20)
  • Following the production meeting but on the same day, Rick Kolbe still had questions regarding the drawing-room scene, so he spoke to Jeri Taylor about the holonovel. In the art department, Producer Merri Howard wondered if clearances were needed, pertaining to the woman who is illustrated in the portrait. After Howard and Art Director Michael L. Mayer considered various alternatives, Mayer asked Scenic Artist Wendy Drapanas to obtain an 1800s-style portrait of a woman, add a bonnet of some form to her head and make some as-yet-undetermined alterations to her face, in order to make her unrecognizable. Although Mayer wanted Drapanas to carry out these instructions by the next afternoon, the fact that filming of the drawing-room scene was, the next morning, announced as being scheduled as late as Monday, 19 December 1994 allowed a relieved Drapanas much more time to finish the portrait. ( A Vision of the Future - Star Trek: Voyager , pp. 34, 72 & 332)
  • According to Tim Russ, the reason why Kim Friedman, in a story meeting, brought up the eventually-dropped plot point of Tuvok being blinded was that "she had problems with the scene because it didn't make any sense in terms of filming and blocking." ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , pp. 144-145)
  • Supervising Producer David Livingston had reservations about the use of Chakotay's medicine wheel in this episode. " I wanted to actually paint it onto the set, " he remembered, " because it's what B'Elanna would have done. She doesn't care if she's defacing anything. She's going to come in and take care of her friend. They resisted it, and instead we had this piece of skin with a design on it hung in there. I think it would have been more fun if she had painted it onto the wall of the set regardless of the consequences. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 144)
  • According to the unauthorized reference book Delta Quadrant (p. 44), the shots of this episode that seem to be from disembodied perspectives utilized a fish-eye lens, typically used for similar sequences in TNG, and a less common disguising filter.
  • Jay Chattaway composed the music for this episode and, of all the first season Voyager episodes he worked on, he cited this as having been his second favorite to write music for (with " Caretaker " being his first choice). Shortly after characterizing this installment as "the one the producers gravitated towards," he remarked, " The music had to sell the fact that there was this invisible entity. It was a real mystery that made it a fun episode. " ( The Official Star Trek: Voyager Magazine  issue 4 , p. 49)

Reception [ ]

  • Brannon Braga was ultimately very critical of this episode, feeling that the story had suffered as a result of his disagreement with Michael Piller. ( Star Trek Monthly  issue 7 , p. 9) Braga stated, " In the end [...] it's really not about anything. Not my greatest shining moment. It's got tension and action at a point when we needed an infusion of that, but that's about it. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 144) " I hear a lot of people liked it ... but I thought it was too confusing, " Braga also said, before conceding, " I guess it does have a spooky quality to it. " ( Star Trek Monthly  issue 7 , p. 9) He was specifically disappointed with some of the performances in this episode, observing, " The actors felt the lack of impact in the script and were trying to bring something to it, God bless them, but some of it was over the top. The director should have pulled them in. It was a rather popular episode, but in the end I think it was much ado about nothing. " ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, p. 63)
  • Michael Piller found the episode's logic problematic. He admitted, " I was not comfortable with the logic of a lot of the things going on. And I thought that once the possessions became known, Janeway was acting like the alien through the whole thing. It just seemed like it was very eerie and moody, but there's not a lot of logic to the way people were acting in the show [....] It's one of my least favorite. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 144)
  • Jeri Taylor said the episode was "a show that sounded better in concept than it turned out to be." She continued, " Some people liked it, but I wasn't sure it was entirely successful. I thought it was a little confusing and so is the twist. It was talky and not as compelling as it should have been. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 144)
  • Alternately, Executive Story Editor Kenneth Biller thoroughly enjoyed the episode. He commented, " I love the twist. I think it represented an interesting game of cat and mouse during a period when we were stuck doing a whole bunch of bottle shows . " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 144)
  • This episode achieved a Nielsen rating of 6.4 million homes, and a 10% share. [3] (X)
  • Cinefantastique gave this installment 2 out of 4 stars. ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, p. 63)
  • In their unofficial reference book Trek Navigator: The Ultimate Guide to the Entire Trek Saga (pp. 32 & 33), co-writer Mark A. Altman rates this episode 1 and a half out of 4 stars (defined as "poor") while fellow co-writer Edward Gross scores the installment 2 out of 4 stars (defined as "mediocre").
  • The unauthorized reference book Delta Quadrant (p. 45) gives the episode a rating of 6 out of 10.
  • In the lead-up to this episode's VHS release, Star Trek Magazine reviewer Stuart Clark wrote a positive assessment of the episode, remarking, " Some good writing keeps the twist at the end of this story a surprise until the very last, when all is revealed and, suddenly, everything slots into place. Tim Russ, who plays Tuvok, shows that he can be quite menacing in this episode and makes one wonder if he can be entirely trusted. The final denouement of the story underlines that the USS Voyager is indeed travelling through an uncharted region of space, quite unlike anything the USS Enterprise NCC-1701-D ever encountered. " ( Star Trek Monthly  issue 8 , p. 62) However, in Star Trek Magazine 's retrospective "Ultimate Guide", the magazine gave this episode 2 out of 5 Starfleet-style arrowhead insignia. ( Star Trek Magazine  issue 164 , p. 30)

Continuity [ ]

  • During this episode, Tuvok 's rank switches from lieutenant commander to lieutenant and back again a number of times. By the end of the episode, he is wearing the rank of lieutenant. His rank remains that of lieutenant until the fourth season episode " Revulsion ", in which he is officially promoted to the rank of lieutenant commander. There is no scripted reason why Tuvok's rank changes during this episode, and it may be that it was simply an error in costuming for him to have been wearing a lieutenant commander rank for the first half of the first season; he is referred to as "lieutenant" several times in earlier episodes, despite wearing lieutenant commander rank insignia.
  • While no explanation is given, Lieutenant Paris' rank is also dropped from full lieutenant to lieutenant junior grade in this episode; he went on to carry the latter rank continuously until " Thirty Days ", wherein he is demoted to ensign and spends time in the brig.
  • Also, the rank of Lieutenant Torres is reduced from two silver bars on her Maquis pin to one silver and one black, although this is evident from the beginning of the episode.
  • This episode marks the first performance of a Vulcan neck pinch on Star Trek: Voyager , although it is not seen on-screen and Tuvok is not in control of himself when he performs it.
  • This episode is similar to TOS : " Spock's Brain " in that, in both episodes, a crew member's consciousness is displaced from his body.
  • At the end of the third season, Tim Russ cited this episode as one of four or five installments (in the first three seasons) in which Tuvok's "defenses have been breached" and "his control has been taken away or lost," other such episodes being " Flashback " and " Meld ". ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 29, No. 6/7, p. 100)
  • Janeway's holonovel later returns in both " Learning Curve " and " Persistence of Vision ".
  • Following the introduction of Lieutenant Durst in this episode, he is killed in the next installment, " Faces ".

Video and DVD releases [ ]

  • UK VHS release (two-episode tapes, CIC Video ): Volume 1.7, catalog number VHR 4007, 9 October 1995
  • As part of the VOY Season 1 DVD collection

Links and references [ ]

Starring [ ].

  • Kate Mulgrew as Captain Kathryn Janeway

Also starring [ ]

  • Robert Beltran as Commander Chakotay
  • Roxann Biggs-Dawson as Lieutenant B'Elanna Torres
  • Jennifer Lien as Kes
  • Robert Duncan McNeill as Lieutenant Tom Paris
  • Ethan Phillips as Neelix
  • Robert Picardo as The Doctor
  • Tim Russ as Lieutenant Tuvok
  • Garrett Wang as Ensign Harry Kim

Guest Stars [ ]

  • Brian Markinson as Pete Durst
  • Michael Cumpsty as Lord Burleigh
  • Carolyn Seymour as Mrs. Templeton

Co-Star [ ]

  • Majel Barrett as Computer Voice

Uncredited co-stars [ ]

  • Kimberly Auslander as command ensign
  • Jasmin Bischoff as operations officer
  • Christine Delgado as Susan Nicoletti
  • Kenneth David Ebling as command officer
  • Tarik Ergin as Ayala
  • Norman Gibbs as operations officer
  • Ken Gruz as Kurt Bendera
  • Sue Henley as Brooks
  • Kerry Hoyt as Fitzpatrick
  • Julie Jiang as operations lieutenant junior grade
  • Jordan Monheim as sciences officer
  • Louis Ortiz as Culhane
  • Chad Patterson as sciences officer
  • Beth Rogers as Jarvis
  • Lydia Shiferaw as command officer
  • Jennifer Somers as sciences officer
  • Simon Stotler as operations ensign
  • Piper Taylor as operations officer
  • Julie Thornton as operations officer
  • Rod Wallace as operations officer
  • Jeff Witzke as operations officer
  • Unknown actress as Bridget

Stunt doubles [ ]

  • Christine Anne Baur as stunt double for Kate Mulgrew
  • Irving Lewis as stunt double for Tim Russ (unseen)

Photo doubles [ ]

  • Jerry Quinn – photo double for Robert Duncan McNeill and Michael Cumpsty
  • Photo double for Kate Mulgrew
  • Photo double for Tim Russ
  • Photo double for Robert Picardo
  • Photo double for Roxann Biggs-Dawson

Stand-ins [ ]

  • Sue Henley – stand-in for Kate Mulgrew
  • Husted – stand-in for Brian Markinson
  • Cy Kennedy – stand-in for Robert Beltran
  • Susan Lewis – stand-in for Roxann Biggs-Dawson
  • Lemuel Perry – stand-in for Tim Russ
  • Jerry Quinn – stand-in for Robert Duncan McNeill
  • Richard Sarstedt – stand-in for Robert Picardo
  • Jennifer Somers – stand-in for Jennifer Lien
  • Simon Stotler – stand-in for Ethan Phillips and Brian Markinson
  • John Tampoya – stand-in for Garrett Wang
  • Unknown actor – stand-in for Michael Cumpsty
  • Unknown actress – stand-in for Carolyn Seymour

References [ ]

ability ; access hatch ; accusation ; alien entity ; alpha k ; attack ; autopilot ; axon ; backup log ; bio analysis ; biomatrix ; biomolecular scan ; bio-neural energy ; bio scan analysis ; brain ; brain dead ; Brown ; bruise ; Burleigh, Beatrice ; Burleigh, Henry ; Burleigh's wife ; cape ; cardio-stimulator ; centimeter ; central computer core ; Chakotay's tribe ; coma ; comb ; command code ; command code authorization ; computer memory ; concussion ; condition four ; condition red ; contusion ; cortical stimulator ; Coyote Stone ; damage ; dark matter nebula ( unnamed ); dark matter nebula planetoids ; data ; Davenport, Lucille ; dendrite ; density ; dilithium matrix ; DNA ; disembodied ; dissection ; dizziness ; drawing room ; Emergency Command Hologram (premise); Emergency Medical Holographic system (aka holographic doctor ); emergency thruster ; emotional condition ; energy being ; energy discharge ; England ; failsafe ; Fifth Realm ; flight path ; forensic sweep ; garlic soup ; gigaquad ; hail ; Hargrove ; heart ; holocomic book ; holodeck ; holonovel ; hostage ; hour ; house call ; hull ; hull fracture ; Ilidarian ; information ; injury ; Intrepid class decks ; intruder alert ; ion trail ; Janeway Lambda One ; Jefferies tube ; Komar ; lemon ; lie ; logic ; lollipop ; long range sensor ; lord ; magneton scan ; magneton scanner ; main computer ; medical emergency ; medicine wheel ; memory engram ; mind meld ; Mountains of the Antelope Women ; multiphasic scan ; mutiny ; Native American ; navigational computer ; navigational control ; navigational log ; neck ; neural energy ; neural transceiver ; neurological damage ; non-corporeal alien ; nostalgia ; organic being ; painting ; paranoia ; parity trace scan ; Parsons, Michael ; pejuta ; person ; phaser ; planetoid ; plasma relay ; psycho-spiritual belief ; roadblock ; sculpture ; senior officer ; sensor log ; sensor matrix ; setting ; shoulder ; shuttlecraft log ; Sixth Realm ; Sora root ; soul ; star map ; subspace distortion ; suspect ; synapse ; talisman ; telepathic ability ; trade mission ; trianic-based energy being ; trapezius nerve ; vehicle status ; visual relay ; Voyager shuttlecraft ; Vulcan neck pinch ; waiting room ; warp core ejection ; wound

External links [ ]

  • " Cathexis " at Memory Beta , the wiki for licensed Star Trek works
  • " Cathexis " at Wikipedia
  • "Cathexis" at StarTrek.com
  • " Cathexis " at MissionLogPodcast.com , a Roddenberry Star Trek podcast
  • " Cathexis " at the Internet Movie Database
  • 2 ISS Enterprise (NCC-1701)

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Season 1 – Star Trek: Voyager

Where to watch, star trek: voyager — season 1.

Watch Star Trek: Voyager — Season 1 with a subscription on Paramount+, or buy it on Fandango at Home, Prime Video.

What to Know

Star Trek: Voyager breaks the Star Trek mold with a brand new final frontier and the fierce leadership of the franchise's first female captain.

Audience Reviews

Cast & crew.

Kate Mulgrew

Capt. Kathryn Janeway

Robert Beltran

Roxann Dawson

B'Elanna Torres

Robert Duncan McNeill

Jennifer Lien

Ethan Phillips

More Like This

Critics reviews, season info.

Star Trek: Voyager

While on a short-term mission to track an infiltrated Maquis cell, Capt. Kathryn Janeway and her newly launched U.S.S. Voyager crew -- and the Maquis fighter crew -- are drawn 70,000 lightyears to the far side of the Delta Quadrant by an alien seeking survival, calling itself "the Caretaker." As the Voyager and Maquis crews forge a tentative bond of survival, Janeway decides to cut off the escape route homeward to deal with the aggressive Kazon-Ogla, the Ocampa's devastated world, and the "Caretaker" who blames himself for it.

The reality of co-existence hits Maquis and Starfleet personnel alike, but the troubled but brilliant B'Elanna Torres is made chief engineer after solving a baffling spatial mystery with Janeway.

An industrial but pre-warp planet's dangerous polaron technology seems to be the cause of a planet-wide wipeout discovered by the Voyager crew -- or did the visitors actually cause the problem in the near past?

When a grotesque and bizarre alien team steals Neelix's lungs, the Doctor's holographic replacements keep him alive until Janeway finally tracks down the Vidiians and their society-wide Phage plague.

A nebula whose baffling interior provides no exit while being explored is discovered to be a living entity, and Janeway leads the crew in delicate "surgery" to repair the damage and finally emerge intact.

The crew is overjoyed to find a wormhole leading to the Alpha Quadrant, only to find that it is micro-sized and terminates in the Romulan Empire. The lone Romulan they contact, however, eventually seems won over to helping them.

Cast & Crew

Kate Mulgrew

Capt. Kathryn Janeway

Robert Beltran

Roxann Dawson

B'Elanna Torres

Robert Duncan McNeill

Ethan Phillips

Getting lost in space has never been so much fun.

Information

© 2007 CBS Corp.

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Screen Rant

I can’t believe star trek: voyager didn’t switch two important neelix episodes.

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Every Voyager Character Who Has Returned In Star Trek (& How)

Star trek: voyager’s vulcan vorik & alexander enberg’s tng connection explained, 8 villain reveals that ruined their shows forever.

  • Switching two Neelix episodes in Voyager's seasons 1 and 3 would have improved his character development.
  • "Jetrel" and "Fair Trade" revealed Neelix's tragic past, but should have been aired in reverse order.
  • Airing "Jetrel" in season 3 would have made Neelix more likable and even improved his story arcs in later seasons.

Star Trek: Voyager made a mistake by not switching two important Neelix (Ethan Phillip) episodes in seasons 1 and 3. Neelix was Voyager 's Talaxian cook, morale officer, and unofficial ambassador to the Delta Quadrant throughout the show's seven seasons. Introduced in season 1 alongside his then-girlfriend, Kes (Jennifer Lien) , Neelix became a more permanent fixture in Voyager 's cast of characters , and his storylines improved exponentially after he and Kes broke up and Lien left the show .

Although Neelix was often Voyager 's comic relief, he also had a tragic backstory that was revealed throughout the show's early seasons. Two episodes in particular, "Jetrel" in season 1 and "Fair Trade" in season 3, helped flesh out Neelix's backstory and laid the groundwork for other significant episodes in later seasons . "Jetrel" revealed that Neelix's family was killed in a brutal conflict with a race called the Haakonians, while "Fair Trade" dealt with some of his sordid past as a contraband smuggler before he joined Voyager 's crew. However, the two episodes should have been aired in a different order.

Star Trek: Voyager's beloved characters have returned in Star Trek: Picard, Star Trek: Lower Decks, and especially Star Trek: Prodigy.

Star Trek: Voyager Should Have Switched The Order Of Two Important Neelix Episodes

Neelix's character development would have been improved.

If Voyager had switched which seasons "Jetrel" and "Fair Trade" appeared in, it would have improved the show's storyline and Neelix's character exponentially. Voyager 's creative team conceived the story idea for "Fair Trade" as early as season 1, but the episode was put on the back burner to make room for "Jetrel" in the season's lineup. This was a mistake, given that both episodes' reveals about Neelix would work much better in reverse .

Neelix's over-the-top personality in Voyager season 1 would have benefitted greatly from some tempering, and seeing him struggle with self-doubt and how to do the right thing in "Fair Trade" could have made him more likable

"Fair Trade" was a very human story for Neelix. If the episode had aired in season 1, the exploration of Neelix's previous life outside the law, coupled with his genuine desire to help Voyager 's crew, would have grounded the character at a time when he was a caricature of himself . Neelix's over-the-top personality in Voyager season 1 would have benefitted greatly from some tempering, and seeing him struggle with self-doubt and how to do the right thing in "Fair Trade" could have made him more likable. Unfortunately, both "Jetrel" and "Fair Trade" did more harm to Neelix than good.

Why “Jetrel” Would Have Worked Better In Star Trek: Voyager Season 3

"jetrel" could have been a great season 3 episode.

In season 1, at a time when Neelix was on shaky ground in terms of character growth and popularity, "Jetrel" did him no favors. In the first place, "Jetrel" was a bad copy of "Duet" from Star Trek: DS9 , and the episode being so early on in the series when audiences knew very little about Neelix only served to make his tragic backstory fall flat. There was not much reason to care about what Neelix and his family had suffered , and as such, scenes that were meant to be particularly emotional or impactful packed less of a punch.

If "Fair Trade" had aired first and "Jetrel" had been a season 3 episode, both would have been significantly improved. Neelix's flaws and strengths could have been thoroughly explored before introducing an episode so clearly designed to tug at the audience's heartstrings . Star Trek: Voyager could have built much more sympathy and compassion for Neelix by giving time to make audiences like him. As it was, "Jetrel" in particular failed on several storytelling levels, and Neelix had to wait until later seasons to get more well-rounded storylines.

Star Trek: Voyager is available to stream on Paramount+.

Star Trek: Voyager

*Availability in US

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The fifth entry in the Star Trek franchise, Star Trek: Voyager, is a sci-fi series that sees the crew of the USS Voyager on a long journey back to their home after finding themselves stranded at the far ends of the Milky Way Galaxy. Led by Captain Kathryn Janeway, the series follows the crew as they embark through truly uncharted areas of space, with new species, friends, foes, and mysteries to solve as they wrestle with the politics of a crew in a situation they've never faced before. 

  • Star Trek: Voyager (1995)

voyager season 1 episode 12

Glenn Morshower's 5 Star Trek Roles Explained

  • Glenn Morshower portrayed five characters across multiple Star Trek series & films, showcasing his versatility as a character actor.
  • Morshower's roles ranged from a junior officer to a sneaky alien, displaying his talent for embodying different personas effectively.
  • Known for playing military and law enforcement roles, Morshower's commanding presence shines through in each of his Star Trek performances.

Character actor Glenn Morshower has portrayed five different characters across three Star Trek series and one feature film. Morshower's first Star Trek appearance came near the end of Star Trek: The Next Generation season 2, when he portrayed ensign Burke in "Peak Performance." He later appeared as an alien named Mr. Orton in the TNG season 6 episode, "Starship Mine." Morshower briefly appeared as the navigator on the USS Enterprise-B in Star Trek Generations before popping up in episodes of Star Trek: Voyager and Star Trek: Enterprise .

Glenn Morshower has appeared in numerous films and television shows, often portraying military men or law enforcement officers. He is best known for playing Secret Service Agent Aaron Pierce in 24 and Colonel Sharp in the Transformers films. Morshower has also appeared in episodes of The X-Files, CSI, The West Wing, Friday Night Lights, and Agents of SHIELD. More recently Morshower played Marshall Winthrop in 25 episodes of The Resident and President Andrew Johnson in the Apple TV+ series Manhunt . Morshower has also done voice-over work for several popular video game franchises, including Call of Duty and Wolfenstein.

Every Star Trek Series, Ranked Worst To Best

Ensign burke, star trek: the next generation season 2, episode 21 - "peak performance".

In Star Trek: The Next Generation 's "Peak Performance," the USS Enterprise-D participates in war games exercises, as Captain Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) faces off against Commander William Riker (Jonathan Frakes) in command of the USS Hathaway. Glenn Morshower portrays Ensign Burke, who serves as a junior operations and tactical officer aboard the Enterprise. When Riker chooses Lt. Worf (Michael Dorn) to be a part of his crew on the Hathaway, Burke takes the Klingon's place at the tactical station.

A Ferengi ship commanded by DaiMon Bractor (Armin Shimerman) arrives and attacks, unaware that the two Federation ships are participating in practice exercises. The two Federation ships and their crews are able to outsmart the Ferengi, and bring an end to the wargames. Ensign Burke then serves as a mediator during a game of Strategema between master strategist Sirna Kolrami (Roy Brocksmith) and Lt. Commander Data (Brent Spiner).

Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 6, Episode 18 - "Starship Mine"

In Star Trek's version of Die Hard , Captain Picard must singlehandedly thwart a group of thieves aboard the USS Enterprise-D. When the Enterprise docks at the Remmler Array to undergo a decontamination process, Captain Picard ends up stuck on the ship when the rest of the crew beams down to the station to attend a party. The party is quickly interrupted when the station administrator, an Arkarian named Mr. Orton, takes the senior officers captive, while his accomplices board the Enterprise.

With his alien appearance and prosthetics, Glenn Morshower is unrecognizable as Orton, who is eventually captured after the captive Enterprise crew members escape. Data and the other crew members had rigged the VISOR of Lt. Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton) to emit a hypersonic pulse that rendered everyone other than Data unconscious. Orton initially played nice with the Enterprise crew members at the party, before revealing his part in the plot to steal trilithium from the Enterprise.

Tim Russ portrayed the first of the marauders taken out by Captain Picard on the Enterprise. Russ is most known for portraying Vulcan Chief of Security Tuvok in all 7 seasons of Star Trek: Voyager , but he also appeared briefly as a lieutenant aboard the Enterprise-B in Star Trek Generations.

USS Enterprise-B Navigator

Star trek generations.

Glenn Morshower's unnamed navigator only appears in the opening sequence of Star Trek Generations as a crewmember aboard the USS Enterprise-B, under the command of Captain John Harriman (Alan Ruck) . Setting out on its maiden voyage, the Enterprise-B soon gets pulled into a rescue mission to save two El-Aurian refugee ships. Morshower's navigator informs Harriman that the Enterprise is the only ship in range of the El-Aurian ships , and he later releases plasma from the warp nacelles as part of the rescue attempt.

When the Enterprise gets trapped in the same energy ribbon that damaged the El-Aurian ships, the navigator is hit by an explosion and presumably killed. From this point forward, Montgomery Scott (James Doohan) takes over the navigator's station and helps the Enterprise escape. Having gone down to the deflector control room to modify the main deflector, Captain James T. Kirk (William Shatner) gets caught in a hull breach and is presumed dead. In reality, he ends up in the mysterious Nexus, where Captain Picard later finds him.

Every Star Trek Movie In Chronological Order

Mokra order guard, star trek: voyager season 2, episode 12 - "resistance".

As Captain Kathryn Janeway (Kate Mulgrew), Lt. Tuvok, and Lt. B'Elanna Torres (Roxann Dawson) try to buy tellerium for the USS Voyager, they are targeted by the planet's ruling body, the Mokra Order. Tuvok and B'Elanna are captured, while an injured Janeway is saved by a local man named Caylem (Joel Grey). Caylem believes Janeway to be his daughter, Ralkana, who was killed years ago trying to rescue her mother from prison.

Glenn Morshower only appears briefly as one of the Mokra Order guards stationed at the prison where Tuvok and B'Elanna were being held. When Janeway and Caylem mount their rescue attempt, Janeway lures this guard away from his post so that Caylem can knock him out. With distinct ridges at the tops of their noses, the Mokra Order soldiers were brutal members of the Alsaurian species opposed by the Alsaurian resistance movement.

Sheriff MacReady

Star trek: enterprise season 3, episode 9 - "north star".

As the Enterprise NX-01 explores the Delphic Expanse, they discover a planet inhabited by humans living in a civilization modeled after the 1860s American frontier. Captain Jonathan Archer (Scott Bakula) , Commander Trip Tucker (Connor Trinneer) and Sub-Commander T'Pol (Jolene Blalock) visit the planet to investigate and soon meet Glenn Morshower's Sheriff MacReady. MacReady is immediately suspicious of Archer, and orders his deputy to keep an eye on him.

Archer and his crew eventually learn that the humans were originally brought from Earth by a species called the Skagarans. The humans later overthrew their Skagaran masters and subjugated them, creating laws preventing them from getting an education or owning property. Archer later tells MacReady about modern Earth and emphasizes that humans of the 22nd century have moved past subjugating sentient species. With his penchant for playing law enforcement officers, Glenn Morshower brought a commanding presence to all five of his Star Trek roles.

Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Voyager, & Star Trek: Enterprise are available to stream on Paramount+.

Star Trek Generations is available to stream on Max.

Star Trek: The Next Generation

Cast Michael Dorn, LeVar Burton, Brent Spiner, Wil Wheaton, Jonathan Frakes, Patrick Stewart, Marina Sirtis, Gates McFadden

Release Date September 28, 1987

Streaming Service(s) Paramount+

Showrunner Jeri Taylor, Michael Piller, Rick Berman

Star Trek Voyager

Cast Jennifer Lien, Garrett Wang, Tim Russ, Robert Duncan McNeill, Roxann Dawson, Robert Beltran, Kate Mulgrew, Jeri Ryan, Ethan Phillips, Robert Picardo

Release Date May 23, 1995

Showrunner Kenneth Biller, Jeri Taylor, Michael Piller, Brannon Braga

Star Trek: Enterprise

Cast Dominic Keating, Connor Trinneer, Linda Park, John Billingsley, Scott Bakula, Jolene Blalock, Jeffrey Combs, Anthony Montgomery

Release Date September 26, 2001

Showrunner Manny Coto, Brannon Braga

Glenn Morshower's 5 Star Trek Roles Explained

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Well, hello, Voyager 1! The venerable spacecraft is once again making sense

Nell Greenfieldboyce 2010

Nell Greenfieldboyce

voyager season 1 episode 12

Members of the Voyager team celebrate at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory after receiving data about the health and status of Voyager 1 for the first time in months. NASA/JPL-Caltech hide caption

Members of the Voyager team celebrate at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory after receiving data about the health and status of Voyager 1 for the first time in months.

NASA says it is once again able to get meaningful information back from the Voyager 1 probe, after months of troubleshooting a glitch that had this venerable spacecraft sending home messages that made no sense.

The Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 probes launched in 1977 on a mission to study Jupiter and Saturn but continued onward through the outer reaches of the solar system. In 2012, Voyager 1 became the first spacecraft to enter interstellar space, the previously unexplored region between the stars. (Its twin, traveling in a different direction, followed suit six years later.)

Voyager 1 had been faithfully sending back readings about this mysterious new environment for years — until November, when its messages suddenly became incoherent .

NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft is talking nonsense. Its friends on Earth are worried

NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft is talking nonsense. Its friends on Earth are worried

It was a serious problem that had longtime Voyager scientists worried that this historic space mission wouldn't be able to recover. They'd hoped to be able to get precious readings from the spacecraft for at least a few more years, until its power ran out and its very last science instrument quit working.

For the last five months, a small team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California has been working to fix it. The team finally pinpointed the problem to a memory chip and figured out how to restore some essential software code.

"When the mission flight team heard back from the spacecraft on April 20, they saw that the modification worked: For the first time in five months, they have been able to check the health and status of the spacecraft," NASA stated in an update.

The usable data being returned so far concerns the workings of the spacecraft's engineering systems. In the coming weeks, the team will do more of this software repair work so that Voyager 1 will also be able to send science data, letting researchers once again see what the probe encounters as it journeys through interstellar space.

After a 12.3 billion-mile 'shout,' NASA regains full contact with Voyager 2

After a 12.3 billion-mile 'shout,' NASA regains full contact with Voyager 2

  • interstellar mission

Inside NASA's 5-month fight to save the Voyager 1 mission in interstellar space

Artist's concept depicts NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft entering interstellar space.

After working for five months to re-establish communication with the farthest-flung human-made object in existence, NASA announced this week that the Voyager 1 probe had finally phoned home.

For the engineers and scientists who work on NASA’s longest-operating mission in space, it was a moment of joy and intense relief.

“That Saturday morning, we all came in, we’re sitting around boxes of doughnuts and waiting for the data to come back from Voyager,” said Linda Spilker, the project scientist for the Voyager 1 mission at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. “We knew exactly what time it was going to happen, and it got really quiet and everybody just sat there and they’re looking at the screen.”

When at long last the spacecraft returned the agency’s call, Spilker said the room erupted in celebration.

“There were cheers, people raising their hands,” she said. “And a sense of relief, too — that OK, after all this hard work and going from barely being able to have a signal coming from Voyager to being in communication again, that was a tremendous relief and a great feeling.”

Members of the Voyager flight team celebrate in a conference room at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory on April 20.

The problem with Voyager 1 was first detected in November . At the time, NASA said it was still in contact with the spacecraft and could see that it was receiving signals from Earth. But what was being relayed back to mission controllers — including science data and information about the health of the probe and its various systems — was garbled and unreadable.

That kicked off a monthslong push to identify what had gone wrong and try to save the Voyager 1 mission.

Spilker said she and her colleagues stayed hopeful and optimistic, but the team faced enormous challenges. For one, engineers were trying to troubleshoot a spacecraft traveling in interstellar space , more than 15 billion miles away — the ultimate long-distance call.

“With Voyager 1, it takes 22 1/2 hours to get the signal up and 22 1/2 hours to get the signal back, so we’d get the commands ready, send them up, and then like two days later, you’d get the answer if it had worked or not,” Spilker said.

A Titan/Centaur-6 launch vehicle carries NASA's Voyager 1 at the Kennedy Space Center on Sept. 5, 1977.

The team eventually determined that the issue stemmed from one of the spacecraft’s three onboard computers. Spilker said a hardware failure, perhaps as a result of age or because it was hit by radiation, likely messed up a small section of code in the memory of the computer. The glitch meant Voyager 1 was unable to send coherent updates about its health and science observations.

NASA engineers determined that they would not be able to repair the chip where the mangled software is stored. And the bad code was also too large for Voyager 1's computer to store both it and any newly uploaded instructions. Because the technology aboard Voyager 1 dates back to the 1960s and 1970s, the computer’s memory pales in comparison to any modern smartphone. Spilker said it’s roughly equivalent to the amount of memory in an electronic car key.

The team found a workaround, however: They could divide up the code into smaller parts and store them in different areas of the computer’s memory. Then, they could reprogram the section that needed fixing while ensuring that the entire system still worked cohesively.

That was a feat, because the longevity of the Voyager mission means there are no working test beds or simulators here on Earth to test the new bits of code before they are sent to the spacecraft.

“There were three different people looking through line by line of the patch of the code we were going to send up, looking for anything that they had missed,” Spilker said. “And so it was sort of an eyes-only check of the software that we sent up.”

The hard work paid off.

NASA reported the happy development Monday, writing in a post on X : “Sounding a little more like yourself, #Voyager1.” The spacecraft’s own social media account responded , saying, “Hi, it’s me.”

So far, the team has determined that Voyager 1 is healthy and operating normally. Spilker said the probe’s scientific instruments are on and appear to be working, but it will take some time for Voyager 1 to resume sending back science data.

Voyager 1 and its twin, the Voyager 2 probe, each launched in 1977 on missions to study the outer solar system. As it sped through the cosmos, Voyager 1 flew by Jupiter and Saturn, studying the planets’ moons up close and snapping images along the way.

Voyager 2, which is 12.6 billion miles away, had close encounters with Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune and continues to operate as normal.

In 2012, Voyager 1 ventured beyond the solar system , becoming the first human-made object to enter interstellar space, or the space between stars. Voyager 2 followed suit in 2018.

Spilker, who first began working on the Voyager missions when she graduated college in 1977, said the missions could last into the 2030s. Eventually, though, the probes will run out of power or their components will simply be too old to continue operating.

Spilker said it will be tough to finally close out the missions someday, but Voyager 1 and 2 will live on as “our silent ambassadors.”

Both probes carry time capsules with them — messages on gold-plated copper disks that are collectively known as The Golden Record . The disks contain images and sounds that represent life on Earth and humanity’s culture, including snippets of music, animal sounds, laughter and recorded greetings in different languages. The idea is for the probes to carry the messages until they are possibly found by spacefarers in the distant future.

“Maybe in 40,000 years or so, they will be getting relatively close to another star,” Spilker said, “and they could be found at that point.”

voyager season 1 episode 12

Denise Chow is a reporter for NBC News Science focused on general science and climate change.

  • Cast & crew
  • User reviews
  • Episode aired Jan 31, 2001

Jeri Ryan and Jeff Kober in Star Trek: Voyager (1995)

Voyager rescues a prison warden and a set of prisoners that are scheduled to be executed testing their own ethical beliefs. Voyager rescues a prison warden and a set of prisoners that are scheduled to be executed testing their own ethical beliefs. Voyager rescues a prison warden and a set of prisoners that are scheduled to be executed testing their own ethical beliefs.

  • Michael Vejar
  • Gene Roddenberry
  • Rick Berman
  • Michael Piller
  • Kate Mulgrew
  • Robert Beltran
  • Roxann Dawson
  • 14 User reviews
  • 4 Critic reviews

Robert Duncan McNeill, Roxann Dawson, and Ethan Phillips in Star Trek: Voyager (1995)

  • Capt. Kathryn Janeway

Robert Beltran

  • Cmdr. Chakotay

Roxann Dawson

  • Lt. B'Elanna Torres

Robert Duncan McNeill

  • Lt. Tom Paris

Ethan Phillips

  • Seven of Nine

Garrett Wang

  • Ensign Harry Kim

Jeff Kober

  • Warden Yediq
  • (as Tim deZarn)

F.J. Rio

  • Voyager Security Officer

Robert Axelrod

  • (uncredited)
  • Voyager Ops Officer

Tarik Ergin

  • Benkaran Prisoner
  • Nygean Prisoner
  • All cast & crew
  • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

Did you know

  • Trivia The novel "A Clockwork Orange" by Anthony Burgess is a strong influence behind "Repentance."
  • Goofs Early in, a bowl gets thrown at a force field in the 'new brig', and bounces off. Later, The Doctor is holding a Padd and walks through a Force Field in the Med Bay. Though The Doctor is a Hologram, the Padd shouldn't have been able to pass through the force field.

[Iko takes The Doctor hostage]

The Doctor : I'm a hologram. I can't be harmed.

[Tuvok shoots his phaser through The Doctor and stuns Iko]

The Doctor : I think you proved my point.

  • Connections References A Clockwork Orange (1971)
  • Soundtracks Star Trek: Voyager - Main Title (uncredited) Written by Jerry Goldsmith Performed by Jay Chattaway

User reviews 14

  • tomsly-40015
  • Feb 5, 2024
  • Why did Iko give his meal to another inmate? And why THAT particular inmate?
  • January 31, 2001 (United States)
  • United States
  • Official site
  • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA (Studio)
  • Paramount Television
  • See more company credits at IMDbPro

Technical specs

  • Runtime 43 minutes
  • Dolby Digital

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COMMENTS

  1. List of Star Trek: Voyager episodes

    The last four episodes of season 1 were moved to season 2 (the episodes with stardates 48xxx). ... 12 "Resistance" 49234.1: Winrich Kolbe: Story by : Michael Jan Friedman and Kevin J. Ryan Teleplay by : ... Here is a summary of 2-part Voyager episodes, which are sometimes shown as a single feature length media and reviewed as such.

  2. "Star Trek: Voyager" Cathexis (TV Episode 1995)

    Cathexis: Directed by Kim Friedman. With Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Jennifer Lien. An encounter with a peculiar nebula suddenly leaves Chakotay brain dead and unconscious. The crew is left with a mysterious but powerful force of energy onboard that can take over the minds of the crew members.

  3. Star Trek: Voyager (TV Series 1995-2001)

    Mon, Jan 30, 1995. The Voyager crew discovers a planet which recently suffered a horrific catastrophe. Upon investigation, Janeway and Paris are sent back in time before the disaster and are faced with the decision of whether to try to stop it. 7.1/10 (2.3K)

  4. "Star Trek: Voyager" Jetrel (TV Episode 1995)

    Jetrel: Directed by Kim Friedman. With Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Jennifer Lien. Neelix is diagnosed with a fatal illness by a Haakonian named Jetrel. The same man who'd developed a doomsday weapon which destroyed a Talaxian moon and killed Neelix's family.

  5. Heroes and Demons

    "Heroes and Demons" is the 12th episode of the first season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: Voyager. The episode first aired on the UPN network on April 24, 1995. It was directed by Les Landau and written by former Star Trek: The Next Generation story editor Naren Shankar.Set in the 24th century, the series follows the adventures of the Starfleet and Maquis crew of ...

  6. Star Trek: Voyager: Season 1, Episode 12

    Watch Star Trek: Voyager — Season 1, Episode 12 with a subscription on Paramount+, or buy it on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV. More Like This

  7. Watch Star Trek: Voyager Season 1 Episode 12: Star Trek: Voyager

    Harry Kim's innocent medieval role-playing holo-program turns dangerous when he and Chakotay disappear without a trace. In his own "native" environment, the holographic Doctor undertakes his first "away mission" to rescue them and survives fear, romance and heartbreak in unmasking an unlikely trespasser.

  8. Heroes and Demons

    S1 E12: Harry Kim's innocent medieval role-playing holo-program turns dangerous when he and Chakotay disappear without a trace. In his own "native" environment, the holographic Doctor undertakes his first "away mission" to rescue them and survives fear, romance and heartbreak in unmasking an unlikely trespasser. Sci-Fi Apr 24, 1995 44 min.

  9. Star Trek: Voyager · Season 1 Episode 12 · Heroes and Demons

    Stardate: 48693.2. Harry Kim disappears from the holodeck during his holo-novel, "Beowulf." According to the characters, he died at the hands of a mystical beast known as "Grendel". When Chakotay and Tuvok also disappear, the Doctor is transferred to the holodeck to investigate.

  10. Cathexis (episode)

    Voyager attempts to investigate the force that made Chakotay brain-dead, while an unknown entity keeps turning them back. Captain Kathryn Janeway is taking part in a holonovel set in "ancient England" when she is called to the bridge by Harry Kim, who announces that the shuttle Chakotay and Tuvok are in has appeared on long range sensors but has not answered hails. The shuttle has taken damage ...

  11. Watch Star Trek: Voyager Season 1

    The wildly successful Star Trek franchise continues as Capt. Kathryn Janeway and the crew of the U.S.S. Voyager follow a Maquis ship into the Badlands, and one species-saving decision later, find themselves in the Delta Quadrant, 70,000 light years away from the Alpha Quadrant, the Federation, and home. The two ships must join together to make it back, facing treacherous battles from the ...

  12. Star Trek: Voyager: Season 1

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  13. Star Trek: Voyager: Season 1

    Season 1 episodes (16) 1 Caretaker, Pt. 1. 1/15/95. $1.99. While on a short-term mission to track an infiltrated Maquis cell, Capt. Kathryn Janeway and her newly launched U.S.S. Voyager crew -- and the Maquis fighter crew -- are drawn 70,000 lightyears to the far side of the Delta Quadrant by an alien seeking survival, calling itself "the ...

  14. Star Trek: Voyager Season 1 Episodes

    S1 E8. Feb 28, 1995. During a friendly visit to the advanced world of Banea, Paris is accused of murdering the high-ranking husband of a woman who claims the lieutenant had an affair with her. Tuvok's detective skills and her own pet finally clear him, exposing a different culprit far more dangerous to the Baneans.

  15. "Star Trek: Voyager" Heroes and Demons (TV Episode 1995)

    Heroes and Demons: Directed by Les Landau. With Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Jennifer Lien. When Harry disappears during his Beowulf holonovel, Chakotay and Tuvok, sent to investigate, disappear as well. Not wanting to lose anymore crewmembers, the Doctor's transferred to the holodeck to investigate.

  16. Star Trek: Voyager

    Voyager is in pursuit of a rebel Maquis ship in a dangerous part of the galaxy when it is suddenly thrown thousands of light years away into the Delta Quadrant. With much of her crew dead, Captain Janeway is forced to join forces with the Maquis to find a way back home... Sci-Fi 1995. 8+. TV-PG. Starring Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson.

  17. Star Trek: Voyager

    Watch Full Episodes. Kathryn Janeway is the captain of a starship that is lost in space and must travel across an unexplored region of the galaxy to find its way back home. Starring: Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Robert Duncan McNeill, Ethan Phillips. TRY IT FREE.

  18. Watch Star Trek: Voyager

    S1 E1 - Caretaker Part 1. 16 January 1995. 46min. While searching for a missing officer, Captain Kathryn Janeway and the crew of the Starship Voyager are swept 70,000 light years from home. Store Filled. Free 7-day trial of Paramount+, auto renews at £6.99/month, purchase. Watch with Paramount+. Buy SD £1.89.

  19. Prime Video: Star Trek: Voyager Season 1

    The wildly successful Star Trek franchise continues as Capt. Kathryn Janeway and the crew of the U.S.S. Voyager follow a Maquis ship into the Badlands, and one species-saving decision later, find themselves in the Delta Quadrant, 70,000 light years away from the Alpha Quadrant, the Federation, and home. The two ships must join together to make it back, facing treacherous battles from the ...

  20. Watch Star Trek: Voyager · Season 1 Full Episodes Online

    Where to watch Star Trek: Voyager · Season 1 starring Kate Mulgrew, Robert Picardo, Roxann Dawson.

  21. Watch Star Trek: Voyager Season 1

    January 15, 1995. 1 h 31 min. 7+. While on a short-term mission to track an infiltrated Maquis cell, Capt. Kathryn Janeway and her newly launched U.S.S. Voyager crew -- and the Maquis fighter crew -- are drawn 70,000 lightyears to the far side of the Delta Quadrant by an alien seeking survival, calling itself "the Caretaker." Store Filled.

  22. Star Trek: Voyager (TV Series 1995-2001)

    Star Trek: Voyager: Created by Rick Berman, Michael Piller, Jeri Taylor. With Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Robert Duncan McNeill. Pulled to the far side of the galaxy, where the Federation is seventy-five years away at maximum warp speed, a Starfleet ship must cooperate with Maquis rebels to find a way home.

  23. I Can't Believe Star Trek: Voyager Didn't Switch Two Important Neelix

    If Voyager had switched which seasons "Jetrel" and "Fair Trade" appeared in, it would have improved the show's storyline and Neelix's character exponentially.Voyager's creative team conceived the story idea for "Fair Trade" as early as season 1, but the episode was put on the back burner to make room for "Jetrel" in the season's lineup.This was a mistake, given that both episodes' reveals ...

  24. Glenn Morshower's 5 Star Trek Roles Explained

    Morshower briefly appeared as the navigator on the USS Enterprise-B in Star Trek Generations before popping up in episodes of Star Trek: Voyager and ... Voyager Season 2, Episode 12 - "Resistance" ...

  25. NASA's Voyager 1 team is having success in repairing a worrying ...

    The Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 probes launched in 1977 on a mission to study Jupiter and Saturn but continued onward through the outer reaches of the solar system. ... After a 12.3 billion-mile ...

  26. Inside NASA's monthslong effort to rescue the Voyager 1 mission

    Inside NASA's 5-month fight to save the Voyager 1 mission in interstellar space. The Voyager 1 probe is the most distant human-made object in existence. After a major effort to restore ...

  27. "Star Trek: Voyager" Repentance (TV Episode 2001)

    Repentance: Directed by Michael Vejar. With Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Robert Duncan McNeill. Voyager rescues a prison warden and a set of prisoners that are scheduled to be executed testing their own ethical beliefs.

  28. Voyager 1 regains communications with NASA after inventive fix

    Voyager 1 is sending data back to Earth for the first time in 5 months ... Voyager 2, which is operating normally, has traveled more than 12.6 billion miles (20.3 billion kilometers) from our ...