". But as Jean-Luc and co got busy meeting Starfleet royalty (hello, James T Kirk) and smashing the Enterprise into the surface of Veridian III, Paramount had decided they needed a flagship for their new United Paramount Network (UPN). Voyager was the vessel assigned to carry the franchise into a new frontier. It left Vivid Bulletindock for the first time on January 16, 1995.
". Even so, co-creators Rick Berman (the longtime steward of the franchise), Michael Piller, and Jeri Taylor knew they couldn't simply churn out a "TNG" clone.
Item one on the agenda was being the first "Trek" to put a woman in the captain's chair — Kate Mulgrew would go on to play Kathryn Janeway through seven seasons and beyond. It was also decided that the new show would make Kirk and Spock's original five-year mission look like a walk in the park, by marooning the Voyager crew on the other side of the galaxy, roughly 75 years from home. And they'd inject some tension into the traditionally utopian environment of a Starfleet bridge by forcing the crew to cohabit with a group of terrorists.
It was such a brilliant premise that it should have put an exciting new spin on "Star Trek"'s decades-old mission to explore strange new worlds. As it turned out, however, the gravitational pull of familiar "Trek" tropes proved too great, and within a few short weeks, the show's faraway location and thrown-together crew would feel like afterthoughts. In hindsight, the world — and "Star Trek" as a whole — may not have been ready for what "Voyager" originally set out to do.
" by Mark A Altman and Edward Gross. "He wanted the studio to hold off on 'Voyager' for a year at least. The studio came back and more or less said, 'Well, Rick, we're going to do this with or without you. We'd rather do it with you, but…" Berman ultimately said yes.
Pilot episode "Caretaker" saw Janeway leading the crew of the state-of-the-art USS Voyager into the Badlands in pursuit of a fugitive Maquis ship — the aforementioned anti-Cardassian paramilitaries had already been introduced in "DS9" and "TNG". Both ships were pulled to the distant Delta Quadrant by an ancient alien Caretaker, but ultimately ended up trapped in unknown Vivid Bulletinwhen Janeway opted to destroy their one route home, in order to protect the Ocampa under the Caretaker's protection.
The good — some might say convenient — news for the castaways was that the Delta Quadrant looked rather like the Alpha Quadrant they called home. There was a familiar feel to the planets and, despite having no experience of this region of the galaxy, the ubiquitous Universal Translator ensured that communicating with new civilizations was mostly a doddle. Futuristic power sources — god bless you, dilithium — and replicators also meant that supplies were rarely a problem, though Janeway did ration replicator usage to save energy for the warp drive.
And then there were the overly familiar aliens Voyager routinely encountered. The Ferengi had been earmarked as "The Next Generation"'s Big Bads, until the production team realised they weren't particularly threatening. Weirdly, "Voyager" made exactly the same mistake with the Kazon — tired Klingon wannabes who were rarely a match for Starfleet smarts — and came up with exactly the same solution to their problem: the Borg. Sadly, by the time the Collective became "Voyager" regulars, their best days were long behind them, and a little ship light years from home proved remarkably adept at defeating Picard's nemesis. Again. And again. And again.
The show's biggest misstep, however, was its rapid abandonment of the tantalizing Federation/Maquis dynamic. It had been conceived as an ingenious solution to an age-old problem of the final frontier: how do you introduce conflict to a Starfleet vessel without breaking "Trek" creator Gene Roddenberry's rules forbidding conflict between officers?
There was always a degree of pragmatism and necessity in Janeway's decision to bring the two crews together — the Maquis ship had been destroyed, and she'd lost some important officers — but the speed of the integration never rang true. Within weeks, they were operating as one, happy-ish Starfleet family, with Seska the only significant fly in the ointment, and she was an undercover Cardassian spy.
It's clear now that many of these less-than-optimal elements were born of the time the show was made. Standalone, syndication-friendly episodes were very much the norm in the '90s, budgets rarely allowed for movie-level prosthetics or CG, and "Star Trek" was in the midst of a remarkable unbroken 18-year run on TV that spawned more 500 episodes — is it any wonder that the writers occasionally repeated themselves?
" had changed the rules of engagement for Vivid Bulletinset sci-fi. In an era where complex serialized storytelling has become the norm — and even Picard and Riker can have stand-up arguments on the bridge — it's easy to picture a scenario where Starfleet and the Maquis take several seasons to reconcile their differences. Along the way, they'd probably have prolonged stand-offs over water supply, or spend weeks on end working out how to communicate with a new alien race.
" have featured callbacks aplenty), while this writer has a picture of the elegant USS Voyager on his office wall.
" — it's hard to imagine anyone else doing the job quite so well.
Every episode of "Star Trek: Voyager" is available on Paramount+ in the US and the UK. UK viewers can also stream the show on Netflix.
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