Scene from star trek voyager episode "year of hell" - Voyager encounters an asteroid field with no shields and janeway risks her life to save the ship!
Jayfive276 yes. I got my hair chopped today..I thought it was too short..but..with me beautifying it..it definitely has the Janeway look circa Year of Hell. 😁 And I’m starting to like it.
You can tell from 0:55 to 1:18 that she's scared to death, but she does it anyway for the good of her ship and her crew. You have to admire that kind of selfless courage.
Well I'm going through Voyager and just got up to this episode. I have yet to see an episode I'd describe as "really crappy". On average I've found most episodes gripping. There have been just a few episodes that were a bit average. TNG, as great as it was, in my opinion had far more "really crappy" episodes at this same point through the show. I haven't seen anything yet on Voyager that comes close to episodes involving Deanna's mother, any season 1 episode, yet another klingon honour episode, Irish farmers, geordies issues with women etc. TNG has some of the very best star trek there will ever be but I think that makes people overlook the utter dross that there is plenty of in that show. Voyager seems to have the opposite problem where some people focus too much on some of the flaws of the show and overlook all of the excellent aspects of the show. In my opinion I think Voyager is massively underrated.
@@GozUnlimited I agree. I wouldnt say really crappy! there were times where much wasnt going on. And times where alot what going on. It was made more realistic. A lot of the newer shows today always have something tragic going on to have you at the edge of your seat the whole time to keep you interested in the show. But thats not really realistic.
We know McCoy did it, Crusher did it, the EMH did it, Flox (OMG) did it... not sure if Pulaski was around long enough and can't remember if Bashir ever relieved Sisko of command. I always love when the docs pull rank and threaten/remove people out of command. Guess it's a bias since I'm studying medicine at the moment. Good episode!!!
Thus began my crush on Captain Janeway. The two episode story, "Year of Hell" was to me a marriage of post apocalyptic survival drama and Stark Trekian science fiction. Brilliantly executed. I wish this was an entire season and not just a couple episodes.
+07malonese1 Issue though, it would piss off all the fans. Imagine, an entire season of events just wiped away because of a time event? Its as bad as an entire season being meaningless due to it all being a dream.
MnJiman Voyager utilized the time travel event in many episodes, including the final episode to get home. Personally, I do not mind the time travel plot as long as the story surrounding it is well written. An entire season of 'Year of Hell' as well written as the original two part episode would have more than made up for an ending similar to a time negation loop; if anything, I'd prefer a season of 'Year of Hell' if it meant getting a much, much better final episode with no time traveling at all. For example, the entire premise of Voyager was to get home, but in each and every episode they discovered little by little that home is where you make it, and family is who will stand by you in dark and troubling times. By the time Voyager got back to the Alpha quadrant, there had been Dominion Wars, Starfleet was building warships and space exploration was no longer their 'primary' mission. Wouldn't it have been better if they arrived home, only for the remaining Maquis had been arrested, 7 of 9 to be forcibly taken to a research facility, Voyager taken to a shipyard for being out of specs with 40% alien technology? The 'home' they were seeking would no longer exist, except for the home they had made for themselves on Voyager. The final episode could have been a daring heist from the remaining Starfleet crew to rescue the Maquis, 7 of 9 and to retake Voyager; a clash of ideologies that would force Starfleet to take a hard look at itself and more importantly, what it could become because of war and fear. Not....'time travel'....again. The final shot should have been Voyager going to warp towards an unknown region of space; literally Janeway and her crew continuing their journey, knowing that the home they were seeking was the last vestige of a forgotten time in Starfleet; something they would preserve, teach and maintain as they continued the exploration of the galaxy, bringing actual meaning and context to the entire series and the message it conveyed. Not....oh we're home and by the way, we could have sat next to the destroyed nothing we did really mattered since we just had to wait for a time travel event to get us home instantly. How many times did Janeway say she wouldn't use shortcuts and an easy, corrupt and possibly unethical way to get home? Only for future Janeway to break the Temporal Prime Directive, murder and steal to do just those things. It cheapened the entire series and to this day I cannot stand watching the final episode of Voyager. Give me a final episode like the one I described earlier and a season long 'Year of Hell' and I won't care in the slightest about a time travel negation ending for the latter. Besides, the use of time travel in 'Year of Hell' was the best use of time travel I have ever seen in a Star Trek series before with the exception of 'The Inner Light', which...wasn't really time travel I guess. Still amazing.
+MrStitty26 so season 3 of Enterprise? :D As slow as ENT started, season 3 was great, but then 4 was kind of a mixed bag. It had the same time-travel bullshit though, combined with terrible "you're the chosen one" garbage.
janeway did the right thing. I don't know if the doctor realizes that she had to delve in to that fire else Voyager would almost certainly have been destroyed
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EMH: You realize I am entering this in my official logs. You face the threat of court-martial. Janeway: This episode ends in a reset button, sucka. There won't be no logs! Writers: Problem solved!
+Chris Peplinski I'd agree if they didn't push the magic reset button at its end. The Year of Hell should have been a full season of STV with consequences lasting for the rest of the show. Imagine, Voyager would have emerged as a significantly altered ship with a new social structure, a fantastic basis for a whole slue of stories. But, no, the whole conservative "never really change anything" mentality that was going to ultimately destroy Star Trek on TV had long since taken hold. Read what Ronald Moore has to say about his time working with the STV team - it's a really depressing illustration of just how creativity bankrupt the show runners had become.
his mobile emitter would have melted and he'd be gone forever. the doctor may not be able to be harmed, but his mobile emitter still can be harmed. no mobile emitter, no mobile doctor.
And not only that, but how could they encounter the Krenim in this time line because they are now 9,500 light years closer to home than when they were when Kes encountered them?
The series doesn't explain it but I have heard about a book who involve alternate timelines: it mentioned the timeline explored by Kes and it explained a situation very similar to the Dark Frontier one: they used the borg technology to shorten their travel home; this is why they manage to see the Krenim Imperium also in the timeline visited by Kes. See you soon. Guido.
1:10: “tell the doctor I’ll be coming back with severe burns” And you know, dead from heat exhaustion and smoke inhalation. Still a cool scene, though.
They do have suits for hostile environments, and fire-fighting is a thing Navy ships have an obsession about. And they can't send the Doctor because deflector control i& ship systems isn't in his in his programming.
PEOPLE, IT'S JUST ENTERTAINMENT, ENJOY, ENJOY.PLEASE DON'T GO IN TO TO MUCH DETAILS. BUT THE IDEA THAT PEOPLE THINK THEY ARE DEAD, BUT NOT DEAD, BUT IN ANOTHER DIMENSION AND FIGHTING TO GET BACK TO THE REAL WORLD, IS VERY SCARY.
Exceptional circumstances. Had Janeway not risked her life, Voyager would've been destroyed by the relentless pelting of micro meteorites. So, is she reckless? Is she under extreme stress and emotional duress? Yes. Under normal circumstances, she'd be replaced by her first officer. But under these circumstances, every able minded person is needed for survival of the group. The Doctor was adhering to protocol too strongly. All he had to do was make his official statement for the record and then stop there.
@@avae5343 I recently finished Voyager and decided I would not watch Enterprise because it strayed too much from original Trek; I was initially on the fence about Voyager. I saw some clips of Picard and Discorvery, and safe to say, I'm loving Captain Archer!
@@avae5343 Oh, no, I would never touch Disc or Pic with a 10-foot pole. I know that they obliterate the lore and heart of star trek like how the movies blew up the timeline.
I'm sure it would take a higher temperature than that fire reached to melt the mobile emitter. It's from the 29th century. Data's technology was much earlier and even he won't be harmed by normal fire.
Oh my god, you guys talk too much. Voyager IS great. Not would be or is not. I know, personal opinion and so on but do you realy have to shoot against it every time? And if we are realistic, even in the ST universe you are not faceing the death every day or every week. Or did the Enterprise look like this every day? No. But i guess humens just need something what they can hate.If there are reasons for it or not.
It seems funny to me that Harry had the ability to see every detail of what Janeway was doing but couldn't just do it himself from the bridge. I'll bet she wasn't turning knobs and moving cables around.
Janeway finally put that pugnacious prick of a hologram in his place. Doctor, you are at the bottom of my list of Star Trek Medical Officers. 1.) Leonard McCoy 2.) Beverly Crusher 3.) Doctor Phlox 4.) Julian Bashir 5-99.) Every unnamed crew member that worked in Sickbay 100.) EMH Mk.1 (cause he's an arrogant bastard that Voyager should've dumped in a black hole the first chance they had).
They take ship's logs and and other such records seriously and autonomic system lockouts as well. The EMH is one, a natural extension of said ship's logs and lockouts and two in absence of an organic doctor due to Voyager's unique circumstances, they'd have to take it seriously. EMH could make the argument that is he or is he not sentient in the same vein Data did and unlike Data, EMH would have Data's case as a legal precedent with a very good chance of winning.
+dehdeh55 Probably because he was treating others, or his mobile emitter wouldn't have stood up to the conditions in the fire, or else maybe he just didn't have the skills.
Cuz the script needed Janeway to do it to demonstrate her recklessness in this episode by having her getting severely burned and nearly getting herself killed.
In real life, a younger faster person would have been better at the job - or at least Janeway could have worn a device that would allow her to be transported immediately once the job was done.
My question is how did they repair all that damage both inside and out? At this point the whole ship is little more than a floating pile of scrap metal. And how long would such repairs have taken.
What was it that actually caused the fire in Deflector Control? Did something damaged overload and ignite when the micro-meteoroids collided into Voyager?
Temporal mayhem caused by the bad guy, Voyager encountered beefed up Krenim ships with temporal torpdoes that can go through her shields because they exists in several phases of time at the the same time. The shields block only one phase, the one you're in, unless you modify them. Seven modified the shields but the ship was already heavily damaged, it just prevented the ship to be destroyed altogether.
Here they were operating with a less than skeletal crew and she wouldn't endager the lives of younger people, plus Voyager is like home so she'll defend it whatever the costs to her.
They didn't in this case. Janeway had to sacrifice the ship to cause a timeline reset. So rather than needing to repair the ship, it just never got damaged in the first place.
+madisonelectronic Where did that come from?! Also I do have a job and not that it matters but there's a very high probability that I earn more than you. Now fuck off you pathetic human being.
It was the writers, they wanted Voyager to be a "hero" ship. In reality the Enterprise D would face stomp the Defiant and the Voyager with no problems what so ever given the power levels, hull strength, and weapons available to each ship. The Defiant was so unrealistic given that it drew power from its engines to fire its phaser cannons, yet still zipped around at full speed and full weapon power. It was the writers who ruined the ships. No way Voyager survives half of what it did.
This was dumb, one of the dumbest things they ever did. 1 year played out on an entire episode. They should have made The Year in He'll a season. Long story arch, this is just lazy writing.