I feel so bad for Janeway in this episode, esp when you actually see the metal prods being shoved and twisted into her skull. But lmao Mulgrew had quit smoking this episode and tapped into feeling miserable for her being so mean to the crew and then at the end tapped into 17 hr nicotine rage for her delighted insanity at the aliens 😄 iconic
Wait, you *increased* Janeway's adrenaline and dopamine levels, deprived her of sleep, threatened her crew and let her know it was you who did it? Were you *trying* to commit suicide?
Even after the alien scientist sheds her invisibility and addresses her directly, Janeway refuses to look at her. It's her way of saying "This is not a negotiation. This is me establishing dominance over you. You can either submit or die, and I really don't care which one you choose."
@@JnEricsonx I just found out that Jeffery Combs, who played Thy'lek Shran in Star Trek: Enterprise also played Weyoun in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. Btw, I'm still waiting for a Star Trek series with an Andorian as one of the main characters serving on the bridge of a Star Fleet spaceship.
I remember when this first aired, I screamed "YEAH!" when one of the alien vessels disintegrated when trying to escape. One of my favorite episodes from Voyager.
I love the stupidity of the aliens to think they still have control by threatening the captains life when the captains clearly ok with dying from her actions🤣
“You’re not in control here!” You don’t suppose those made Jurassic World have watched Voyager and remembered this line? Asking because it’s *nearly* the same when Claire said it to Owen.
what temp does the hull melt at I am just curious they never say it in the show just hull outer hull temp has reached 9 thousand degrees not what it melts at which would add to the suspense
One thing that really gets me about this scene. Janeway didnt even hesitate to start CPR, probably the only medical thing she knows how to do. Didnt give up on that lady until she had to. She really would do anything to save every one of them. Not that other captains wouldn’t, but I don’t think there was ever a time where the captain was literally performing CPR trying to keep someone alive.
I like how it represents their situation too, they're stuck with no help from their galactic superpower allies and they use everything they have at their disposal, no matter whether they had the newest alien technology or were using methods thousands of years old to get by
Well this was an outdated CPR technic belonging to late 20th century. These days its all about chest compression, if you are doing it right there is no need for mouth to mouth oxygen delivery.
Bad move Aliens, Janeway without her coffee is like Picard without his earl grey, hot, or Kirk without his Romulan ale. The results are usually unpleasant.
Henchman Twenty1 That would also be my last straw, too. Don't fuck with me when I'm cooking my peppers...and I can't live without my coffee, so I'd make a terrible Starfleet captain. Janeway gets a pass here.
I met kate last year at the Rio, in Vegas. She is even more beautiful in person. I was also late to her table and almost missed her, but before they packed it up she gave me her autograph , I was the last one. Classy lady, she waited for me as I huffed up there, and then she smiled a me and then I knew she wasn't just an actress. Kate is a lovely kind woman who takes care of her fans, she called me a dear and then I walked on clouds all night. I also came from Anchorage, Alaska, from cool mountain air to meet her, to go all that way for that moment. It was one of the best times of my life.
astrangeone Kate is a gem, a real person, and she doesn't put on airs like she's better than everyone else. She's also beautiful in person, a peaches and cream complexion that would make a 20 year old envious. Kate is tops, I was not disappointed to travel from the top of the Earth (Alaska) to a dessert just to get her autograph. My roommate and I were in Anchorage the Winter previous, when we found out she was going to be there , we said ok, that's it , we're booking airfare and rooms. It was worth it, the highlight of our trip, and she made it all worthwhile.
pjgumby Kate Mulgrew was the reason I got my Fan Expo passes. I can't wait to meet her in person, and her voice makes me smile. Kind of that "whiskey and cigarette" voice. I have no idea how I'm going to afford the rest of Fan Expo.
CandyLaStar Considering Janeway went through the "year of hell" and all Picard did was survive the assimilation, I'd say that Janeway is a lot physically tougher than Picard is. Picard however was a rough character in his youth, so he does have some "dirty fighting" tactics as well. I'd probably say they are well matched. Except Janeway has spent a good deal of her career in hardship (essentially stranded away from Starfleet, while Picard was basically pampered)...I'd say that my money is also on Ms Kathryn Janeway. :)
astrangeone Completely agree! Even to add to that point she was the leader of a mini federation in the void, and worked to make deals with the borg, and many other races like the kay-son. She forsure was the better of the two.
I love how it kills one of those alien ships they were like I can kill you in an instant that didn't save their ship with that idle threat the clearly had no control despite being able to kill them all in an instant
Even if the first ship didn't get destroyed immediately, it still couldn't escape the gravitational field of the pulsars. They would've needed to go beyond Warp 9.99 to escape and considering their size, I don't think they had that functionality.
you know what's funny that ensign with sever adrenal stress that's me I'M SERIOUS MY ADRENALINE SYSTEMS ARE RUNNING THAT HOT HAVE BEEN SINCE I WAS A CHILD WHICH IS WHY EVEN IF I FAST FOR A DAY MY BLOOD SUGAR READING FOR A BLOOD SUGAR TEST COME BACK HIGH BECAUSE ADRENALINE IS TECHNCALLY SUGAR DUDE AND MY blood pressure is 127 over 65 not some insane number like the doctor says she has
It's not plot armor. This is obviously the work of Scotty! He wrote the book on engineering after all. Always overestimate the time/hull stress/pressure/energy/etc you need so that you'll seem like a miracle worker.
What you quoted is first part of what he said. Actually, the relevant part was the second part: When writing technical manuals and specifications for the piece of equipment, always under-estimate slightly the amount of stress and assorted beating it can take. Because there will always be engineers finding themselves in situations when they have to dial some part to eleven and hope it works out. Now I am wondering how many thousands of lives Scotty has saved during decades he did that. Let's say that there is piece of equipment which can work at 500 gigawhiz flawlessly for 99% of the time (as in, you can use it for decades at that capacity), 600 gigawhiz for 95% of the time (10 years of constant use), 800 gigawhiz for 50% at the time (5 years) and 1000 gigawhiz for 25% of the time (1 full year of unlimited use, but it has a chance to blow up in 6 months). And Scotty writes that the limit is 600 gigawhiz, but you should really use it at 500 gigawhiz for optimum effectiveness. So when some poor engineering bastard is forced to use it at 800 gigawhiz, he really seems like a miracle worker to his captain because he actually has better chance to survive the shenanigans than even he (the engineer) knows. And then the crisis is averted and some other ship gets into shit again and the engineer says "You know, I heard that engineer at *previous ship* made it run at 800 gigawhiz for 20 minutes" And captain is like "But we need them to run at 1000 gigawhiz for 5 minutes. They are going to blow. We are all going to die!" Engineer: "But what other choice do we have here?! We need at least 30% of gadgets to stay intact for us to survive." Captain: "Ok, make it so." And 75% of gadgets miraculously survive, even though effort at some places went up to 1100 gigawhiz! Captain: "Engineer, you are a miracle worker and a lifesaver!"
Janeway is insane on a *good* day! Those aliens should have done more background-checking before they decided to turn the dial on her crazy up to eleven!
hahahahahahha... shes a good captain, and shes gona be a fantastic federation admiral, maybe shes the reason picard finally decides to take a few decades off so he doesnt have to deal with her commandeering him to go find a new source of coffee so she can really stay focused and alert while dealing with negotiations with other empires :/ Janeways probably half the reason the JJ abrahams universe has a time anomalie, Tal Shier probably was trying to find a way to deal with her influence at the negotiations tables... they ended up destroying Romulus atleast temporarily instead :/
I love that line, "Seems like I'm trying to crush this ship like a tin can." and she says it without drama, just a matter of fact. Wow, now that's cool!
Yeah, it was sort of a bluff, but not really. I mean, clearly she didn't want to destroy Voyager, but she knew it would be worse to let the aliens continue. Thinking about it, it's kind of a shame that the Voyager crew never took up poker night the way the Enterprise-D crew did. I bet even Seven wouldn't be able to tell when Janeway was bluffing.
@@Tantalus010 That's PRECISELY why they DON'T play poker on Voyager! Janeway ran them off the tables for 2 months. Finally, they gave up, and switched to pool.
Aren't they like 500 years in the future? With food replicators everywhere, I don't think they'd have cans. Imagine using a figure of speech about some kitchen item 500 years ago - seems pretty archaic. ;)
@@ColinFox We still say something is horse and buggy thinking although horses and buggys aren't the norm for traveling nowadays. What's to say that tin cans didn't have their use in the 23rd century?
Some people claim Janeway's method if regaining control of Voyager is questionable. But we must remember she was making a command decision under circumstances that had limited her options in a very extreme way. The aliens had left her no means of negotiating. Her prime duty is in defending her crew and then the ship. I really can't think of how she could have done better. I would welcome anyone to explain what other options she might have had.
Picard faced much the same issue. His solution was to arm the selfdestruct. When the alien relented, they were able to remove the threat immediately, with no damage to ship or crew. He was in complete control of the risk from first moment to last. A plan with a 95% chance to kill you all even if it works is a bad plan.
Well, Kate Mulgrew was not very fond of Jeri Ryan anyway. I guess she was afraid of the competition. I remember an interview with Mulgrew where she said she hated how 'Voyager' supposedly had turned into 'The Jeri Ryan Show'. Sounds like she was a _bit_ envious of Ryan.
I have always wondered what material that voyagers hull was made out of to take 9000 degrees and not melt just turn red then again it's the future so it must be some amazing new metal to take that kind of heat you know
@@coren5911 what is duranium's melting temp they don't say so in a way the hulls at 9000 degrees does not mean much unless you know what that minor detail is I mean yeah it could be a problem to crew members closer to the hull but that's a separate issue
@@raven4k998 My very limited understanding of the Fed's tech is this: They made an agreement with the Romulans and Klingons, whereby those two got to develop cloaks, but the Fed couldn't (forget why). As a consequence of this however, the Fed focused on making super-durable ships. Fed ships can't cloak, but they're hardier and tougher. This does give some credence to the possibility that they might have a better than... usual(?)... chance to survive here.
@@Aeroldoth3 it was the treaty of algeron that prohibits them from developing cloaking tech so long as the Romulan Star empire exists they cannot make cloaking tech
This was true method acting; during filming Kate Mulgrew (a smoker) was going 24 hours without a cigarette. So her misery/aggression was 100% real. I’m a smoker, I recognize a nicotine withdrawal instantly.
I didn't know that but it makes total sense. I am a smoker too. I once quit and my partner at the time threatened to leave me if I didn't start smoking again I was so angry and irritable all the time. The withdrawal is absolutely brutal.
Fortunately Tuvok is calculating those odds based on this knowledge of the engineering specifications of the ship and as Scotty said a good engineer always leaves plenty of tolerance.
Great character, yes. Can you honestly say if the plot wasn't set up keep voyager's journey going that the ship would have lasted five minutes in the Delta Quadrant with her as Captain?
You don’t suppose those made Jurassic World have watched Voyager and remembered this line? Asking because it’s *nearly* the same when Claire said it to Owen.
So unfortunate one of those ships seemed to get away. I was hoping Janeway would turn around and send them a complimentary photon torpedo to go with all that research data.
70,000 light years from home, from support, from back up. Facing a 75 year journey she kept rank and order and discipline. She made them feel like they were still Star Fleet, no matter how far from home they may be. She is legendary.
STFU - This show was one of the first in a long line of Men Drool, Gurl Power Rules. Clearly you're trying to get one of the female writers to sleep with you, stop SIMPing and get some "T" therapy.
***** It amazes me that Federation starships can survive flying through something like a binary pulsar yet against the Dominion they were getting blown up left and right. Although the fact that many of the ships fighting in the war were old 23rd century relics like Mirandas and Excelsiors (and probably some Constitution refits in there somewhere) it's probably no wonder that the UFP was losing so many ships in that war :-P
Yep. You hit it right on the head Amendolea. The Defiant and Galaxies did much better throughout the war. They apparently didn't put the Lakota upgrades to the Excelsior on too many ships...unfortunately.
3Rayfire Upgrading such old starships was probably more trouble than it was worth. In order to be able to have an Excelsior-class be able to channel Galaxy-class phaser power through its old phaser banks would require a major upgrade to its main power source for one thing (a standard power/warp core for an Excelsior wouldn't've been producing even half the power necessary to produce such firepower) and for another thing major upgrades to the power relay systems....since even if they could get a power source for the Excelsior capable of producing enough power to power the upgrades, without corresponding upgrades to the power relay system then the minute they tried to fire said upgraded phasers it would've blown every power relay that that old Excelsior had :/
Ehhh..... Plot armor would be, "Captain, the vulcans showed up and shielded us, no damage to the ship." They were clearly limping after they went through.
I love the different aspects of Janeway that you see in this scene. The captain and protector who takes ownership of everything that happens to her ship and crew, the tactician who works out a winning strategy to achieve her goals and the scientist who applies her knowledge to the situation to work out the best outcome. Just a brilliant scene.
This was very similar to Picard activating the auto destruct to prevent the crew from being tortured in the season 2 episode against Nagilum. Only this is more like playing chicken with a hot rod at full speed near a cliff.
It's a little Different. These experiments would kill her whole crew. Voyager couldn't get anywhere missing 1/3 the crew at random. Picard could have just called for a pickup.
I disagree. I think what Janeway did was way more ballsy, and it was not playing chicken. I doubt Picard would've sacrificed the entire crew. Picard could've turned off auto destruct, so he was indeed bluffing. Janeway did not have the option of turning back. Once she was committed, she was all in. There was no bluff. So, had Janeway been playing chicken, she drove straight off the cliff and landed on the other side
A great episode and finale. Janeway pulled her Boss card and handled her damn business. Killing one of her crew in front of her, what the hell were they thinking? Did not who they were F***ing with.
Captain Janeway can be one hell of a badass! She doesn't let the Kazon, the Borg or even her own future self try to control her! This is a perfect example of a "decisive, risk-taking moment," especially when Voyager and her crew are confronted with hostile aliens. Janeway can kick ass, even if it means her own death and the destruction of Voyager.
@@oddish4352 Looking how the surviving ship burned opposite to Voyager, decelerating (and therefore doing an opposite of a slingshot maneuver, required to clear the pulsars)... I'd say all of them were turned into atomic spaghetti
@@caav56 Considering what they were doing, it's hard to feel any sympathy. Janeway told them to stop, and they not only refused, but then they killed a crewman. There are consequences for things like that.
I was thinking that this was a very Klingon Tactic. Random Officer "Sir, The intruders have boarded the ship,they outnumber us 10 to 1!" Captain "GOOOD, we are assured a place in STO VO KOR! Aim the Bird of Prey for the Ground! FOR GLORIOUS SLAUGHTER! KAPLAH!!! "
I met Kate Mulgrew at a Star Trek convention some years back, she is a lovely person and she appreciates her fans, I was so honored to meet her, she also called me a dear and I was over the moon. She truly is a beautiful person, inside and out. She truly is a stellar person, one of the most best moments of my life. She is also just as beautiful in person as on film, she doesn't need make up, 20 years olds would be envious of her completion, she was older, but I'm telling you, this is and will always be a beautiful woman and the best Caption of Star Trek!
Lovi Poekimo :) I've had insomnia on and off all my life, and the idea of some group FORCING me to go without sleep really touched me on a visceral level-- I guess we all felt that.
I know humans with similar ethics. All 'clinical' and 'in the name of logic or science' with zero compassion or humanity. A bit like some of the Nazi era savages
This is the episode that made Janeway one of the all time greats. Up until now, Voyager was a happy-go-lucky trek across unknown space. After this scene, she bent the universe to her whim. Everything wanted to kill her crew, and she knew that the only way to survive was to use her instincts. Janeway finally understood the prime directive
i feel like thats a George Lucas touch having it have eyes and a mouth as it rocks side to side like its almost a droid... seriously he did over see the special effects, do not be surprised if he was trying to give the ship a bit of extra character and a sense of artificial intelligence
I love that she got her revenge for her murdered crew, in that one of the aliens ships was pasted, probably taking as many or more of them than she lost. Well done Janeway.
The guest star who played the head alien female did a great job. Her ability to portray heartlessness, arrogance and a superiority attitude helped us all cheer when the aliens died!
A fabulous episode and sequence. I remember reading an article in the Star Trek Voyager magazine back in the day about this episode. Kate Mulgrew had given up smoking when this episode was being filmed. I think her nicotine withdrawals made this episode! I miss Voyager!
And this is exactly why I love her. She wasn't perfect, she just did what needed to be done and wore the consequence. No other captain could have survived for 7 years in the Delta Quadrant
TARDIS Tales Agreed, except for the last statement: Sisko could have done it. He and Janeway were the only captains who had to make genuinely hard decisions, facing bad consequences no matter what they did. They didn't have all the deus ex machinas that Kirk and Picard got so often.
***** Agreed...but only because Picard always had the luxury of convenient plot twists to make sure he never had to make a really tough decision. Janeway and Sisko were the only captains who regularly had truly tough choices with no "right" answers.
YT Cyberpunk Hmm... I kind of disagree a little bit, Picard had to do a lot of scary mediation work which involved big decisions, but yeah, you're right in that the nature of both Sisko's and Janeway's situation was pretty unique, they really hadn't much room to handle. They basically were forced to be radical.
Zona Rosa Matter of perspective. The deus ex machina here is just externalized to the director. She did not blew up, because the writer chose so. This was a gamble, and it worked out, that's it.
Actually I would’ve liked to see Voyager fire a couple of photon balls just to get rid of those cowards, but seeing one ship blow up was a consolation price at best. Had it been a Klingon vessel, well. It would’ve been not only torpedoes , hah
They're going to ruin the new star trek, aren't they :( By pandering to whatever bs is in the news at that moment. If only they would look at this series and realise it was great without their agendas.
If she'd actually gone for 96 hours without sleep, that could very literally be the case. People generally start hallucinating and acting irrationally after about 72 hours of sleep deprivation. Now stack an extra day on that and whatever else the aliens had been doing with her brain chemistry... yeah, I'd say "crazy" is definitely a closer fit than "reckless"
@@IronSpyder-ky2lk Sisko is another pet of godlike aliens. Once a captain says "I'll just play chicken and see if god saves me" he's not a hero anymore. He's a pawn. Then when he's going to let his son get killed and he's crying about how he won't go against his masters, just sickening.
Ironically, if the aliens had not doped up Janeway and deprived her of sleep she probably would NOT have done what she did. But when you push someone to the edge, sometimes you get cut. (See what I did there?)
@@Oldnotweak Possibly. I remember watching this episode when it first aired and cheered my butt off when one of the two alien ships blew up while detaching (hoping it'd be both).
I'll admit to blatant sexism when it came to Janeway, I didn't think a female captain would be able to exert the same level of authority, but I was pleasantly surprised, janeway is the perfect captain for voyager.
@@ScottyDont1945It’s the same now a days, like with Doctor Who. Everyone was concerned when there was a female Doctor, and their concerns were proven. Unfortunately/fortunately for me, before I could write the whole series off, my mom got hooked on it -_- but I got to see, around mid of the series I think? They accidentally showed they were perfectly capable of writing an amazing Female Doctor Who. But they had that character be written off to keep sucking the non-existent dick of the shitty one. Motives always shine through with writing. If motives are genuine and innocent, like here with Star Trek, you’ll find incredible works. If they’re scheming, conniving, gaslighting, manipulating, and focusing solely on checking boxes, you’ll get garbage like Doctor Who was/is today.
she had actually the most difficult task from all 3 captains, Picard, Sisko, Janway I mean. 1. No reinforcements 2. Picard had Data as a super strong Android with the ability to calculate everything, also Deana Troy could tell him everything he needed to know, about the mind of his enemy. 3. Sisko had ODO, who could impersonate everybody, ALSO Sisko had the prophets who saved his life and the lifes of every human by destroying the Dominion Armada in entering the Alpha Quadrent. Also Jadzia, who had like 500 "mind" years. Janeway had only Tuvok, and maybe KES, but Kes was only an unexperienced child, didn't do much. Later she "acquired 7of9", then it was bit easier, but still she wasn't DATA, or a shape shifter, or a prophet for that matter. Well the Doctor, with his mobile emitter was kinda helpful. So she had to "improvise" ;)
@@joet7136 yeah the second ship got the slower death. Even if they were able to make it the first one exploding already shows their hulls were far weaker than voyager in that situation so exploding shortly after the scene is a guarantee.
@@kishascape Think you're right. Right after they lifted away from Voyager Janeway says that she can't break free from the gravitational forces. That other ship is dust.
One of my favourite Janeway moments. I like her and Sisko best when they're doing the sort of psychotic (kamikaze star diving, face-mashing time erasing ships) or sociopathic (poisoning planets, murdering Romulan senators) things that Picard would never be caught doing.
Yeah Picard is just the kind of guy who will park you between the Enterprise and Three Bird of Prey, blow up the flammable coolant when you won't, or put bitches in their place diplomatically.
you mean the same Picard that went into Romulan territory on the whim of a defector ... got caught ... only to have two Aces (Klingon ships) in reserve.
I love watching Janeway hit fuck it. From plan A, straigh to play Z. It may be reckless, but its genious. It shows Janeway understand power...just like she understands fear 😉. This is probably my favorite scene in all Trek.
Knowing what it is like to be awake for several days due to intense pain I can say she acted spot on. You reach a limit where any filters you had were gone. Your speech, emotions, and senses become raw. It's not pretty to see.
I mean, sure, ST:VOY had its problems, some of which stemmed from characterizations being all over the place, while others were shaped like _salamander babies_. But when the writers actually got their shit together, Voyager had some of the best episode and many of the most badass scenes in Star Trek history. I love this show so much.
Let’s share our favourites? I love them all. In particular Neelix and the afterlife- I was intrigued how it broke him, yet he didn’t magically heal- a process of pain, support systems, and the road to acceptance. Seven of nine’s ‘borg child’ (Seven: you are hurting me. Borg: “You will adapt.”; that really got me feeling for the human condition and death. I also liked Enterprise; I found the forced mind meld on T’pal a bit disturbing, but I admired they took such a heavy, dark, sadly common idea (abuse and the authorities).
I can appreciate the wreckless feeling somebody feels being kept up for days on end as your brain chemicals go through the roof. Kate makes the scene so convincing in her strained tone and look of running on adrenaline fumes. Probably mentioned but kate quit many years of heavy smoking not long before she filmed this episode and i can appreciate that it may not have been entirely the acting that gave this brilliant performance...what with the long hours and shooting schedule and her bodh crying out for nicotine with chequered aleep patterns..i know that feeling very well.
I think the part about this scene that showcases Janeway the most is the way she keeps fighting to save that crewman even after the EMH says she's dead. Janeway is on a knife edge ALL THE TIME because she's responsible for getting that crew home and there's no way to for them to be backed up by Starfleet. She's entirely isolated as a Captain in a way that none of the other series Captains are, and she takes that role to an extreme level because of it. Every single lost crew member is personal for her.
Which is why I don't understand these peanut-sized brain morons who say this was "TNG" lite. Opinions are beautiful. One can argue when the Borg became pussies and even if "Voyager" was as good as "TNG" and "DS9" but there is no way this is "TNG" lite. It was darker than "TNG" even if not darker than "DS9." This too was arguably anti-"TNG." This show had the most thrills along with "DS9."
God when I saw Janeway the first time I was so chauvinist, I hated her guts. Female captain, after Kirk, Picard NEVER.... But Janeway is my favorite captain ever. She was all that Mr.Roddenberry wanted star trek universe wanted to be different...strong badass, mother, boss, scientist, human....I adore Scientific method episode... and 7 of 9.... ruled...
aldo alda I agree she was the embodiment of what his ideals were voyager was the best and closest to what he wanted he would be so proud I think he would have like voy best
its ok to make mistakes, the key thing is to learn... im still working on learning from my horrible horrible life mistakes :/ its painful sometimes, but i think im ready to just let go eventually and move on with life :/
I still don't like her acting style. She just doesn't evoke any emotions. A "Sigourney Weaver type" as captain would have been awesome. Just imagine how Sigourney would have acted this scene out..
This was what I liked about that series - the captain jumped in and helped when stuff was happening. She couldn't pick up replacement crew so she knew every role (every person) was critical.
I can't remember a whole lot of individual Voyager plotlines because I watched the show when I was a kid, but this episode has stuck with me. Janeway was pissed at being a lab rat and she was going to do whatever it took to get her crew free.
Karlo Tvrtko I do not think a d7 would at all, a ship 80 years old just does not have the same types of modern systems and enhancements it would need to survive a star. Jemhadars ships, again if they can be taken out by runabouts then a star is a whole different magnitude of destruction. A bioship is a living vessel and not sure how it would react to the sheer forces and what not of a star, I just do not know. Federation ships like I said starfleet engineers really know how to bang a ship together so probably most if not all would come out the other side a little worse for wear. Vorcha sure probably they are good tough ships as well. Cardassian for me is a coin flip.
Romulan Warbird? Hell no, they're fragile. Good firepower. Except a Scimitar of course. Klingon ships are pretty tough though. They're mostly made of armor anyway. Ferengi ships are a catch 22 and depends on how much was paid. Was a cheapo ship, or the best starship that money can buy. Also consider that the scientist that invented Metaphasic shields was a Ferengi. Metaphasics would've been perfect here, if she actually cared about the appearance of survival.
So freaking cool, Captain Janeway wasn't going to let ANYONE take control of her ship. That's what always kept her ship safe and her crew in command. If you wear the pants you better make the hard right choices! One of the best Captain's in Star Trek history!!!
MarginalSC Yeah, but she took it to the limit, but I do remember when Picard and number one were in a count down and had only one second to spare when they aborted. But, stay with me, Caption Jane way didn't have a button to push and end it all, she had to depend on her crew to get out of that binary and ride it to the end. It was a rash move though, she would rather die with her crew than be medical subjects to these aliens. If they survived great, if they didn't she would have saved everyone from a slow death. It was a gutsy move, hardly even a 50 50 chance but she still beats the odds and somehow, I think she knew she could have. I do think she was reckless, but I also think she a calculated risk, she had some smarts.
well, you do have a point. But she did save the ship because she had some good back up, I love that line "Seems like I'm trying to crush this ship like a tin can." Capt, Janeway played poker, put all her chips in and won. She gambled, because she had no other choice, take it all or lose it all at that time> Yeah, time to play some poker!
***** well, you do have a point there, but it's not unlike other capt's who choose to push the auto destruct button, she at least made it to where there was a chance, she could have pushed that fatal button but she didn't and she had a chance in hell, and she took it.
Alien: "If you try to stop our experiments on you I'll kill you and your crew."
Janeway: "Not if I do first!"
Alien: "Exactly...wait, what?"
Alien: "I WILL kill your crew!"
Janeway: "Then you get to test what kills you quicker. Burning to death, or being crushed. Have fun."
Sisko would not have waited this long
@@niyablake He probably would have nuked their homeworld. :P
@@TheEDFLegacy biogenic weapons
. When it came to war crimes Sisko was like F the prime directive
Lol
“I don’t think you realize YOU ARE NOT IN CONTROL HERE ANYMORE” she nailed that line.
the best line in all of Trek and my favorite episode of Voyager
Janeway tells the transgender alien off
@@robintexas91 the next is when she said Starfleet Captains Don't Easily Sucome To Fear. And Finally fear says DRAT!
@@robertclopton8942 GFY.
I feel so bad for Janeway in this episode, esp when you actually see the metal prods being shoved and twisted into her skull. But lmao Mulgrew had quit smoking this episode and tapped into feeling miserable for her being so mean to the crew and then at the end tapped into 17 hr nicotine rage for her delighted insanity at the aliens 😄 iconic
Wait, you *increased* Janeway's adrenaline and dopamine levels, deprived her of sleep, threatened her crew and let her know it was you who did it? Were you *trying* to commit suicide?
They DIDNT want to be discovered
not exactly how it happened. If it were not for Seven of Nine's unique attributes they might have never realised what was going on
@@mistermornevanderberg They are Starfleet. They would have figured it out.
What's faster? Committing suicide or taking Janeway's coffee away?
@@cinnabarsorcerer8970 With her adrenaline levels and dopemine levels that high there is little coffee would do!
" I never realized you thought of me as reckless, Tuvok."
"A poor choice of words. It was clearly an understatement." BRILLIANT.
"Fucking insane" would be the correct term.
Tuvok... star treks funniest Vulcan.
Vulcans are masters of shade
@@jonathanfenton2601 Russ probably said that, so everyone and the crew had a good laugh. Then the scene was re-shot.
OUCH!
You know you've pissed Janeway off when she starts piloting her own ship!
That's what you call taking command at the highest level!
pjgumby yes
Are you really Kate Mulgrew?
pjgumby no. But we are all the same.
pjgumby jk I am
Even after the alien scientist sheds her invisibility and addresses her directly, Janeway refuses to look at her. It's her way of saying "This is not a negotiation. This is me establishing dominance over you. You can either submit or die, and I really don't care which one you choose."
well why would she Janeway's is past the point of talking and is committed to ridding her ship from those savages💀💀
"Don't push the pink-skins to the thin ice."
Andorian proverb.
Jeffery Combs-a man who can play villains and heroes alike on a dime. Glad I met him.
They will drag you down with them
@@JnEricsonx I just found out that Jeffery Combs, who played Thy'lek Shran in Star Trek: Enterprise also played Weyoun in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. Btw, I'm still waiting for a Star Trek series with an Andorian as one of the main characters serving on the bridge of a Star Fleet spaceship.
@@atanvardo5730 Actually, he played two characters in Deep Space Nine. Weyoun was one, the other was the Ferengi Brunt, FCA Liquidator.
@@ki5aok Whoa! I didn't know that.
I remember when this first aired, I screamed "YEAH!" when one of the alien vessels disintegrated when trying to escape. One of my favorite episodes from Voyager.
what is happened when this alien simulated.
Me too!
Guys will look at that and go “Hell yeah!”
Then you can scream it again, because that second tiny vessel definitely did not escape the gravity of the binary pulsar.
Hey I did the same thing. Aww this is when Star trek was Star Trek.
"Enter the authorization code and change course IMMEDIATELY!" "I don't think you realize you are NOT in control here anymore" I love that line!
I love the stupidity of the aliens to think they still have control by threatening the captains life when the captains clearly ok with dying from her actions🤣
@@raven4k998 They aliens know the right and wrong way but they have never seen the janeway 😂😂😂
@@felixleong61 that is no excuse for doing the wrong thing and then getting your your people killed🤣🤣🤣
Janeway gets the best lines
“You’re not in control here!”
You don’t suppose those made Jurassic World have watched Voyager and remembered this line? Asking because it’s *nearly* the same when Claire said it to Owen.
Alien: You're being quite irrational, captain.
Janeway: *Fuck You*
Was that alien we see on one of those pods that exploded? If so, i call that justice lol
+Lee249 still it provides valuable data for the other ship
+FallenEpic i say fuck you o you i think you arent a real star trek fan hm ^^
FallenEpic she likes fuck you I'm the captain
FallenEpic "Welcome to the human condition, lady. You want rational, talk to Mr. Tuvok. He's our rationality expert."
For those who don't speak Vulcan: "It was clearly an understatement" translates roughly to "Holy shit you crazy bitch."
what temp does the hull melt at I am just curious they never say it in the show just hull outer hull temp has reached 9 thousand degrees not what it melts at which would add to the suspense
@The Shah of Iran yeah but how much over 9000? is it 9100? 9500? 10000?
Damn you beat me to it! haha
I also love how you can see her fighting a smile at the end.
@@michaelfawcett9935 She's not fighting it, she's just too damn tired to actually do it.
Picard: The diplomat
Sisko: The Pragmatist
Janeway: The mama bear
Wolfram More like the grizzly bear on decaf.
Jason Lee Trater To be fair, that was PTSD.
Napoleon, when told of a promising and brilliant officer is supposed to have asked if he was lucky. Like Kirk, Janeway was lucky.
Archer: the fuck up
@@umadbroimatroll7918 Hey. Archer was the PIONEER.
J: "I never realized you thought of me as reckless, Tuvok?"
T: "A poor choice of words; it was clearly an understatement"
That was good one :-)
Classic Tuvok (and Janeway, for that matter).
Man I hated this show most of the time but when it got good it got really good
That was a harder burn than those pulsars.
Brilliant.
It's somewhat cathartic to see Janeway toss science and diplomacy out the airlock for a plan that consists entirely of "fuck it" and "let's do it".
Good description of insomnia.
It's more effective than you might think.
@Zoe Kin Well, it's not effective *all* the time, or else every major strategic moment in history would amount to "fuck it, let's do this".
@@benjaminklaassen4722 Many of them are, it usually just depended on which side had that attitude at the time.
I wonder what drugs it took to make her just say fuck it and do it
One thing that really gets me about this scene. Janeway didnt even hesitate to start CPR, probably the only medical thing she knows how to do. Didnt give up on that lady until she had to. She really would do anything to save every one of them. Not that other captains wouldn’t, but I don’t think there was ever a time where the captain was literally performing CPR trying to keep someone alive.
I like how it represents their situation too, they're stuck with no help from their galactic superpower allies and they use everything they have at their disposal, no matter whether they had the newest alien technology or were using methods thousands of years old to get by
Well this was an outdated CPR technic belonging to late 20th century. These days its all about chest compression, if you are doing it right there is no need for mouth to mouth oxygen delivery.
The original series Kirk saved a boy's life with CPR and was mistaken for a god.
@@jakep1979 I thought chest compressions were only used after the heart has stopped beating.
@@calvingreene90 I AM KIROK!
This is what happens when aliens remove *coffee* from the replicator menu!
Bad move Aliens, Janeway without her coffee is like Picard without his earl grey, hot, or Kirk without his Romulan ale. The results are usually unpleasant.
+Henchman Twenty1 Well it was the last straw.
+Fodxp hatesgoogle or Sisco without baseball or his kitchen
dominic marino - Or burning his peppers using his cookware.
Henchman Twenty1
That would also be my last straw, too. Don't fuck with me when I'm cooking my peppers...and I can't live without my coffee, so I'd make a terrible Starfleet captain. Janeway gets a pass here.
I met kate last year at the Rio, in Vegas. She is even more beautiful in person. I was also late to her table and almost missed her, but before they packed it up she gave me her autograph , I was the last one. Classy lady, she waited for me as I huffed up there, and then she smiled a me and then I knew she wasn't just an actress. Kate is a lovely kind woman who takes care of her fans, she called me a dear and then I walked on clouds all night. I also came from Anchorage, Alaska, from cool mountain air to meet her, to go all that way for that moment. It was one of the best times of my life.
astrangeone Kate is a gem, a real person, and she doesn't put on airs like she's better than everyone else. She's also beautiful in person, a peaches and cream complexion that would make a 20 year old envious. Kate is tops, I was not disappointed to travel from the top of the Earth (Alaska) to a dessert just to get her autograph. My roommate and I were in Anchorage the Winter previous, when we found out she was going to be there , we said ok, that's it , we're booking airfare and rooms. It was worth it, the highlight of our trip, and she made it all worthwhile.
pjgumby
Kate Mulgrew was the reason I got my Fan Expo passes. I can't wait to meet her in person, and her voice makes me smile. Kind of that "whiskey and cigarette" voice.
I have no idea how I'm going to afford the rest of Fan Expo.
+astrangeone who would win in a fight Voyager or Enterprise? My money is on Janeway!! XD
CandyLaStar
Considering Janeway went through the "year of hell" and all Picard did was survive the assimilation, I'd say that Janeway is a lot physically tougher than Picard is. Picard however was a rough character in his youth, so he does have some "dirty fighting" tactics as well.
I'd probably say they are well matched. Except Janeway has spent a good deal of her career in hardship (essentially stranded away from Starfleet, while Picard was basically pampered)...I'd say that my money is also on Ms Kathryn Janeway. :)
astrangeone Completely agree! Even to add to that point she was the leader of a mini federation in the void, and worked to make deals with the borg, and many other races like the kay-son. She forsure was the better of the two.
You have to love how just absolutely balls to the wall insane this stunt was, and it pays off so beautifully
I love how it kills one of those alien ships they were like I can kill you in an instant that didn't save their ship with that idle threat the clearly had no control despite being able to kill them all in an instant
Even if the first ship didn't get destroyed immediately, it still couldn't escape the gravitational field of the pulsars. They would've needed to go beyond Warp 9.99 to escape and considering their size, I don't think they had that functionality.
I mean it had to; there was still more season left to go..
It only worked because she was prepared to die. Liberty or Death.
"balls to the wall" insane. Thank you for teaching me that phrase.
Kate rolled a 20.
she got OVER 9000!!!!
+CliventheTraveller Literally, seeing as Tuvok put their odds of getting out alive at 1 in 20.
Girl's MADE of natural 20's.
That would be such an awesome way to determine your plot line when writing... nice.
All bless RNJesus.
There's the right way, the wrong way and the Janeway. I love this episode.
Great saying!
And her favorite grocery store in the alpha quadrant is Safeway, since she is the opposite of that.
If she ever drove a semi before piloting a starship, she'd be Roadway :D
Ha ha!!! I like that!
When she smokes, she's Captain Highway.
Proving that Janeway is and will always be, a total badass.
you know what's funny that ensign with sever adrenal stress that's me
I'M SERIOUS MY ADRENALINE SYSTEMS ARE RUNNING THAT HOT HAVE BEEN SINCE I WAS A CHILD WHICH IS WHY EVEN IF I FAST FOR A DAY MY BLOOD SUGAR READING FOR A BLOOD SUGAR TEST COME BACK HIGH BECAUSE ADRENALINE IS TECHNCALLY SUGAR DUDE AND MY blood pressure is 127 over 65 not some insane number like the doctor says she has
"A poor choice of words. It was clearly an understatement."
How the hell does Tuvok define "understatement"? Friggen whackadoodle 😛
I think that's a polite way of saying "Bitch, you crazy!"
Reminds me of Spock when i was a kid
This is the kind of Star Trek jokes that I have always loved. It's a very succinct and clever one-liner.
I liked it too. All Vulcan characters are custom made for deadpan.
It's not plot armor.
This is obviously the work of Scotty!
He wrote the book on engineering after all.
Always overestimate the time/hull stress/pressure/energy/etc you need so that you'll seem like a miracle worker.
What you quoted is first part of what he said. Actually, the relevant part was the second part: When writing technical manuals and specifications for the piece of equipment, always under-estimate slightly the amount of stress and assorted beating it can take. Because there will always be engineers finding themselves in situations when they have to dial some part to eleven and hope it works out.
Now I am wondering how many thousands of lives Scotty has saved during decades he did that. Let's say that there is piece of equipment which can work at 500 gigawhiz flawlessly for 99% of the time (as in, you can use it for decades at that capacity), 600 gigawhiz for 95% of the time (10 years of constant use), 800 gigawhiz for 50% at the time (5 years) and 1000 gigawhiz for 25% of the time (1 full year of unlimited use, but it has a chance to blow up in 6 months). And Scotty writes that the limit is 600 gigawhiz, but you should really use it at 500 gigawhiz for optimum effectiveness.
So when some poor engineering bastard is forced to use it at 800 gigawhiz, he really seems like a miracle worker to his captain because he actually has better chance to survive the shenanigans than even he (the engineer) knows. And then the crisis is averted and some other ship gets into shit again and the engineer says
"You know, I heard that engineer at *previous ship* made it run at 800 gigawhiz for 20 minutes"
And captain is like "But we need them to run at 1000 gigawhiz for 5 minutes. They are going to blow. We are all going to die!"
Engineer: "But what other choice do we have here?! We need at least 30% of gadgets to stay intact for us to survive."
Captain: "Ok, make it so."
And 75% of gadgets miraculously survive, even though effort at some places went up to 1100 gigawhiz!
Captain: "Engineer, you are a miracle worker and a lifesaver!"
@@jo1stormlord
Gigawizz?
@Robin Gilliver
Gigawhiz - fictional unit of measurement of applied phlebotinum.
@@robinhyperlord9053 I think you only understand one of the words you used, and likely only about half the words other people use.
@@jackal59
I am no conformist, you child.
The amount of trust Vulcans like Tuvok put into their captains while they do stuff like this is staggering.
They have faith.
@@AngelSebastianLeon faith of the heart?
@@georgexenakis3545 I don't know, I was just trying to reference Spock. XD
@@AngelSebastianLeon He was just trying to reference the Enterprise theme song :)
@@VM-lt9wl I didn't see Enterprise yet, I'm still watching Voyager.
I was referencing the movie.
Janeway is insane on a *good* day! Those aliens should have done more background-checking before they decided to turn the dial on her crazy up to eleven!
Daniel S Bwahahaha! So true!
She's the best of them all!
hahahahahahha... shes a good captain, and shes gona be a fantastic federation admiral, maybe shes the reason picard finally decides to take a few decades off so he doesnt have to deal with her commandeering him to go find a new source of coffee so she can really stay focused and alert while dealing with negotiations with other empires :/
Janeways probably half the reason the JJ abrahams universe has a time anomalie, Tal Shier probably was trying to find a way to deal with her influence at the negotiations tables... they ended up destroying Romulus atleast temporarily instead :/
There is no such thing as crazy.
Insane? on any other day, you d be wrong. But that day... was a special day.
I love that line, "Seems like I'm trying to crush this ship like a tin can." and she says it without drama, just a matter of fact. Wow, now that's cool!
Yeah, it was sort of a bluff, but not really. I mean, clearly she didn't want to destroy Voyager, but she knew it would be worse to let the aliens continue. Thinking about it, it's kind of a shame that the Voyager crew never took up poker night the way the Enterprise-D crew did. I bet even Seven wouldn't be able to tell when Janeway was bluffing.
@@Tantalus010 That's PRECISELY why they DON'T play poker on Voyager! Janeway ran them off the tables for 2 months. Finally, they gave up, and switched to pool.
I wouldn't play poker with Janeway, Sisko, nor Picard FOR SURE.
Aren't they like 500 years in the future? With food replicators everywhere, I don't think they'd have cans. Imagine using a figure of speech about some kitchen item 500 years ago - seems pretty archaic. ;)
@@ColinFox We still say something is horse and buggy thinking although horses and buggys aren't the norm for traveling nowadays. What's to say that tin cans didn't have their use in the 23rd century?
Some people claim Janeway's method if regaining control of Voyager is questionable. But we must remember she was making a command decision under circumstances that had limited her options in a very extreme way. The aliens had left her no means of negotiating. Her prime duty is in defending her crew and then the ship.
I really can't think of how she could have done better.
I would welcome anyone to explain what other options she might have had.
She totally did the right thing. There was no other way out, and quite frankly who would want to live like that?
Picard faced much the same issue. His solution was to arm the selfdestruct. When the alien relented, they were able to remove the threat immediately, with no damage to ship or crew. He was in complete control of the risk from first moment to last.
A plan with a 95% chance to kill you all even if it works is a bad plan.
it shows that no one objected. except the aliens.
It wasn't the first time a captain had used the threat of destroying their own ship to cow an enemy, though I admit hers was the most badass.
Picard pulled the same thing in the nagillum episode
Kate Mulgrew quit smoking when this episode was filming so she was really miserable.
No shit? Well, that's some method right there.
From the Interviews ive seen of Jeri Ryan she said Kate Mulgrew was a bitch all the time
Well, Kate Mulgrew was not very fond of Jeri Ryan anyway. I guess she was afraid of the competition. I remember an interview with Mulgrew where she said she hated how 'Voyager' supposedly had turned into 'The Jeri Ryan Show'. Sounds like she was a _bit_ envious of Ryan.
@@Furzkampfbomber nothing at the fault of Jeri. that was the writers and producers
@@Furzkampfbomber well the skin tight uniform jeri wore wasn't whatever kate thought sent the right message.
I always hated those aliens most of all. Like, the immediate thought of "How fucking dare you." comes to mind.
I have always wondered what material that voyagers hull was made out of to take 9000 degrees and not melt just turn red then again it's the future so it must be some amazing new metal to take that kind of heat you know
@@raven4k998 it's duranium, sooo... yeah
@@coren5911 what is duranium's melting temp they don't say so in a way the hulls at 9000 degrees does not mean much unless you know what that minor detail is I mean yeah it could be a problem to crew members closer to the hull but that's a separate issue
@@raven4k998
My very limited understanding of the Fed's tech is this:
They made an agreement with the Romulans and Klingons, whereby those two got to develop cloaks, but the Fed couldn't (forget why). As a consequence of this however, the Fed focused on making super-durable ships. Fed ships can't cloak, but they're hardier and tougher.
This does give some credence to the possibility that they might have a better than... usual(?)... chance to survive here.
@@Aeroldoth3 it was the treaty of algeron that prohibits them from developing cloaking tech so long as the Romulan Star empire exists they cannot make cloaking tech
This was true method acting; during filming Kate Mulgrew (a smoker) was going 24 hours without a cigarette. So her misery/aggression was 100% real. I’m a smoker, I recognize a nicotine withdrawal instantly.
Wow...the first pull after that must be heavenly...
Garaks actor actually had claustrophobia, like his character.
In fact his makeup itself triggered a mild reaction.
Back to the ready room for a smoke after that one I'd say. ;)
Dangerous aliens: *Offers Death before Dishonor*
A nicotine deprived smoker: "Watch me do what I want, cause mama needs a cigarette"
I didn't know that but it makes total sense. I am a smoker too. I once quit and my partner at the time threatened to leave me if I didn't start smoking again I was so angry and irritable all the time. The withdrawal is absolutely brutal.
"I hope you were exagerating about those odds, Tuvok."
"I was. They aren't nearly that good."
That's the line I was expecting, honestly.
Fortunately Tuvok is calculating those odds based on this knowledge of the engineering specifications of the ship and as Scotty said a good engineer always leaves plenty of tolerance.
Janeway is a great character and a great captain. She gets a lot of undeserved hate.
Great character, yes. Can you honestly say if the plot wasn't set up keep voyager's journey going that the ship would have lasted five minutes in the Delta Quadrant with her as Captain?
In the 1960s, Star Trek would had never allowed a female to command a star ship, but I agree with you, she is amazing!
A male captain would never of got them stuck in that quadrant
@@VisionElectricAus Conservatives who don't watch Trek to begin with aren't a reliable source. You never saw the first episode, certainly.
James Bond
Triggered like a true menstruated famale
"I don't think you realize you are NOT in control here anymore!" This scene is why Janeway is badass!
You don’t suppose those made Jurassic World have watched Voyager and remembered this line? Asking because it’s *nearly* the same when Claire said it to Owen.
I liked it when the aliens died.
So unfortunate one of those ships seemed to get away. I was hoping Janeway would turn around and send them a complimentary photon torpedo to go with all that research data.
i dont know anything about those alien´s tech... but i think they couldnt reach escape velocity... dont you?
Who knows? Star Trek physics only follows actual physics as long as it's convenient for the plot.
I do too, but I can't help but wonder wouldn't the debris from their ship crash right in to the starboard nacelle?
the nacelles are lower than the saucer section. The debris went over it.
70,000 light years from home, from support, from back up. Facing a 75 year journey she kept rank and order and discipline. She made them feel like they were still Star Fleet, no matter how far from home they may be. She is legendary.
and this is how you get rid of murderous aliens from your starship so take notes
@@raven4k998 The best part was only one of the two alien ships made it out!
"You kill a member of my crew, I kill one of your ships"
STFU - This show was one of the first in a long line of Men Drool, Gurl Power Rules.
Clearly you're trying to get one of the female writers to sleep with you, stop SIMPing and get some "T" therapy.
"In a part of space where there are few rules, it's more important than ever that we hold fast to our own."
Aliens: You'll never break free!
Janeway: Hold my coffee.
‘There’s /coffee/ in that nebula!’
The federation sure know how to build a ship
Enterprise206 Ikr? Tough sobs!
***** It amazes me that Federation starships can survive flying through something like a binary pulsar yet against the Dominion they were getting blown up left and right. Although the fact that many of the ships fighting in the war were old 23rd century relics like Mirandas and Excelsiors (and probably some Constitution refits in there somewhere) it's probably no wonder that the UFP was losing so many ships in that war :-P
Yep. You hit it right on the head Amendolea. The Defiant and Galaxies did much better throughout the war. They apparently didn't put the Lakota upgrades to the Excelsior on too many ships...unfortunately.
3Rayfire
Upgrading such old starships was probably more trouble than it was worth. In order to be able to have an Excelsior-class be able to channel Galaxy-class phaser power through its old phaser banks would require a major upgrade to its main power source for one thing (a standard power/warp core for an Excelsior wouldn't've been producing even half the power necessary to produce such firepower) and for another thing major upgrades to the power relay systems....since even if they could get a power source for the Excelsior capable of producing enough power to power the upgrades, without corresponding upgrades to the power relay system then the minute they tried to fire said upgraded phasers it would've blown every power relay that that old Excelsior had :/
Mirandas to Sabers, Excelsiors to Akiras, some more Defiant class starships and Soverigns would have been better.
Tuvok: Hull stress is exceeding maximum tolerance!
Janeway: DON'T WORRY, PLOT ARMOR IS STILL AT 100%!
BWAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!
Ehhh..... Plot armor would be, "Captain, the vulcans showed up and shielded us, no damage to the ship." They were clearly limping after they went through.
Darth Obscurity
You might want to research what plot armor is.
Funny comment nonetheless
LOL
I love the different aspects of Janeway that you see in this scene. The captain and protector who takes ownership of everything that happens to her ship and crew, the tactician who works out a winning strategy to achieve her goals and the scientist who applies her knowledge to the situation to work out the best outcome. Just a brilliant scene.
voyagers hull turned red man that's one hell of a hickey🤣
This was very similar to Picard activating the auto destruct to prevent the crew from being tortured in the season 2 episode against Nagilum. Only this is more like playing chicken with a hot rod at full speed near a cliff.
It's a little Different. These experiments would kill her whole crew. Voyager couldn't get anywhere missing 1/3 the crew at random. Picard could have just called for a pickup.
@@alphanerd7221 Picard couldn't call anyone. They were trapped in a black void.
I disagree. I think what Janeway did was way more ballsy, and it was not playing chicken.
I doubt Picard would've sacrificed the entire crew. Picard could've turned off auto destruct, so he was indeed bluffing.
Janeway did not have the option of turning back. Once she was committed, she was all in. There was no bluff.
So, had Janeway been playing chicken, she drove straight off the cliff and landed on the other side
@@itchyisvegeta Wrong episode. This isn't in the void. That's why there are suns here.
@@alphanerd7221 no, I'm thinking the right episode
A great episode and finale. Janeway pulled her Boss card and handled her damn business. Killing one of her crew in front of her, what the hell were they thinking? Did not who they were F***ing with.
I know when I saw this I thought now you've really pissed of Capt Janeway BIG BIG error you're in for now
If they wanted to find Janeway's berserk button, they sure did a damn good job of it!
LOL
The expression is "F*ck around and find out"
@@68jroche Didn't exist when I made this comment. Though I still would've stuck with the Riddick quote.
Captain Janeway can be one hell of a badass! She doesn't let the Kazon, the Borg or even her own future self try to control her! This is a perfect example of a "decisive, risk-taking moment," especially when Voyager and her crew are confronted with hostile aliens. Janeway can kick ass, even if it means her own death and the destruction of Voyager.
@Dawson Davis Well, too bad for the aliens, because half of them were turned into cat food.
@@oddish4352 Looking how the surviving ship burned opposite to Voyager, decelerating (and therefore doing an opposite of a slingshot maneuver, required to clear the pulsars)... I'd say all of them were turned into atomic spaghetti
@@caav56 Considering what they were doing, it's hard to feel any sympathy. Janeway told them to stop, and they not only refused, but then they killed a crewman. There are consequences for things like that.
They fucked around and found out
Well Done Captain. Sometimes it's better to die in the process of destroying your enemies than let them control your life.
Klingons would be singing songs of this great feat if they had know about it!
It would most certainly be an honourable death.
I was thinking that this was a very Klingon Tactic.
Random Officer "Sir, The intruders have boarded the ship,they outnumber us 10 to 1!"
Captain "GOOOD, we are assured a place in STO VO KOR! Aim the Bird of Prey for the Ground! FOR GLORIOUS SLAUGHTER! KAPLAH!!! "
Qaplah*
In the Latin alphabet, kaplah is spelled with a Q.
She plays the greatest sleep deprived Captain ever...
She was always short of sleep. One of the things I remember besides Seven's chest and ass.
Either sleep deprivation or coffee deprivation!
@@midnightrun5622
The actress quit smoking while filming the series. That made her a tad miserable and angry XD
@@marcoboscarol2420 perfect time for that episode then
@@midnightrun5622 SHE ALWAYS HAS A CUP OF COFFEE NEARBY!
That moment when Janeway performs CPR on the crewmember is a powerful and unique event in Trek history. It really hits home.
I met Kate Mulgrew at a Star Trek convention some years back, she is a lovely person and she appreciates her fans, I was so honored to meet her, she also called me a dear and I was over the moon. She truly is a beautiful person, inside and out. She truly is a stellar person, one of the most best moments of my life. She is also just as beautiful in person as on film, she doesn't need make up, 20 years olds would be envious of her completion, she was older, but I'm telling you, this is and will always be a beautiful woman and the best Caption of Star Trek!
I remember this episode; these aliens were real pieces of dogshit.
They really were. Fuckers.
I actually cheered when one of their ships blew up.
Lovi Poekimo
:) I've had insomnia on and off all my life, and the idea of some group FORCING me to go without sleep really touched me on a visceral level-- I guess we all felt that.
They're absolute absence of ethics, compassion, or decency makes them even further from 24th century humans than the Borg are.
I know humans with similar ethics. All 'clinical' and 'in the name of logic or science' with zero compassion or humanity. A bit like some of the Nazi era savages
This is the episode that made Janeway one of the all time greats. Up until now, Voyager was a happy-go-lucky trek across unknown space. After this scene, she bent the universe to her whim. Everything wanted to kill her crew, and she knew that the only way to survive was to use her instincts. Janeway finally understood the prime directive
Second, my dude. She negotiated with the Borg… somehow. Totally backfired but she did it
@@jamchiroptera4258 not totally she did get seven of nine out of it in the end :P
"Oh yeah, it's warcrimes time" _- Benjamin Sisko_
GO GO Gurl Power!!!!!!!!!!! Stupid.
This is how a badass Captain acts under pressure. Well done, Janeway. 👌🏻
3:33 The deflector dish is either really hyped about being this close to a pulsar, or utterly terrified. Either way, Voyager sure is cute :'D
Three years later and I still laugh at this comment lol
Omg it looks so excited
i feel like thats a George Lucas touch having it have eyes and a mouth as it rocks side to side like its almost a droid... seriously he did over see the special effects, do not be surprised if he was trying to give the ship a bit of extra character and a sense of artificial intelligence
Deflector "IM ON FIRE AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA"
As my dad used to say, Voyager would have laid her ears back and taken off like a shot!
I love that she got her revenge for her murdered crew, in that one of the aliens ships was pasted, probably taking as many or more of them than she lost. Well done Janeway.
The Klingon saying, "Perhaps Today IS A GOOD DAY TO DIE!" comes to mind.
Qa'pla! and "Victory is Life!"
Prepare for ramming speed!
I think Janeway has about as big a set of balls as you can get. Really miss this show.
It's now being shown on BBC America.
1 word: Netflix
I missed it so much I bought the box set.
Lucky you, every good show from 20th century TV is now premium, as is pay per veiw. And this is why we're cutting cords in the US, TV just sux today.
I just stream whatever i want from free sites. Not lining their pockets. I don't even own a TV.
The guest star who played the head alien female did a great job. Her ability to portray heartlessness, arrogance and a superiority attitude helped us all cheer when the aliens died!
When Janeway pushed her up against a bulkhead I was cheering
A fabulous episode and sequence. I remember reading an article in the Star Trek Voyager magazine back in the day about this episode. Kate Mulgrew had given up smoking when this episode was being filmed. I think her nicotine withdrawals made this episode! I miss Voyager!
That's fortunate for the extra she gave cpr to
And this is exactly why I love her. She wasn't perfect, she just did what needed to be done and wore the consequence. No other captain could have survived for 7 years in the Delta Quadrant
You know this is TV, right? Its not real.
TARDIS Tales Agreed, except for the last statement: Sisko could have done it. He and Janeway were the only captains who had to make genuinely hard decisions, facing bad consequences no matter what they did. They didn't have all the deus ex machinas that Kirk and Picard got so often.
***** Agreed...but only because Picard always had the luxury of convenient plot twists to make sure he never had to make a really tough decision. Janeway and Sisko were the only captains who regularly had truly tough choices with no "right" answers.
YT Cyberpunk
Hmm... I kind of disagree a little bit, Picard had to do a lot of scary mediation work which involved big decisions, but yeah, you're right in that the nature of both Sisko's and Janeway's situation was pretty unique, they really hadn't much room to handle. They basically were forced to be radical.
Zona Rosa
Matter of perspective.
The deus ex machina here is just externalized to the director.
She did not blew up, because the writer chose so. This was a gamble, and it worked out, that's it.
I hate to admit it but this is the kind of hard-core, kick your enemies in the balls kind of problem solving I love.
Actually I would’ve liked to see Voyager fire a couple of photon balls just to get rid of those cowards, but seeing one ship blow up was a consolation price at best. Had it been a Klingon vessel, well. It would’ve been not only torpedoes
, hah
Janeway was one hell of a captain and Voyager was one HELL of a ship!! Awesome scene
They're going to ruin the new star trek, aren't they :( By pandering to whatever bs is in the news at that moment. If only they would look at this series and realise it was great without their agendas.
If Anything Discovery should be closer to The Original Series.
God, I love Janeway.
My most favorite episode
Not overly fond of the episode but I like this scene.
My fav episode was the one where she met fear.
This one and Blood Fever were my favourite! Both were really intense.
"Did I say 'Reckless'? I meant 'toatlly batsh!t crazy'!"
If she'd actually gone for 96 hours without sleep, that could very literally be the case. People generally start hallucinating and acting irrationally after about 72 hours of sleep deprivation. Now stack an extra day on that and whatever else the aliens had been doing with her brain chemistry... yeah, I'd say "crazy" is definitely a closer fit than "reckless"
Janeway showing Kirk and Picard levels of badassery.
Janeway and Sisko are the most badass captains
picard wishes he were up to her level.
@@IronSpyder-ky2lk Sisko is another pet of godlike aliens. Once a captain says "I'll just play chicken and see if god saves me" he's not a hero anymore. He's a pawn. Then when he's going to let his son get killed and he's crying about how he won't go against his masters, just sickening.
Ironically, if the aliens had not doped up Janeway and deprived her of sleep she probably would NOT have done what she did. But when you push someone to the edge, sometimes you get cut. (See what I did there?)
While yes I do
i think she still would have done it. she couldnt let her crew be wiped out by some evil shits
@@Oldnotweak Possibly. I remember watching this episode when it first aired and cheered my butt off when one of the two alien ships blew up while detaching (hoping it'd be both).
I disagree, Picard was in a similar situation and was going to blow up the ship.
@@Rebecca_Lockheart Which episode?
This is the equivalent of a submarine diving below test depth.
With an enemy minisub attached.
Whole being waterbombed
Janeway was awesome as a captain. One of her best scenes.
"What are you doing, Captain?"
Tuvok knew Janeway was about to go full Janeway.
Conclusion of the alien species' research: Never piss off Capt. Janeway!
They didn't even have the chance to log this incidence. Their ships were destroyed.
@@sirgalahad777 Just one of them. The other made it.
@@alphanerd7221 I thought so at first but unlike Voyager they didn't have the speed necessary to escape the pulsar
@@xandercage2388 Speed is irrelevant.
@@alphanerd7221 explain Janeway needing to get speed to get out then?
"this ends RIGHT NOW!"
You know that voice that says: you done fucked up ..... Kathryn Janeway was a master of inflecting it.
"Uh oh..."😱
Even the Doc has that look on his face when she says it... "hoooh shit. They dun flipped her switch."
Captain Janeway is so underrated by some in the Trek community, Sisko, Picard and Kirk are great. I'm with Janeway.
I'll admit to blatant sexism when it came to Janeway, I didn't think a female captain would be able to exert the same level of authority, but I was pleasantly surprised, janeway is the perfect captain for voyager.
@@ScottyDont1945It’s the same now a days, like with Doctor Who. Everyone was concerned when there was a female Doctor, and their concerns were proven.
Unfortunately/fortunately for me, before I could write the whole series off, my mom got hooked on it -_- but I got to see, around mid of the series I think?
They accidentally showed they were perfectly capable of writing an amazing Female Doctor Who. But they had that character be written off to keep sucking the non-existent dick of the shitty one.
Motives always shine through with writing. If motives are genuine and innocent, like here with Star Trek, you’ll find incredible works. If they’re scheming, conniving, gaslighting, manipulating, and focusing solely on checking boxes, you’ll get garbage like Doctor Who was/is today.
Shake A Few Trees & See What Kind Of Nuts Fall Out, a bestselling book by Captain K. Janeway
Love it when the Captains deliver a "fuck around and find out" moment to an adversary. 😅
God I miss these people. I miss them in my soul. May your journey be free of incident, Captain Janeway.
she had actually the most difficult task from all 3 captains, Picard, Sisko, Janway I mean.
1. No reinforcements
2. Picard had Data as a super strong Android with the ability to calculate everything, also Deana Troy could tell him everything he needed to know, about the mind of his enemy.
3. Sisko had ODO, who could impersonate everybody, ALSO Sisko had the prophets who saved his life and the lifes of every human by destroying the Dominion Armada in entering the Alpha Quadrent.
Also Jadzia, who had like 500 "mind" years.
Janeway had only Tuvok, and maybe KES, but Kes was only an unexperienced child, didn't do much. Later she "acquired 7of9", then it was bit easier, but still she wasn't DATA, or a shape shifter, or a prophet for that matter. Well the Doctor, with his mobile emitter was kinda helpful.
So she had to "improvise" ;)
Agree with everything, but Kes not doing much? She only pushed them safely past Borg space!
Agree. One of my favorite parts of the show is the "lost in space" feel that is not there in other series. Makes for interesting plot devices
ELMtree2of2 cutting 10 years of their journey 7 Neelix who helped them get supplies and knowledge of parts of the delta quadrant were of great help
I think you mean Kes cut their journey by 10 years when she ascended. She pushed them outside Borg space if you remember.
Good point
I hated those aliens, they got their comeuppance. I hope the one on the bridge was on the second, not so lucky, ship. 😏
Considering Voyager barely made it out going full throttle I'm betting the other ship didn't get far before blowing up.
@@joet7136 yeah the second ship got the slower death. Even if they were able to make it the first one exploding already shows their hulls were far weaker than voyager in that situation so exploding shortly after the scene is a guarantee.
@@kishascape Think you're right. Right after they lifted away from Voyager Janeway says that she can't break free from the gravitational forces. That other ship is dust.
One of my favourite Janeway moments. I like her and Sisko best when they're doing the sort of psychotic (kamikaze star diving, face-mashing time erasing ships) or sociopathic (poisoning planets, murdering Romulan senators) things that Picard would never be caught doing.
Yeah Picard is just the kind of guy who will park you between the Enterprise and Three Bird of Prey, blow up the flammable coolant when you won't, or put bitches in their place diplomatically.
That my fried is how to win a war.
Oh god imagine what Sisko's reaction to these aliens would be...
DarkNova50 Picard would try to be diplomatic and talk them down
you mean the same Picard that went into Romulan territory on the whim of a defector ... got caught ... only to have two Aces (Klingon ships) in reserve.
'This ends, right now!' ONE of my all time fav episodes!
"You're relieved" = "I'm about to lose my fucking shit"
Main lesson from this "Science Experiment": Don't EVER Piss Off A Starfleet Captain.
Yeah. Picard had the same response to a similar threat.
lol.....love that last Tuvok line referring to the recklessness of Janeway....."a poor choice of words.....it was clearly an understatement" :)
I love watching Janeway hit fuck it. From plan A, straigh to play Z. It may be reckless, but its genious. It shows Janeway understand power...just like she understands fear 😉. This is probably my favorite scene in all Trek.
Knowing what it is like to be awake for several days due to intense pain I can say she acted spot on. You reach a limit where any filters you had were gone. Your speech, emotions, and senses become raw. It's not pretty to see.
Don't F with Janeway.
Never a dull moment with Janeway.
I mean, sure, ST:VOY had its problems, some of which stemmed from characterizations being all over the place, while others were shaped like _salamander babies_.
But when the writers actually got their shit together, Voyager had some of the best episode and many of the most badass scenes in Star Trek history. I love this show so much.
I love saying that: Salamander Babies!
The only real problem with ST:VOY was it's reliance on Alpha Quadrant aliens.
Oh, and the very last episode. That sucked.
@@bgrigg07 yeah, with those two episodes where they encountered alpha quadrant aliens.
How fucking dare you?! Those babies were adorable and are the future of the Delta Quadrant.
Let’s share our favourites? I love them all. In particular Neelix and the afterlife- I was intrigued how it broke him, yet he didn’t magically heal- a process of pain, support systems, and the road to acceptance. Seven of nine’s ‘borg child’ (Seven: you are hurting me. Borg: “You will adapt.”; that really got me feeling for the human condition and death. I also liked Enterprise; I found the forced mind meld on T’pal a bit disturbing, but I admired they took such a heavy, dark, sadly common idea (abuse and the authorities).
Love how Tuvok took that challenging remark by Janeway and turned it around on her, by emphasizing it even more 🖖
Did.... did I just get the chills from a late 90's TV show? Damn Janeway don't screw around.
I can appreciate the wreckless feeling somebody feels being kept up for days on end as your brain chemicals go through the roof. Kate makes the scene so convincing in her strained tone and look of running on adrenaline fumes. Probably mentioned but kate quit many years of heavy smoking not long before she filmed this episode and i can appreciate that it may not have been entirely the acting that gave this brilliant performance...what with the long hours and shooting schedule and her bodh crying out for nicotine with chequered aleep patterns..i know that feeling very well.
0:45 - I really like how the tricorder states death (beeeeep) as being when brain death occurs, not the heart stopping.
I think the part about this scene that showcases Janeway the most is the way she keeps fighting to save that crewman even after the EMH says she's dead. Janeway is on a knife edge ALL THE TIME because she's responsible for getting that crew home and there's no way to for them to be backed up by Starfleet. She's entirely isolated as a Captain in a way that none of the other series Captains are, and she takes that role to an extreme level because of it. Every single lost crew member is personal for her.
Which is why I don't understand these peanut-sized brain morons who say this was "TNG" lite. Opinions are beautiful. One can argue when the Borg became pussies and even if "Voyager" was as good as "TNG" and "DS9" but there is no way this is "TNG" lite. It was darker than "TNG" even if not darker than "DS9." This too was arguably anti-"TNG." This show had the most thrills along with "DS9."
@@robjackson5245 I've honestly never encountered anyone who called it TNG Lite
@@Fluffykeith A good amount say that nonsense. I've seen it
God when I saw Janeway the first time I was so chauvinist, I hated her guts. Female captain, after Kirk, Picard NEVER.... But Janeway is my favorite captain ever. She was all that Mr.Roddenberry wanted star trek universe wanted to be different...strong badass, mother, boss, scientist, human....I adore Scientific method episode... and 7 of 9.... ruled...
aldo alda I agree she was the embodiment of what his ideals were voyager was the best and closest to what he wanted he would be so proud I think he would have like voy best
its ok to make mistakes, the key thing is to learn... im still working on learning from my horrible horrible life mistakes :/ its painful sometimes, but i think im ready to just let go eventually and move on with life :/
Thats not what cheuvanism is.
@@marcusbullock630 yes it is, he used it correctly, and you spelled it wrong.
I still don't like her acting style. She just doesn't evoke any emotions. A "Sigourney Weaver type" as captain would have been awesome. Just imagine how Sigourney would have acted this scene out..
Kathryn Janeway, one of the most badass female characters ever created.
This was what I liked about that series - the captain jumped in and helped when stuff was happening. She couldn't pick up replacement crew so she knew every role (every person) was critical.
Will Smith out of nowhere: "from now on THAT'S how you drive!!!"
Veritech Girl 😂😂😂 or “HELL NO” to the aliens
Welcome to Earf.
'Woo Hoo!! I gotta get me one of these!' 🤣 {Will Smith ~ ID4}
If anything Elite: Dangerous has taught me, flying between binary pulsars is a VERY bad idea.
LOL :D
+Mike Luedcke No doubt. I tried it. And next thing I know, I'm looking at the insurance screen.
That's because you weren't flying an Intrepid :P
Adam McLaughlin Even most Intrepids wouldn't survive it. The odds _were_ 1 in 20; at best.
Or a very GOOD idea. Especially when you have some very persistent pirates/cops/hangers-on that you want to sacrifice to the sun gods.
I can't remember a whole lot of individual Voyager plotlines because I watched the show when I was a kid, but this episode has stuck with me. Janeway was pissed at being a lab rat and she was going to do whatever it took to get her crew free.
Keeping a Janeway face in 1 in 20 odds of survival is the oxford definition of courage.
Starfleet engineers really know how to hammer a ship together. Would like to see a ferengi or cardassian ship survive that.
+kuribo1 Romulan warbird!
+MarquisRex if any other ship could maybe a warbird sure yes.
+kuribo1 Soverign, Ambassador, Kessok- KArdasian Hybreed, Jemhadars ships, Vorcha, D-7, 8472 bioship and lot more of them.
Karlo Tvrtko
I do not think a d7 would at all, a ship 80 years old just does not have the same types of modern systems and enhancements it would need to survive a star. Jemhadars ships, again if they can be taken out by runabouts then a star is a whole different magnitude of destruction. A bioship is a living vessel and not sure how it would react to the sheer forces and what not of a star, I just do not know. Federation ships like I said starfleet engineers really know how to bang a ship together so probably most if not all would come out the other side a little worse for wear. Vorcha sure probably they are good tough ships as well. Cardassian for me is a coin flip.
Romulan Warbird? Hell no, they're fragile. Good firepower. Except a Scimitar of course. Klingon ships are pretty tough though. They're mostly made of armor anyway. Ferengi ships are a catch 22 and depends on how much was paid. Was a cheapo ship, or the best starship that money can buy. Also consider that the scientist that invented Metaphasic shields was a Ferengi. Metaphasics would've been perfect here, if she actually cared about the appearance of survival.
The crew must've been wearing magnetic shoes. All that shaking and they're still standing.
The aliens found out soon enough that they f*cked with the wrong captain.
Well, Shepard didn't exist yet. :)
So freaking cool, Captain Janeway wasn't going to let ANYONE take control of her ship. That's what always kept her ship safe and her crew in command. If you wear the pants you better make the hard right choices! One of the best Captain's in Star Trek history!!!
Kirk and Picard both did the same thing. That has to be a class in Starfleet Academy at this point.
MarginalSC Yeah, but she took it to the limit, but I do remember when Picard and number one were in a count down and had only one second to spare when they aborted. But, stay with me, Caption Jane way didn't have a button to push and end it all, she had to depend on her crew to get out of that binary and ride it to the end. It was a rash move though, she would rather die with her crew than be medical subjects to these aliens. If they survived great, if they didn't she would have saved everyone from a slow death. It was a gutsy move, hardly even a 50 50 chance but she still beats the odds and somehow, I think she knew she could have. I do think she was reckless, but I also think she a calculated risk, she had some smarts.
Janeway's crew didn't do anything but complain about how the ship was melting.
well, you do have a point. But she did save the ship because she had some good back up, I love that line "Seems like I'm trying to crush this ship like a tin can." Capt, Janeway played poker, put all her chips in and won. She gambled, because she had no other choice, take it all or lose it all at that time> Yeah, time to play some poker!
***** well, you do have a point there, but it's not unlike other capt's who choose to push the auto destruct button, she at least made it to where there was a chance, she could have pushed that fatal button but she didn't and she had a chance in hell, and she took it.