Vis a Vis - The Doctor is angry at Tom for spending too much time working on old cars in the Holodeck (yes after having a hole THREE DECKS HIGH blown in it last week the Holodeck is fine again, as is the rest of the ship thanks for asking!) rather in Sickbay (also fine after being blown up, I assume.) It's time to randomly give Tom a character again! A ship with a fancy warp drive that folds space shows up nearly explodes. Tom does some nifty flying to save the ship and its pilot Steth (Dan Butler from Frasier.) Tom wants to help Steth fix his ship but Chakotay is concerned that Tom's been weird lately ("lately" being "the start of this episode.") Then he just lets Tom work with Steth anyway. Steth is a hotshot test pilot so he and Tom get on, even though Tom fails to notice Steth briefly shifting into a woman. Tom is late for dinner with B'Elanna. She's completely reasonable about this, but Tom flies off the handles and is "WHY ARE YOU QUESTIONING ME, WOMAN." Tom uses his car knowledge to fix Steth's ship. Tom admits he's restless on Voyager. Steth says he's lucky to be there and turns into a girl again. Seven nearly catches Steth downloading all information on Tom and he creeps on her. We finally get to the body swap part of the episode after Steth tells Tom he's examined his DNA (the pervert.) Steth as Tom heads to the Bridge and watches his ship leave with Tom as Steth still onboard. Steth manages to talk to Chakotay, Harry and the Doc without them noticing anything is wrong (even though Harry catches him looking at a map of the ship.)
He practices putting in B'Elanna's quarters. Steth smooth talks her and she's pretty easily won over. They kiss and presumably have sex (which is rape but it's not like the episode is going to deal with that in any way!) Tom wakes up on Steth's ship to aliens attacking him for stealing their ship. Another ship shows up and saves him. It's the girl Steth kept shifting into, and she is the original owner of the body Tom is currently in. Steth tries to get B'Elanna to ditch work with him but she won't and he gets aggressive. Seven catches him doing dodgy stuff again and he threatens her. She isn't impressed. Janeway tries to give Steth a talking to and he hits her. Tuvok stuns him. Steth isn't really doing very well at pretending to be Tom, is he! Tom and the alien woman arrive back at Voyager and he tells Janeway he's the real Tom. She's skeptical even though it's really obviously true. But there's a twist! Steth has now jumped into Janeway's body and stuns Seven to steal a shuttle (one Tom was working on to go faster.) Tom proves to Chakotay he's really himself and goes after the shuttle in Steth's ship. We get a few monents of Kate Mulgrew doing hammy villain complete with EVIL LAUGH and it's pretty great (but not at all like how Steth was acting before!) Tom catches Steth and everyone gets put back in the right body. Dan Butler vows to find the original owner of the body Steth is in and everyone elese he's ever swapped with. Tom lets B'Elanna visit his garage Holodeck for the first time and that solves all the problems between them.
It feels like they had a checklist of episode types Voyager hasn't done yet and "body swap" got ticked off last week. They (kind of) try to make it a character episode for Tom by having him be a bit of a dick at the start, but then Steth steals his body and goes round being a super dick, then Tom comes back and...everything's fine. He's not a dick or restless anymore. It's like it was just there to say "see, we can do character development!" when they really can't. There's nothing larger to the body swap plot, it just goes through the motions. Robert Duncan McNeil is good at being a dick and Dan Butler does a great job at playing Tom, but what's the point of it all?
SCORE: 5/10
The Omega Directive - Harry is playing Vulcan chess with Tuvok in a rare moment of continuity. Seven swoops in and ends the game so Harry will come to work. The symbol for omega appears all over the Bridge and Chakotay is locked out of the ship's systems. Only Janeway knows what's going on and she locks herself in her Ready Room. She sets the rest of the crew to work but it's all highly classified and they don't know what they're doing. Janeway tells the truth to Seven, who already knows about "omega" thanks to her Borg knowledge. Janeway's orders are to destroy the Omega molecule and Seven agrees to help despite the Borg believing Omega is "perfection." Seven wants to understand it. Seven detects hundreds of Omega molecules, which means they'll need the whole crew to destroy them. Harry tries to gossip with Tuvok about what's going on but Tuvok doesn't give a fuck. Janeway's going off with Seven in a shuttle and tells Chakotay that if they don't come back by a certain time he should fly away and never look back. He tells her not to take this all on alone, to Hell with her orders. Janeway finally tells the whole truth to the crew: Omega is the most powerful substance in the universe. A Starfleet scientist once created a single molecule and it blew him up real good. It also creates ruptures in subspace that can stop ships going to warp. Seven tells Janeway how the Borg learned of Omgea from assimilating 13 different species. Janeway thinks the Borg's belief that Omega is perfect resembles a religious belief.
Voyager arrives at the planet where Omega was detected and finds lots of stuff blown up and lots of injured aliens. Janeway and Tuvok beam down to the planet and find some Omega. In a command position on ship, Seven gives those under her command Borg designations (Harry is 6 of 10 and asks her to please stop calling him that. She bumps him down to 2 of 10. It's funny.) Seven questions a sick alien scientist (against the Doc's objections) and he tempts her with the possibility of saving the Omega molecules. Janeway is determined to destroy Omega despite how intriguing it is. Seven tells Chakotay she's found a way to store Omega. She pretty much begs him to let her keep working on it, even though it's not what she was ordered to do. She expresses her admiration of Omega and how she needs to understand its perfection. Some aliens show up wanting Omega back so Voyager beams it to Seven's storage compartment and goes on the run. Janeway and Seven clash over what the best thing to do is. Janeway won't risk the safety of the Quadrant (wait, the whole Quadrant's at risk now?) just to satisfy Seven's quest for perfection. The aliens attack as Janeway and Seven are working to destroy Omega. The Omega molecules start to spontaneously stabilise and Seven looks on them with religious awe for a moment before Janeway drags her away. Omega is destroyed. In da Vinci's workshop (a really odd choice for the season's Holodec hangout, by the way!) Seven tells Janeway she saw perfected for 3.2 seconds and maybe there is something to religion after all.
I like this episdoe because it's probably the cloest Voyager will ever get to doing a TOS episode. I can easily imagine the Omega symbol flashing up on the Bridge of the Enterprise and Kirk working to destroy this crazy super molecule, while Spock takes a logical fascination with it and so on. The problem is that Voyager is never gong to go as crazy or campy as TOS. It's a blander show, so all Omega does is...blow stuff up? Make warp drives not work? If this was TOS we'd get all kinds of crazy psychedelic effects from Omega. Voyager's version of Omega is just a bit dull. The episdoe doesn't do a good enough job explaing what's so amazing about it. Jeri Ryan, on the other hand, does a typically amazingly good job playing Seven's religious reverence of Omega. As usual it's her relationship with Janeway and the chemsistry between the two actors that make this work. So its a good episode, it just should have been bigger.
SCORE: 8/10