The Disease - There's a pretty cool shot of a massive spaceship to start, eventually zooming into a bedroom where Harry's getting off with an alien. His chest glows. It's a generational ship with four hundred years of history of its own. Janeway says Voyager is just like them because its journey could last several generations (eh, aren't they shaved twenty five years off their journey this season alone so it seems unlikely.) Harry's worried that he'll be caught with his alien girlfriend as Janeway ordered no personal interactions with the alien crew. The plasma transfer (or whatever) Voyager is trying to do with the generational ship doesn't go well and the Captain is sick of Janeway (this gives Tom a chance to bring back his terrible "friendly people!" catchphrase.) Tom can instantly tell that Harry has fallen in love with the alien lass. Harry talks to the alien about how sick and wrong the sex between them was (even though she looks exaclty like a human) but he was totally into it. Tuvok detects Harry's secret sex chat and tells Chakotay, but Tom covers for Harry. Tom warns Harry he's taking a big risk. Harry asks Seven what she thinks of love. She compares it to a disease. Harry starts to glow. Seven drags him to Sickbay and Harry has to confess to the Doctor that he's caught a space VD. The Doc is shocked Harry had sex without medical clearance, as if that never normally happens. He grasses Harry up to Janeway and she gives him a thorough dressing down as well. Did this episode originally air as an after school special? She orders Harry to break up with his space girlfriend. Tuvok and Neelix find one of the aliens hiding on Voyager. Harry's girlfriend tells him that their biological connection will grow stronger now they've had sex. Shouldn't she have told him this before? Harry fails at breaking up with her and they shag again.
Chakotay and Tuvok question the stowaway. He, and thousands more, dislike life on the generational ship as they're not allowed to leave. He warns that his "movement" are willing to resort to violence. Chakotay and Janeway have dinner and he wonders if she was too hard on Harry. The Captain tells Janeway that when his people mate they do so far life and Harry might die now. That escalated fast. Seven and B'Elanna have found synthetic parasites on the alien ship, no doubt planted by the terrorists. Harry beams his girlfriend over to a shuttle for a space booty call. Why is she the only member of her species to talk in a weird accent? This scene is really boring and they don't have much chemistry considering they're supposed to be biologically linked. Tuvok flies out in the Delta Flyer to cockblock. Harry's girlfriend is questioned by the leader of the aliens back on Voyager as she's one of the terrorists (or dissidents, whatever.) The parasites are to break the generational ship up into smaller ships so everyone will have a choice to stay or not. Janeway warns the parasites could cause explosions that'll kill loads of people. Wow Harry's girlfriend is really reckless. Kathryn orders Harry to Sickbay for treatment but he tells her he's not sick, he's just in love. Garrett Wang's acting is awful here, like 'Timeless' never happened. The alien ship starts blowing up. Voyager saves them and the ship breaks up into smaller ships like the dissidents planned. Harry and the girl (who is free to go despite nearly killing loads of people) say a sad goodbye to each other as apparently their conditions can be easily treated with medication and the I guess the leader was just lying about Harry being close to death or something. Harry refuses to take his medecine because he's an idiot and wants to experience the love in full. Janeway says Harry is a better man than when she first met. Based on the events of this episode? Seven goes to Harry and tells him that maybe love can be a source of strength and isn't a disease at all. Again, I'm not sure why.
Okay the thing everyone immediately says about this episode is "BUT KIRK HAD SEX WITH A DIFFERENT ALIEN EVERY WEEK AND NEVER GOT SICK" and that's not really true (Kirk didn't have sex that much!) but the point is valid. We've seen Star Trek characters have sex with unknown aliens before without obeying an kind of safe sex protocol. Chakotay shagged that woman in 'Unforgettable' last season, then forgot about it, then shagged her again. Janeway didn't stick him in the Brig! On the other hand it does make logical sense that there would be protocols for making "contact" (SEXUAL CONTACT) with aliens. I don't really have a big problem with the sexual contact protocol stuff, apart from it coming across kind of preachy at times in the episode. The problem is that Garrett Wang is a plank of wood and the actress playing his girlfriend isn't much better so I don't care at all about their love story. They're supposed to be unable to resist each other but they don't sell it at all. There's no passion, just some kissing and giggling. They should have shagged each other so much that they made a shuttle explore or something. The generational ship is an interesting idea but the aliens are just the usual asshole xenophobes Voyager meets every week. This is bad!
SCORE: 3/10
Course: Oblivion - Tom and B'Elanna are getting married. That came out of nowhere! Harry plays "here comes the bride" on clarinet. Janeway performs the ceremony like other Captains before her. Tom (who is a Lieutenant again, YOUR FIRST CLUE) and B'Elanna read their own vows and it's kind of nice! The rice thrown on them after starts meliting through the floor and that's weird. Janeway's log mentions an "enhanced warp drive" that will take them home in just two years. Torres leaves Seven in charge of Engineering to go on her honeymoon, but first they find a Jeffries tube melting because its molecules are breaking down or something. B'Elanna blames the new warp core, but taking it offline doesn't help. Soon B'Elanna is ill, as are some other random crewmembers. The Doctor reports that everyone is infected and they'll all die soon unless they find out what's going on. Tom visits B'Elanna in Sickbay in a well acted scene and then she DIES. Tom keeps trying to bring her back despite the Doc telling him she's gone (why not use Seven's nanoprobes!) Chakotay and Tuvok are searching Voyager's records to see when this all started and remember the evenets of 'Demon'. They wonder whatever happened to the duplicates created in that episode. WHAT INDEED. They go to the Doc and he injects B'Elanna's body with something that makes her turn into the silver goo from that episode. They're all copies, the whole crew. Improbably the whole ship is a copy too. None of them can remember being copied as "somehow" they all forgot being duplicates (that's the explanation the Doc gives.) The new warp core is melting them all, and the ship, because they're not really human. They can survive if they go back to the Demon planet. Janeway refuses because that would be turning away from Earth. You're not from Earth!
She tells the rest of the crew what's going on. Tom is angry and says he doesn't care about B'Elanna dying because she wasn't real and neither is he or Harry or the Captain or Neelix's balls so none of this fucking matters. More crewmembers die and Chakotay begs Janeway to go back to the Demon planet. She continues to refuse despite literally killing the crew. Voyager finds a Y-class planet to land on (Janeway thinks they might be able to survive there for a while) but there's some asshole aliens on it who shoot at Voyager because that's what DQ aliens do. So they need to find another planet. Tom points out what a terrible Captain duplicate Janeway is and he's pretty much right. There's another scene with Chakotay trying to talk sense into her, as they continue to get more and more sick. Chakotay dies shortly after. Janeway tells the crew that enough people have died now that she's realised she was wrong and orders them back to the Demon planet. There's a senior staff meeting where they're all melting and it's pretty disturbing. Janeway wants to download the ships logs into a time capsule to launch in case the ship doesn't survive. Janeway dies. (I guess Tom died at some point and I wasn't looking.) Harry's the Captain. Oh boy. The ship contineus to break up as it gets closer to the Demon planet and it's so fucked up it can hardly fly. Seven launches the time probe but it breaks up. They then JUST HAPPEN to come acros the REAL Voyager. What are the chances of that? Really really low I'd say! It's not like they were even looking for them. Harry and Seven struggle to be noticed by the real Voyager by ejecting the warp core but it's all pointless as they fail like they've failed at everything the whole episode. The real Voyager detects the ship but just finds some debris and doesn't have any idea it was their own duplicates. HAHAHA THAT'S THE END.
Okay nerd complaints first: it's really stupid that Voyager was duplicated (there's no hint fo it in 'Demon') and the fact that the whole crew lost their memories (for no explain reason!) is EVEN STUPIDER STILL. Surely the duplicate Voyager has records of their time on the Demon planet, from before they all forgot who they are? Surely the Doctor would remember? Nah, they just forget because they need to for the plot. The weird thing, though, is that the episode is pretty entertaining for a while! Everyone has their acting boots on, it's certainly better than 'The Disease' by virtue of the performances. And I liked the creepiness of the staff meeting where all the characters are melting, it gave me David Lynch feelings (except not as good.) Ultimately though...what's the point of all this? It has the most cynical ending ever, where the duplicate crew just miss out on the real Voyager discovering them. So nobody knows any of this happens. The duplicates lived pointless lives and died without meaing. Is that...Star Trek? It doesn't feel like it. It's tragic, sure, but a pointless kind of tragic? It didn't work for me, but I can't deny it's an interesting episode.
SCORE: 5/10