Star Trek: Voyager: Season 04 (1998)

Star Trek: Voyager: Season 04 (1998)
Member Rating:  
With the cliffhanger finale of Star Trek: Voyager's third season efficiently resolved in the opening salvo of season four, the crew of the Voyager finds itself with a new member: Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan), an earthling who in childhood had been assimilated into a Borg collective, forsaking her individuality in the process. As the season progresses, Seven of Nine's essential humanity slowly returns -- but given her Borg background, can she be trusted? Meanwhile, the Voyager bids goodbye to Ocampan crew person Kes (Jennifer Lien), who after the battle which briefly united her crew with the Borg is compelled to morph into an energy being -- but not before pushing the Voyager some 9,500 light years closer to the Alpha Quadrant. In other developments, Talaxian crew member Neelix (Ethan Phillips) ponders the significance of his existence after being snatched from the jaws of death; former antagonists B'Elanna Torres (Roxann Biggs-Dawson) and Lt. Tom Paris (Robert Duncan McNeill) fall in love; and Captain Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) faces a new threat to the well-being of herself and her crew in the form of "Species 8472." The season's most intriguing episode is "Living Witness," set in the far-distant future, in which a museum curator relates a "reconstructed" version of the Voyager's crucial intervention in the war between the Kyrians and the Vaskans. This season's cliffhanger finale finds the crew celebrating the likelihood that they will soon return to their home base -- but Janeway is curiously non-celebratory, and very grim. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Kate MulgrewRobert Beltran, (more)
Format(s):
DVD,  (View All Versions)

Synopsis of Star Trek: Voyager: Season 04

With the cliffhanger finale of Star Trek: Voyager's third season efficiently resolved in the opening salvo of season four, the crew of the Voyager finds itself with a new member: Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan), an earthling who in childhood had been assimilated into a Borg collective, forsaking her individuality in the process. As the season progresses, Seven of Nine's essential humanity slowly returns -- but given her Borg background, can she be trusted? Meanwhile, the Voyager bids goodbye to Ocampan crew person Kes (Jennifer Lien), who after the battle which briefly united her crew with the Borg is compelled to morph into an energy being -- but not before pushing the Voyager some 9,500 light years closer to the Alpha Quadrant. In other developments, Talaxian crew member Neelix (Ethan Phillips) ponders the significance of his existence after being snatched from the jaws of death; former antagonists B'Elanna Torres (Roxann Biggs-Dawson) and Lt. Tom Paris (Robert Duncan McNeill) fall in love; and Captain Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) faces a new threat to the well-being of herself and her crew in the form of "Species 8472." The season's most intriguing episode is "Living Witness," set in the far-distant future, in which a museum curator relates a "reconstructed" version of the Voyager's crucial intervention in the war between the Kyrians and the Vaskans. This season's cliffhanger finale finds the crew celebrating the likelihood that they will soon return to their home base -- but Janeway is curiously non-celebratory, and very grim. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
1193 mins

Complete Cast of Star Trek: Voyager: Season 04


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Member Reviews (3)

 
James B.

Season 4 is probably my favorite of the Voyager seasons. Starting out with the finale of the Borg Vs 8472 conflict, it moves into episodes that feature a lot of character development and a lot of action as the Voyager crew attempts to get home. Definitely a season I would recommend renting, maybe even buying.

Yes   |   No

 
Gary T.

After a fantastic and entertaining third season, Voyager's Season 4 was a bit disappointing. Much of the humor present in Season 3 was missing and replaced with darker, sometimes tedious, episodes such as the two-part "The Year of Hell (1&2), or "Revulsion". However, Season 4 was not all bad. In particular, "Message In A Bottle" (Disc 4) ranks amongst the best of all Trek episodes in my opinion. "Living Witness"(Disc 6) & "Hope & Fear" (Disc 7) were also fine episodes. As always, ST:Voyager features high production values, a fine ensemble cast, top-notch visual effects and direction. Voyager Season 04 is easy to recommend to fans of the Trek Alti-verse, or the sci-fi genre in general. Obviously, Disc 1 of Season 04 is mandatory for those who enjoyed Season 03 and wish to view the conclusion of the finale "Scorpion".

Yes   |   No

 
Malandon K.

I have always bee a Star Trek fan, and when Voyager first aired I was hooked. So far I think Season 4 is my favorite, especially the way the characters have evolved.

Yes   |   No

 
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