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As season three progresses Captain Kathryn Janeway and the crew of the
USS Voyager are continuing their struggle a cross the space that separates the
Delta and Alpha Quadrants. As their endless journey continues they meet both
new friends and come across new enemies in the form of the Borg and the even
greater danger of Species 8472, a species so powerful that it can destroy
a Borg armada with ease.
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The picture quality is much improved over the Star
Trek : The Next Generation series with a colour definition which is far
richer and more detailed than before. There can be the usual problem with the
conversion from NTSC to PAL, but on the whole things are handled with relative
ease. Never the less, there can still be problems with grain, outlining and pixelisation,
especially on fast moving action scenes with stationary backgrounds. Never the
less, it is certainly far better to anything video could offer and for a
television series which was originally broadcast before the medium of DVD was
established, you couldn't really be expecting anything else.
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Although the series boasts that it has been remastered to
Dolby Digital 5.1 for the DVD release it has had little real effect and, to be
honest, it doesn't really seem worth while the time, money and effort. Both the English and German 384 Kbps
soundtracks have been remastered to full blown 5.1, whilst the Spanish and Italian
soundtracks don't appear to warrant any improvement and remain as 192 Kbps
stereo.
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With this amount of capacity soaked up on
the disc there is very little room for anything particularly dynamic and, other
than the opening credits when Voyager zooms from the rear to the front of the
soundstage, there is very little activity in the surround channels. Fortunately,
the dialogue is crisp and clear in the centre channel whilst the front stereo
channels manage to provide some reasonable stereo steerage. However, for a
series which has its roots firmly placed in the terrestrial television schedule,
it is no surprise that the sound is anything but functional.
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The menu system is pleasantly animated and scored with the
series theme tune as well as the background rumblings of Voyagers engines.
Navigation around the menus is easy enough with only the episodes and subtitling
options available on each main disc. However, along with the final two episodes
of the season, the extras are contained on the rather confusing seventh disc.
Although the menus are similarly designed, there is an element of clumsiness to
them with a menu depth which far too deep for easy navigation and this results
in the Easter eggs being rather easy to locate as you blunder around the menus.
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As for the extras, the presentation box-set can certainly
be classed as one, as in keeping with the Star Trek
: The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine DVD collections, the
discs are presented in wonderfully designed box-set (although, as I couldn't
locate a suitable 2D image, the image used for the review is a generic Voyager
cover from the rather plain looking US release).
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Owners of the previous two seasons will already know
what's in store in the extras department and season three continues with a good
set of in depth features and interviews with the cast and crew that Trekkies
will relish, although an outtake reel would have been a perfect additional the
collection. Image quality on each of the featurettes is nothing special, with
the good old NTSC to PAL conversion playing havoc with the reds, but on the
whole the transfers are more than sufficient for the extras material, plus they
are also subtitled.
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In the Braving The Unknown: Season Three featurette
the stars, writers and producers of the series talk about their favourite
episodes (usually episodes with their character being at the centre of the plot)
as well the writers, rather worryingly I might add, talking about how they came
up with scripts ideas after the end of the previous seasons cliff-hanger as well
as a general chit-chat about how the season progressed. Next up are two Voyager
Time Capsule featurettes looking at Neelix and Kes. Both
featurettes have their respective actors Ethan Phillips (who also appears on the
Kes Time Capsule feature) and Jennifer Lien talking about their roles,
although the Neelix featurette is the more interesting of the two.
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In an exclusive to the region two release, the Creating
The Voyager Crew featurette has series creator Michael Piller discussing
each of the shows main characters. He is ably assisted by plenty of action clips
from the programme plus an introductive clipping from the ever handy Star
Trek Voyager bible. The cracking Flashback To "Flashback"
featurette looks at how the script writers and design team managed to recreate
scenes from Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country including a guest appearance
from Sulu himself - George Takei. Although the episode only contained Robert Beltran
and Kate Mulgrew, George talks enthusiastically about his time on the Voyager
set and it's nice to see one of the originals being rolled out every now and
again.
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The Red Alert! Amazing Visual Effects featurette
interviews visual effects producer Dan Curry and visual effects supervisor
Ronald B. Moore about how they went about creating the effects for Basics
Part II, Future's End, Distant Origin, Macrocosm and Scorpion
Part I. Whilst the majority of these effects can't match a big budget
Hollywood movie, with many obvious looking CGI effects, there is the occasional
gem and the lava scenes in Basics Part II look particularly effective.
The Real Science With André Bormanis featurette looks, unsurprisingly,
at the real science behind the series. Along with astrophysicists Neil Tyson and
Sallie Baliunas they come up with facts and plausible explanations for worm
holes, supernovas and the likelihood of life on other planets (to which I
couldn't agree more with their opinions). For me, this featurette tops the bunch
of what is already an interesting collection of extras.
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In another exclusive to the region two release, the 30th
Anniversary Moments feature contains a number of interviews with cast
members and various guest stars of The Next Generation, Voyager
and even (depending on your opinions) real moon walking astronaut Buzz Aldrin.
However, they were either not invited, hiding or didn't want to be interviewed
but, other than the now late DeForest Kelley, no other cast members from the
original series or Deep Space Nine are interviewed.
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Finally, where would a DVD be without a photo gallery and
collection of trailers for other titles and other tie-ins? Apparently, not very
far as we have a number of behind the scene images of the cast and crew plus a
trailer come set of interviews for the Deep Space Nine DVD box-sets, Star
Trek the Next Generation box-sets and something called Borg Invasion 4D.
I have no idea what this is, so it's either a rather good looking computer game
or theme park ride situated somewhere in America.
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Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry was way ahead of
his time, not only in the creation of various technologies which today's
scientists are already working on, but in the make up of his crew of the
Starship Enterprise. After all, in 1966 a television series containing a
multi-racial cast was unheard of. This leads us onto Star Trek Voyager
and another Roddenberry inspired series which continues to break the mould. Not only does the multi-racial cast
continue, with a black Vulcan and American Indian officer, but the captain is a
woman. Now this could raise a male chauvinistic titter about problems with
reversing and scratching the side of the starship, but as legions as fans will
tell you, the cast gel together perfectly and with some clever script writing
even come close to shading the antics of Star Trek : The Next Generation.
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Week in week out the plots come thick and fast and, unlike
the rather East Enders plodding style of Deep Space Nine, each
episode manages
to keep you entertained throughout the season. Sure, as with most long running
series there are weak ones, but on the whole series three continues to excel
with some cracking episodes, especially the season finale Scorpion, Part I
where Voyager meets the Borg-destroying Species 8472 and, horrors of
horrors, a collaboration with the Borg.
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Extras
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- Braving The Unknown: Season Three
:
Writers and producers Rick Berman, Brannon Braga and Jeri Taylor discuss
highlights of year three, including "Basics, Part II," the two-parter
"Future's End," and "Scorpion."
- Voyager Time Capsule: Neelix
- Features a new interview with Ethan
Phillips and others discussing the role of Neelix. Includes a look at Ethan's
current projects, including a role on Enterprise and starring with Armin
Shimerman in a production of Hamlet
- Voyager Time Capsule: Kes
- Features a new interview with Ethan
Phillips, Robert Picardo and Tim Russ in
addition to Jennifer Lien
discussing her role on the series
- Creating The Voyager Crew
: Series creator Michael Piller provides a
detailed look at the principal characters from Star Trek: Voyager. This is not
contained on the US release
- Flashback To "Flashback"
- A special look at the Voyager
episode with guest star George Takei ("Sulu").
Includes
interviews with Takei, Tim Russ, and an exploration of how scenes from Star Trek
VI: The Undiscovered Country were re-created for this episode
- Red Alert! Amazing Visual Effects
- Visual effects wizards Dan
Curry and Ronald B. Moore provide an inside look at amazing scenes from season
three episodes, including "Basics, Part II",
"Future's End",
"Scorpion" and "Distant Origin."
- Real Science With André Bormanis
- The show’s scientific advisor
Bormanis introduces famed
astrophysicists
who examine the reality of space phenomena as seen on Voyager. Includes
comments on the Wormhole seen in "False Profits" and the supernova in
"The Q and the Grey"
- 30th Anniversary Moments
: - A collection of rare interviews with several
Star Trek cast members and celebrities from the 30th Anniversary celebration at
Paramount Studios in 1996. Includes Kate Mulgrew, TOS guest star Joan
Collins, astronaut Buzz Aldrin, actresses Jane Seymour, Sharon Lawrence, Kirsten
Dunst and Dr McCoy himself, the late DeForest Kelley. This is not contained on
the US releases
- Lost Transmissions
- Easter Eggs Includes interviews with cast and crew
discussing season three
- Photo Gallery
- Borg Invasion 4D
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