Episodes[]
Title | Episode | Production number | Stardate | US release date |
---|---|---|---|---|
"Unimatrix Zero, Part II" | 7x01 | 40840-247 | 54014.4 | 2000-10-04 |
"Imperfection" | 7x02 | 40840-248 | 54129.4 | 2000-10-11 |
"Drive" | 7x03 | 40840-249 | 54058.6 | 2000-10-18 |
"Repression" | 7x04 | 40840-251 | 54090.4 | 2000-10-25 |
"Critical Care" | 7x05 | 40840-250 | Unknown | 2000-11-01 |
"Inside Man" | 7x06 | 40840-252 | 54208.3 | 2000-11-08 |
"Body and Soul" | 7x07 | 40840-255 | 54238.3 | 2000-11-15 |
"Nightingale" | 7x08 | 40840-256 | 54274.7 | 2000-11-22 |
"Flesh and Blood" | 7x09/10 | 40841-253/40841-254 | 54315.3–54337.5 | 2000-11-29 |
"Shattered" | 7x11 | 40840-257 | Unknown | 2001-01-17 |
"Lineage" | 7x12 | 40840-258 | 54452.6 | 2001-01-24 |
"Repentance" | 7x13 | 40840-259 | 54474.6 | 2001-01-31 |
"Prophecy" | 7x14 | 40840-260 | 54518.2–54529.8 | 2001-02-07 |
"The Void" | 7x15 | 40840-261 | 54553.4–54562.7 | 2001-02-14 |
"Workforce" | 7x16 | 40840-262 | 54584.3–54608.6 | 2001-02-21 |
"Workforce, Part II" | 7x17 | 40840-263 | 54622.4 | 2001-02-28 |
"Human Error" | 7x18 | 40840-264 | Unknown | 2001-03-07 |
"Q2" | 7x19 | 40840-265 | 54704.5 | 2001-04-11 |
"Author, Author" | 7x20 | 40840-266 | 54732.3 | 2001-04-18 |
"Friendship One" | 7x21 | 40840-267 | 54775.4 | 2001-04-25 |
"Natural Law" | 7x22 | 40840-268 | 54827.7 | 2001-05-02 |
"Homestead" | 7x23 | 40840-269 | 54868.6 | 2001-05-09 |
"Renaissance Man" | 7x24 | 40840-270 | 54890.7 | 2001-05-16 |
"Endgame" | 7x25/26 | 40840-748 (40840-271/40840-272) | 54973.4 | 2001-05-23 |
Summary[]
This was the final season of Star Trek: Voyager.
A multitude of familiar aliens are revisited for a final shout including the Ferengi in "Inside Man", the Hirogen in "Flesh and Blood", the Klingons in "Prophecy", the Hierarchy in "The Void" and "Renaissance Man", the Q in "Q2", and the Talaxians in "Homestead".
"Drive" sees Tom Paris and B'Elanna Torres pilot the Delta Flyer in a "trans-stellar rally" before finally tying the knot, and in "Body and Soul", Seven of Nine is forced to hide The Doctor's program in her cybernetic implant. In "Q2" John de Lancie returns with his errant son, desperate for the assistance of "Aunt Kathy" which completes the "Q" story arc begun in seasons two and three, and in "Author, Author", the crew get to play in the holodeck alongside adulterated versions of themselves, when The Doctor publishes his first holonovel to less than stellar reviews.
After marrying in "Drive", B'Elanna Torres and Tom Paris' relationship, Torres discovers that she is pregnant in "Lineage", before contending with a group of Klingons convinced she is carrying the Klingon Messiah in "Prophecy". Ultimately, Torres gives birth at the very moment Voyager bursts into the Alpha Quadrant from inside an exploding Borg sphere in the series finale "Endgame".
The series finale, "Endgame" was watched by 8.8 million viewers, significantly less than the show's premiere episode, "Caretaker" with 21.3 million viewers. [1] Still, it pulled in the highest ratings since the premiere episode of the fourth season, "Scorpion, Part II". Referring to "Endgame" as "the right kind of Star Trek programming", UPN President Tom Nunan publicly declared, "The Voyager finale bodes extremely well for Enterprise's première next fall." (Star Trek Monthly issue 82, p. 8)
Background information[]
- Brannon Braga steps down as showrunner to spend a year of pre-production on Enterprise, and is replaced for Voyager's final season by Kenneth Biller.
- Filming for this season began on 22 June 2000 with "Unimatrix Zero, Part II". [2](X)
- After the series, Janeway was promoted to vice admiral and made a cameo appearance in Star Trek Nemesis.
- Alice Krige reprised her role of the Borg Queen in the Voyager series finale "Endgame" for the first time since starring in Star Trek: First Contact. All other appearances of the Borg Queen were played by Susanna Thompson.
- Characters with "crossovers" from other incarnations of Star Trek seen this season: the aforementioned Borg Queen ("Unimatrix Zero, Part II", "Endgame"); Deanna Troi ("Inside Man"); Reginald Barclay ("Inside Man", "Author, Author", and "Endgame"); Q ("Q2").
Credits[]
Starring[]
Also starring[]
- Robert Beltran as Chakotay
- Roxann Dawson as B'Elanna Torres
- Robert Duncan McNeill as Tom Paris
- Ethan Phillips as Neelix
- Robert Picardo as The Doctor
- Tim Russ as Tuvok
- Jeri Ryan as Seven of Nine
- Garrett Wang as Harry Kim
Guest and co-stars[]
Crew[]
- Executive Producers
Consulting Producer: Brannon Braga
- Creative Consultants
- Supervising Producers
Producer: J.P. Farrell
- Co-Producers
Associate Producer: Stephen Welke
Executive Story Editor: Michael Taylor
- Story Editors
Unit Production Manager: Brad Yacobian
Production Coordinator: Diane Overdiek
- First Assistant Directors
Second Assistant Director: Michael DeMeritt
Second Second Assistant Director: Lorri Fischer
Script Supervisor: Jan Rudolph
Science Consultant: Andre Bormanis
Production Designer: Richard James
Art Director: Louise Dorton
Set Designer: Tim Earls
Senior Illustrator/Technical Consultant: Rick Sternbach
Scenic Arts Supervisor/Technical Consultant: Michael Okuda
- Scenic Artists
Construction Coordinator: Al Smutko
Property Master: Alan Sims
Set Decorator: Jim Mees
Director of Photography: Marvin Rush, ASC
Chief Lighting Technician: Bill Peets
First Company Grip: Randy Burgess
Video Operator: Ben Betts
Special Effects: Richard Ratliff
Stunt Coordinator: Dennis Madalone
Video Supervisor: Denise Okuda
Hair Designer: Josee Normand
- Hair Stylists
- Charlotte A. Parker
- Viviane Normand
- Gloria Montemayor
Make-Up Designed and Supervised By: Michael Westmore
- Make-Up Artists
Costume Designer: Robert Blackman
Wardrobe Supervisor: Carol Kunz
- Key Costumers
- Susie Money
- Tom Siegel
- Kim Shull
- Matt Hoffman
- Erin Regan
- Jamie Thomas
Supervising Sound Editor: Bill Wistrom
Supervising Sound Effects Editor: Jim Wolvington
- Sound Editors
- Set Security
Casting Executive: Helen Mossler
- Casting Directors
Original Casting By: Nan Dutton, CSA
- Film Editors
Assistant Editor: Noel A. Guerra
- Composers
(Not a complete list)
- Dennis McCarthy ("Unimatrix Zero, Part II", "Critical Care", "Body and Soul", "Lineage", "Workforce", "Workforce, Part II", "Natural Law", "Renaissance Man")
- David Bell ("Imperfection", "Flesh and Blood", "Nightingale", "Prophecy", "Homestead")
- Jay Chattaway ("Drive", "Repression", "Shattered", "The Void", "Human Error", "Author, Author", "Endgame")
- Paul Baillargeon ("Inside Man", "Repentance", "Q2", "Friendship One")
Music Editor: Gerry Sackman
Visual Effects Producer: Dan Curry
- Visual Effects Supervisors
- Visual Effects Coordinators
Visual Effects Assistant Editor: Edward Hoffmeister
Visual Effects Associate: Chad Zimmerman
Sound Mixer: Alan Bernard
Camera Operator: Douglas Knapp
Post Production Coordinator: Monique K. Chambers
Script Coordinator: Maggie Allen
- Production Associates
- David Rossi
- Maril Davis
- Joanna Fuller
- Michael O'Halloran
- Nicole Gravett
- Eric Norman
- Terry Matalas
- Production Assistants
- Aaron Segal
- Joanna Fuller
- Jim Daley
- Jeremy Leo
Transportation Captain: Stu Satterfield
- Drivers
- Larry Dukes
- Cameron Calder
- John Moore
- Bobby Guillory
Location Manager: Lisa White
Publicity: Rachel Fox
Assistant to Publicist: Candice Clark
Production Accountant: Suzi Shimizu
DGA Trainee: Mark Rabinowitz
Filmed with Panavision Cameras and Lenses
- Main Title Design by
- Post Production Sound by
- 4MC Sound Services
- Todd Studios Burbank
Digital Optical Effects: Composite Image Systems
- Editing Facilities
- Four Media Company
- Level 3 Post
- Computer Generated Effects
Media releases[]
External links[]
- Star Trek: Voyager season 7 at Memory Beta, the wiki for licensed Star Trek works
- Star Trek Voyager Season 7 episode reviews at Ex Astris Scientia
Previous season: VOY Season 6 |
Seasons of Star Trek: Voyager |
Final season in series |