2.25 — “Resolutions”

2.25 — “Resolutions”

Plot: Janeway and Chakotay are stranded together on a planet they dub “New Earth.” They have contracted a fatal, incurable virus that can only be contained if they remain on the planet. As they cope with their indefinite future as mutual castaways, the crew aboard Voyager struggles with the loss of the top two in their chain of command.

Thoughts: We have a scandalous, salacious episode of Voyager. It raises questions: Will Harry Kim give up on his captain? What carpentry project will Chakotay start next? Will Janeway’s towel slip? Will they do it?

I have another question. Is that all there is? There is no pretense of a traditional Star Trek story here; it’s purely a dramatic potboiler. And one that could be more interesting. There have been better “stranded together” stories–Picard and Crusher in TNG 7.8, “Attached,” Kira and Dukat in DS9 4.5, “Indiscretion,” and Picard and Wesley in TNG 4.9, “Final Mission.”

Janeway seems unnaturally chipper about the situation in the beginning. Is that her extraordinary leadership? We learn Janeway is “an able scientist,” which strikes me as a curious co-specialty with captaincy.

I kept waiting for her to be attacked by a Mugato, but ’twas not to be. The planet is completely boring and has no mysteries, which shows a distinct lack of imagination or ambition on the part of the writers. What if Janeway and Chakotay had been driven to explore the planet, rather than stay in place and explore science experiments and carpentry projects? What if the planet had fought back?

Chakotay gets only one name. Like Geronimo. He’s exotic. I could make do with less “My people have a saying” and “An ancient legend among my people…”

The scenes with Tuvok in command of a restive, rebellious crew recall “The Gallileo Seven” and “The Tholian Web,” when Spock found himself in a similar position and predicament. In those episodes, there was a clear racial undercurrent–the Earth crew didn’t want to be commanded by a Vulcan. This was uncomfortable (I don’t love those episodes), but timely in the 1960s and evidently would still be timely today. The scenes on board ship work better than any other part of the episode, but I still feel like they cheat by making this about a questionable command decision, which is so wrapped up in the Deus Ex Technobabble that strands Chakotay and Janeway on the planet that the right and wrong of the decision are fairly obscure. Does Tuvok have insufficient faith in the scientific resources of the crew? Or is rescuing the captain a pipe dream? Who knows? There certainly isn’t any suspense over whether the captain will be rescued at the end of the hour, so Tuvok mostly just looks bad.

What this episode should be about is the principle behind Kirk’s rebuke to Spock in Star Trek III: the needs of the one outweigh the needs of the many. All for one and one for all, which is the impulse the crew has to rally around Janeway and Tuvok instead of cutting bait and running, is a better guiding principle for moral decision-making than Spock’s more famous “needs of the many” speech. Spock was not necessarily wrong to sacrifice himself in Wrath of Khan, but he was wrong to generalize.

Otherwise I find not much notable about this episode, except that it establishes Tuvok as the third in command. When he becomes acting captain, he should switch to command red.

2.5 out of 5 monkeys. How bad can it be, when there are monkeys?

http://memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Resolutions_(episode)


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10 responses to “2.25 — “Resolutions””

  1. Kevin Black Avatar

    Coming to think of it, I ignored the whole Vidiian aspect. I should give credit for bringing back Danara Pel.

    I’m with the faction that says if the road of hope of rescue runs towards attempting negotiations with the Vidiians, they should try it. That doesn’t mean they have to do so haplessly, as depicted here.

  2. Randi Cohen Avatar

    Loved the review and generally agree.

    However, I don’t think Tuvok looks bad at all in terms of saying they shouldn’t negotiate with the Vidiians. Didn’t the Vidiians basically cannibalize the entire ship and crew a couple episodes back, or at least they were well on their way to doing so when a self-destruct happened? Why is this not mentioned?

    I think episodes like this just point out how artificial the whole set-up of the show is. If you know the whole crew and mission will not be demolished because you have a contract for x more episodes this season, then sure, go ahead and try to save the Captain. But if you honestly believe that the survival of the crew is on the line in a significant way, trying to save 2 crewpeople (highly ranking or not) at the risk of everyone else’s being dismembered alive is a poor decision. In other words, I agree with Janeway.

    Tuvok looks bad in terms of his ability to effectively communicate his decision-making, however, and I agree there’s a strong parallel to “Galileo 7” here. I think there was a big thing about whether and how important it was to bury bodies on that one.

    Haha, yes, it’s so funny that a significant plot point was Chakotay’s carpentry work. I did like how they explored Janeway’s denial and it eventually breaking down and I didn’t mind that the planet was boring, because every planet is not necessarily interesting. But it would have been nice to see Tuvok learning from his experience of Captaincy more about how to shade a message. Kes could have potentially helped him out there.

    If he had avoided the Vidiians and then later another means had become available to save the Captain (what if she actually solved the infection problem and figured out how to extend the transmission distance to reach the ship? Maybe a vial or two survived the storm.) it would have been a much more satisfying ending, to me. Being a scientist fits Janeway’s character (she’s curious and not that extroverted), and I think it could potentially make her more interesting to develop that hobby more.

  3. Kevin Black Avatar

    I hope they do develop the science hobby for Janeway! Not sure if they will. Technically the Vidiian cannibalism thing happened in a different dimension, but Harry came over from that dimension so they should all know about it.

  4. Randi Cohen Avatar

    Didn’t they discuss it afterward? I thought they did, so Janeway and the command crew would know about it at least?

  5. Randi Cohen Avatar

    I am also curious what makes you sure it was not a good decision to abandon Janeway and Chakotay. Maybe it’s just what resonates?

  6. Kevin Black Avatar

    I don’t think you rush away from stranded crewmembers, especially the captain and leader of the Maquis crew, when there is no existential threat forcing you to do so. You turn over every stone. The harm is a delay in months to a journey that is already 75 years.

  7. Kevin Black Avatar

    I think there’s also something to demonstrating community values through shared sacrifice that should make them all feel more secure and bonded, because it establishes the importance of each crew and how they care for each other. The whole is stronger when it believes in more than just utilitarianism, but invests in community.

    It’s a somewhat different situation when the cost of the rescue effort exceeds the benefit to be obtained. I think of the episode where Picard has to order Geordi to abandon efforts to try to rescue was appears to be the ghost of his mother from a dangerous nebula.

  8. Randi Cohen Avatar

    Good point that there was no pressing reason to leave the vicinity, under the circumstances. And they also could have made attempts to get help from non- cannibalistic aliens…

  9. Kevin Black Avatar

    Under what circumstances would you say that the needs of the one outweigh the needs of the many? Or was Kirk just being cheeky to Spock? I think that the needs of the many is a hard thing to visualize, and subject to things like prejudice and hysteria; we practice our values in the way we treat individuals. In the Bill of Rights we protect the rights of the individual against the tyranny of the majority, which is not, I think, because we don’t care about the general welfare, but because majorities can be wrong and given to faction..

  10. Randi Cohen Avatar

    Interesting!

    I think Kirk was saying that as a “private citizen”, not as a Captain ordering multiple crewmembers to risk their lives to save one life. You were unhappy with Janeway ordering 1 crewmember to give up his life to revive 2 others… while I feel like ordering the whole crew to significantly risk death to save 2 is wrong. It’s interesting how we call these situations differently.

    I surely agree that it is not good to leave too much up to the majority without some guarantee of individual rights. I like the “your right to swing your fist ends where my nose begins” formulation. The devil is in the details, of course.

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