Star Trek: Voyager

Gravity Index: 6.3

Star Trek: Voyager balances its scientific exploration with character-driven drama and occasional humor. While it presents a serious tone in episodes about time travel, alternate realities, and metaphysical concepts, the scientific and philosophical depth is often secondary to the narrative’s more immediate concerns. Expect a thoughtful but not overwhelmingly heavy series that tackles the consequences of high-concept ideas with care but without diving too deep into their complexities.

Released
01/16/1995
Content Rating
Runtime
minutes
Language
English

Star Trek: Voyager follows the journey of a Starfleet crew stranded 70,000 light-years from Earth after being transported by an alien device known as the Caretaker. The crew, led by Captain Kathryn Janeway, faces numerous challenges involving time travel, alternate realities, and spatial distortions while attempting to return home. Various episodes explore the manipulation of time, such as encountering alternate timelines where characters live out different futures or paradoxes where their actions in the past threaten their present. The series also tackles themes of identity crises through holographic or telepathic means and challenges to the crew’s perception of reality in mind-bending spatial phenomena. The overarching plot sees the crew navigating both literal and metaphysical obstacles, ultimately contributing to the series’ legacy as one of the most introspective within the Star Trek universe, blending philosophical questions with spacefaring adventure.

Tone: 6

While Star Trek: Voyager frequently includes episodes with humor and lighthearted moments, the overall tone is often serious, especially regarding the consequences of space exploration, alternate realities, and time travel. The balance between these tones gives it a medium score.

Consequence: 7

Voyager delves into the lasting impacts of temporal and alternate reality phenomena. Many episodes, especially those involving time travel or alternate dimensions, feature significant, often irreversible consequences that challenge the crew’s morality, ethics, and understanding of science.

Depth: 6

The show often touches on scientific theories related to time travel, quantum mechanics, and the philosophical questions of existence, choice, and identity. However, these explorations are not always deeply central to the overall narrative, with the show sometimes prioritizing action and character drama.