Memory Alpha

Emanations (episode)

  • 1.2 Act One
  • 1.3 Act Two
  • 1.4 Act Three
  • 1.5 Act Four
  • 1.6 Act Five
  • 2 Log entries
  • 3 Memorable quotes
  • 4.1 Story and script
  • 4.2 Cast and characters
  • 4.3 Production
  • 4.4 Visual effects
  • 4.5 Continuity
  • 4.6 Reception
  • 5.1 Starring
  • 5.2 Also starring
  • 5.3 Guest stars
  • 5.4 Co-star
  • 5.5 Uncredited co-stars
  • 5.6 Photo doubles
  • 5.7 Stand-ins
  • 5.8 References
  • 5.9 External links

Summary [ ]

The USS Voyager is investigating a new element , the 247th one known to the Federation , on a ring of asteroids around a class D planet . Chief engineer Torres suggests that they get a look at the element, as many of the asteroids support class M environments. Captain Janeway agrees and orders that Commander Chakotay head an away team to an asteroid. He brings Torres and Ensign Kim with him. Materializing, the three discover numerous decaying bodies.

Act One [ ]

Chakotay reports that they have discovered eighteen bodies on the asteroid – eleven male, seven female. The bodies are in various stages of decomposition, some have been there for years, others just a few days. They cannot determine from where the bodies came from, however. The element Voyager discovered is apparently emanating from the alien's decomposing bodies. Chakotay recommends they leave the bodies in peace, but Ensign Kim disagrees, saying that their find could be a notable anthropological discovery and they should take full advantage of it

Chakotay believes that the unknown species clearly meant for their dead to be left alone. Janeway ultimately agrees with the commander, but advises that the away team's tricorders be set to passive scan only. Chakotay also advises against that, not wishing to disturb the sanctity of the bodies. He wants to use visual observation only. Janeway agrees to this also. Upon ceasing communication with Voyager , Kim nevertheless thanks Chakotay for allowing him to voice his opinion to Janeway. Chakotay then recalls to the young Starfleet officer his first tomb excavation to Ktaria VII , where he visited a burial chamber and took a stone as a memento. He only found out later that the Ktarians leave sacred stones representing prayers in the chamber. He had unknowingly desecrated the man's grave. Torres appears and tells Chakotay she has probably found out all she could about the species, stating that " they like to bury their dead on asteroids. " She can find no artifacts or inscriptions – just some naked dead people.

Chakotay explains that she is simply looking but not seeing. " The fact that they're naked says a lot. It means this race doesn't believe in dressing the deceased. " Upon debating various species' beliefs about the afterlife, a subspace vacuole suddenly forms, and Chakotay requests an emergency beam out. Aboard Voyager , Chakotay and Torres materialize with a female dead body and Kim is missing. Using his sensors, Tuvok can find no sign of him anywhere in the asteroid field and Seska has no trace of his transporter pattern . Scanning the deceased woman, Torres is reading electrical activity in her brain , meaning they could still revive her. Chakotay orders Ensign Seska to beam them directly to sickbay . Meanwhile, Kim has been transported… somewhere.

Act Two [ ]

Kim learns that when the species, called the Vhnori , are near death , they are placed in a coffin-like device called a cenotaph , which euthanizes the occupant, then transports them to the " Next Emanation ," their culture's concept of Heaven or nirvana. They express amazement that an alien has unexpectedly appeared in the coffin. In trying to explain to Hatil Garan where he comes from, Kim introduces to the Vhnori doubt and suspicion about their afterlife beliefs.

Aboard Voyager , the Vhnori corpse is determined to have died within the last few minutes, and within reach of Starfleet medical resuscitation technology. The Doctor removes her brain tumor, replicates replacement neural tissue, and explains that the new element Voyager discovered is a biopolymer , secreted by the epidermal layer of the skin of this species when they die. Janeway asks The Doctor to revive the woman, which he does with 2ccs of netinaline . She is disoriented and upset, as she died fully expecting to wake in the Next Emanation, and be reunited with her brother . Not understanding what she is talking about and perceiving her to be delusional, The Doctor sedates her with a hypospray . Chakotay and Janeway glance at each other, not knowing what to say to the troubled woman.

Act Three [ ]

Back on Vhnori, a leading thanatologist , Neria , questions Kim, and provides him with further information on their beliefs. The cenotaph Kim appeared in is built on a subspace vacuole, called a spectral rupture by the Vhnori. When Neria continues to question Kim on what he saw while on the asteroid, Kim tells the thanatologist that it is a custom of his people to not reveal too much to alien cultures they have just initiated first contact with. Neria then announces that he would like Dr. Ranora to begin a complete bio-analysis on Kim, much to the ensign's chagrin. " You are our first glimpse into what lies beyond death. We are not going to let this opportunity pass us by, " he states to Kim.

Back aboard Voyager , Chakotay is conducting scans of the asteroids at a science station . He reports to Janeway that they have detected 200,000 alien bodies in numerous asteroids. Apparently, a subspace vacuole appears every two hours, leaves a body and then disappears. Janeway believes the vacuoles are the key to locating Kim and has Chakotay try to find more about them. Signaled by The Doctor, Janeway heads to sickbay, where the alien woman, named Ptera , is now awake and much calmer than before.

Ptera tells Janeway everything she knows and would like to know what is currently happening. Janeway explains the situation, that vacuoles appear and deposit bodies on the asteroids. Ptera wants to know if anything else happens after that, which Janeway cannot explain. Ptera emotionally explains that when her people die, they are supposed to evolve into a higher state of consciousness and gain a greater understanding of the universe , where all of their questions are supposed to be answered. Janeway tries to comfort the frightened woman, who wants to see her deceased brother in the afterlife, but Ptera notes that he is not here. Janeway promises her that she will do everything in her power to find out how she got to Voyager and she will let her know as soon as she finds out. Kes suggests they have Ptera leave sickbay and get something to eat.

Suddenly, Voyager rocks. Janeway taps her combadge and asks for a report. Lieutenant Paris responds that a vacuole has formed near engineering . Torres reports that she has localized the rupture and opens a door to an engineering Jefferies tube , where she finds a Vhnori corpse lying on the floor.

Act Four [ ]

Kim's presence disturbs the plans of Hatil Garan, whose family has convinced him that it is time to be sent to the Next Emanation . Expressing his doubts to his wife, Araya , she angrily tells Kim to leave her husband alone. Kim is told by Garan that everyone does this willingly – when they're sick, dying, or lonely. In Hatil's case, his family has urged him to make the decision to make their eventual separation quick and painless. With Kim's arrival, he has begun to have severe doubts.

In close to proximity to the planet, more Vhnori corpses start materializing on the engineering deck, probably attracted by the warp core . None of the crew can determine why these people have died and why they keep appearing. Torres enacts safeguards, such as a dampening field around the warp core, but hopes of getting Kim back dwindle. The bodies continue to appear, and the transporter room beams each body to the asteroids one by one.

On Voyager , Torres comes up with a way to send Ptera back to her dimension and to also get Kim back. They plan to recreate the transporter accident that brought Ptera to Voyager , but send her through the vacuole with a subspace transponder . Chakotay notes that they may be able to penetrate the dimensional barrier and bring Kim back with a transporter beam. Ptera agrees to this, although Janeway warns her they do not know if this will work. She decides to anyway, saying that she has died once before and she is prepared to again if it means her getting home. During the attempt to send Ptera back to Vhnori, it fails and ultimately results in her death again. Kes tells Janeway that they cannot revive her this time and Janeway has Seska beam her to one of the asteroids, believing that is where she now belongs. Kes expresses to Ptera's lifeless body that she hopes she finds what she was looking for.

Act Five [ ]

On Vhnori, Neria intends to move Kim to another location at Paffran for further detailed medical analysis, threatening Kim's hopes of returning to Voyager . " I'm sorry, Harry. It's out of my control, " he says before leaving. Kim convinces Hatil to let him take his place in the device, hoping that it will return him to the same cave he was exploring before he was transported, allowing his crewmates to rescue him. The Vhnori man will flee to the mountains , where his friends live, to live the rest of his life, letting his family believe him dead. Inside the device, Kim dies and is transported to Voyager , where sensors have detected him. Immediately beamed to sickbay , Kim is revived by The Doctor with a dose of cordrazine .

Janeway and Kim, 2371

" It's so easy to become jaded. To treat the extraordinary like just another day at the office. "

Later in the mess hall, Captain Janeway catches up with Kim, and orders him off duty for a couple of days to put his recent adventure in perspective. He resists, but she tells him that it is too easy in Starfleet to just carry on, and objectify each new, "extraordinary experience" as all in a day's work. She urges him to take the time to appreciate what he's been through. Kim then admits that he's been thinking a lot about what happened, how the Vhnori look forward to death and what comes afterwards yet they don't ascend to the Next Emanation but instead are just dumped and decay inside an asteroid. Janeway tells him not to be so sure, as the energy that was detected by Voyager had neural energy emissions from the newly appearing bodies, adding to a complex and dynamic energy field surrounding the planet. Kim asks the captain if she believes the Vhnori do indeed have an afterlife, but all she is certain of is that, " What we don't know about death is far, far greater than what we do know" . Janeway then leaves Kim to reflect on his experience.

Log entries [ ]

  • " Captain's log , stardate 48623.5. There are two-hundred-forty-six elements known to Federation science . We believe we have just discovered the two-hundred-forty-seventh inside the ring system of a class-D planet. "
  • " Captain's log, supplemental . We've returned to the ring system , and we're preparing to send Ptera back to her dimension . Lieutenant Torres has found a way to temporarily protect the warp core against the vacuoles, but she is uncertain how long her measures will be effective. "

Memorable quotes [ ]

" It looks like most of these asteroids support class M atmospheres. "

" I just want to give you a chance to reflect on what's happened. This may not make much sense to you now, a young man at the beginning of his career. But one of the things you'll learn as you move up the ranks and get a little older is that… you wish you had more time in your youth to really, absorb all the things that happened to you. It goes by so fast. It's so easy to become jaded, to treat the extraordinary like just another day at the office. But sometimes there are experiences which transcend all that. You've just had one, Mr. Kim, and I want you to live with it for a little while. Write about it, if you feel like it. Paint. Express yourself in some fashion. The bridge will still be there in two days. "

" Ptera, you've been through a very traumatic experience. It would frighten me. "

" I don't know who you are or where you come from, but you stay away from my husband! "

" In essence, commander, you were strolling through dead bodies. "

" No artifacts, no inscriptions… just some naked dead people. "

" That's why I'm here. I'm… getting ready to die. "

" Relax, Mr. Kim. Everything's fine. You're alive. "

" The fact that they're naked says a lot. It means this race doesn't believe in dressing the deceased. "

" Sometimes I come in here and just stare out at the stars for hours. I never get tired of looking at them. "

" I'm not certain, but I am certain about this. What we don't know about death is far, far greater than what we do know. "

Background information [ ]

Story and script [ ].

  • This episode had the working title "Beyond". [1]
  • The original idea for the installment was conceived years before it developed into an episode. Brannon Braga (who had worked as a writer/producer on Star Trek: The Next Generation before joining Star Trek: Voyager ) explained, " I had wanted to do a show about death ever since I came to Star Trek , but I could never find a way to do it. " ( The Official Star Trek: Voyager Magazine  issue 5 , p. 48) Executive Producer Jeri Taylor offered, " It was [an episode] that Brannon really felt strongly about and he, being consumed with dark things, wrote the script. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 141)
  • Brannon Braga intended to center the episode around some debatable philosophical and political issues. Of the direction he took the story in, Braga commented, " 'Our reality as an alien afterlife' was [an] […] idea that ended up affording […] philosophical explorations, namely, what is life, could something really lie beyond, and a great deal of social commentary about euthanasia. I really tried to emphasize some of the euthanasia issues, that in a society where they know an afterlife exists because it's a scientific fact, some people would be eager to die. Sick people would be encouraged to die, and you start getting into some very tricky issues. Once euthanasia is approved, does the person who's 'deciding' really have a choice? There's so much pressure on that person to go to the next emanation that really there is no choice , and those are some of the things I was trying to say. I don't believe in euthanasia. I don't believe it's fair to say to someone who's sick, 'You may pull the plug,' because there are lots of pressures. What about the people who can't afford the medical treatment? A lot of guilt comes from making your family pay for all of it. So, I think there are some unseen pressures which accompany that choice that I really wanted to explore. " ( The Official Star Trek: Voyager Magazine  issue 5 , p. 48)
  • Brannon Braga's initial attempt to encapsulate the story was not entirely successful. He stated, " I wrote a first draft that I thought was one of my best scripts […] I got a lot of notes and did rewrites I wasn't happy to do, but in the end they were right and I was wrong. " Jeri Taylor recalled, " It was a very tricky episode to do […] It was very tricky in the beginning. He got so involved with the political debate that the story and the people sort of got lost. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , pp. 140 & 141)
  • Another issue that the writing staff encountered was that Brannon Braga and Executive Producer Michael Piller had creative differences over how intellectual to make the script, with Braga wanting the episode to be more "brooding and philosophical" but his boss insisting that the story involve more active conflict. ( Star Trek Monthly  issue 7 , p. 9)
  • It was decided to have this episode depict a planetary ring system, a spatial feature that is typically comprised of rocky debris occasionally including ice. Science Consultant André Bormanis remembered, " We decided that the rings of an alien gas giant planet would be a fun setting for this story, which was ultimately a story about religious beliefs and the afterlife. " ("Real Science With Andre Bormanis", VOY Season 2 DVD special features) Anticipating the expense of close-up shots showing the ringed planet, Voyager 's team of writer-producers initially wrote around the asteroid sequence. David Stipes , the visual effects supervisor on this episode, explained, " We were initially going to see a ring at a distance, so it looks like a Saturn -like planet, then we were going to go into a graphic that shows the asteroids, and then we were going to talk about them. We were not going to see them. That was to cut the budget. The producers were absolutely right that under a conventional approach we could not have done this show [with many elaborate effects shots, due to their expense]. " Stipes justified the costs, however, due to his passion for the episode's story and script. He later noted that he "really pushed" for close-up footage of the rings to be shown. ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, p. 84) André Bormanis concluded, " And so, we were able to bring Voyager into this ring system and show those chunks of rock and ice and get Voyager into orbit with that material. " ("Real Science With Andre Bormanis", VOY Season 2 DVD special features)
  • Brannon Braga tried to imbue Voyager crew members with likable qualities, in scenes such as the early one wherein Chakotay expresses sensitivity to the rituals of other cultures and the penultimate scene, in which Janeway advises Kim to take some time to consider his recent experiences. Of the early scene, Braga remarked, " I thought it would be nice to show that this is a crew that has a lot of respect for alien cultures. To the point where they are not going to muss with anything. Certainly, that whole scene on the asteroid where they are discovering the bodies was an attempt to give Chakotay some character, to show that he's an expert in paleontological events… and that he's really smart. " Braga continued by saying of the later scene between Janeway and Kim, " The moment at the end was a definite attempt to show a Captain who takes the time to appeal to the Human equation in all of this. She tells Kim to take some time off to think about–and in fact, encourages him to seek a creative outlet. It would be nice to see some of our crew members actually engage in some sort of artistic endeavor. " ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, p. 47)
  • One sequence that was considered to be too expensive to produce encompassed a certain visual perspective that Brannon Braga wanted to include in the story. " I had written a whole sequence where, when Kim dies, we follow his point-of-view, " remembered Braga. " It was my contention that how often do we literally get to kill a character and see his point-of-view of death? And in an episode where the only thing being discussed on both sides is death– let's see it! Well, for budgetary reasons, we couldn't do it. " ( The Official Star Trek: Voyager Magazine  issue 5 , pp. 48 & 49)
  • The final draft script of this episode was submitted on 6 January 1995 . [2]
  • This episode was the first of Star Trek: Voyager to have five acts (rather than eight or four) and was one of the most affected by act formatting changes, specifically the decision – made in the first week of January 1995 – to return to the idea of regular episodes each having five acts rather than four. The necessary adjustments were made to the episode's script by Lolita Fatjo and Janet Nemecek . ( A Vision of the Future - Star Trek: Voyager , p. 345)

Cast and characters [ ]

  • Kim actor Garrett Wang was ecstatic to receive the teleplay for this episode. " "I got very excited when I started reading that script, " he reminisced. " I liked the premise. I think it was an excellent story and an excellent script […] Overall I was happy with the episode. " ( Starlog #222, pp. 80 & 81) At about the end of the first season, Wang remarked on having been more active in "Emanations" than usual, implying that he thought his character dying and then being resurrected here brought "more depth and more color" to his role than just Kim's typical reaction shots of "somebody being amazed by something." ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 125) In a retrospective interview, Wang noted, " Kim was actually the first character to die and then come back to life. " (" Voyager Time Capsule: Harry Kim", VOY Season 4 DVD special features) Wang believed the episode was an important step in Kim's maturation. The actor remarked, " The bottom line is, in order to get back, he has to commit suicide. He has to die in order to live. And the fact that he made that decision and went through with it and came out okay shows that Harry is less green at that point. He still has his innocent side, but he also has a little more maturity. " ( Star Trek: Communicator  issue 102 , p. 46)
  • Garrett Wang was also regretful, however, that the potential of "Emanations" might not have been fully realized in the duration allowed. " I personally think that one could have been made into a two-parter, " he suggested. " There were many issues and such a lot of debate back and forth in that episode that for me, the pacing became too slow […] I was left with the feeling, 'Wait a minute, there's more that could have happened.' […] That episode could easily have been stretched into a two-hour episode. It could have been a superb, fantastic episode. " Wang was fascinated to learn that Brannon Braga extremely regretted that, in "Emanations", he was not able to follow Kim's point-of-view as he endured temporary death, the actor exclaiming, " That would have been amazing! " He suggested, too, that the installment could have been combined with " Non Sequitur " to result in a very effective show. ( Starlog #222, pp. 80 & 81)
  • Garrett Wang found this episode to be particularly challenging, later recalling, " "That was a really tough episode for me to film. It was a very long and demanding episode. " ( Starlog #222, p. 80) In fact, he cited the installment as one of three examples, from each of the first three seasons, that he considered to be "a progressively higher jump for me acting-wise" (the other such episodes being "Non Sequitur" and " The Chute "). ( Star Trek Monthly  issue 33 , p. 34) Wang revealed, " 'Emanations' was particularly trying on me. [The episode's production was] tough because as actors, we play parts where a character is dying but not where a character dies and comes back to life, which is very difficult because there's no precedent to that in one's life experience. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 141)
  • To inspire his portrayal of the deceased Kim, Garrett Wang remembered having learned about ninjas. The actor reflected, " When I was pretending to be dead, I concentrated on trying to slow my heartbeat down and on physical things and manifestations. When I was young and on my martial-arts kick, I would read about ninjas who are going to attack and people won't know it because they've sucked in their aura. That's what I tried to do. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 141)
  • Michael Piller was pleased with the work that Jefrey Alan Chandler (Hatil Garan) did on this episode, describing the actor as "terrific." ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 141)
  • Ethan Phillips ( Neelix ) does not appear in this episode.

Production [ ]

  • According to an uncertain Garrett Wang, this episode's production was composed of "seven or eight days of shooting." ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 141)
  • Some of the wall panels in the Vhnori rooms were moldings left over from the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine sets. ( Delta Quadrant , p. 30)
  • Director David Livingston was suffering from flu while filming this episode. ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 141)
  • During the episode's production period, David Livingston was slightly unsure how to differentiate scenes set on the Vhnori homeworld to the series' regular settings. " I said to Jeri Taylor that I had to do something different and the only thing I could come up with was to dutch the camera, " Livingston reflected, in regard to presenting the environment of the episode's alien afterlife on a skewed camera angle. " They all threw up their hands because I did that in [DS9's] ' Crossover [!] ' and took a lot of shit for it. I said it was the only thing I could think of to do visually that would make it different. Rick [Berman] didn't want me to do it, and Jeri finally agreed, and eventually Rick did too, but they didn't want me to go too far overboard with it. I didn't do it as much as I wanted, but I did it enough so that you have a sense that things look slightly unbalanced and skewed. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 141)
  • David Livingston had second thoughts, halfway through the episode's production, about how the Vhnori setting would be depicted. " I wanted the mood of the Other Side to be much darker and the sets to be weirder and stuff, " he recollected, " but time and everything conspire against you. I initially wanted everything bright in the emanation room where they're waiting to die. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 141)
  • The filming of the scene in which Kim is resurrected involved improvisation on Garrett Wang's part. He remembered, " It was interesting because David [Livingston] left up to me when I actually came back to life after I was injected with the hypospray. He said, 'Choose when is the time that it will affect you and jump-start you back.' And so when I did come back I took in this big breath and had goose bumps all over me. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 141)

Visual effects [ ]

  • Compelled to campaign for the visual effects of this episode to include adequately close shots of the ringed planet, David Stipes was inspired by the design of Voyager 's opening credits sequence. " I think [visual effects producer] Dan Curry and the guys at Santa Barbara Studios held out a promise for the show in the title sequence, " Stipes remarked. " I try to adhere to the mood it established. The title sequence was part of the inspiration and the thrust for the 'Emanations' show – the scale of the planet, the planetoids, the asteroids, and the rings, all of those things. " ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, p. 85)

Emanations storyboard

A storyboard that David Stipes designed, in order to convince producers to authorize use of CGI in this episode

  • David Stipes first met with the staff of Amblin Imaging and explained his aspiration of achieving, on a modest budget, an epic vision for these shots. As Voyager had already been rendered in CGI , the shots were within the realm of possibility. In fact, Stipes originally planned to matte footage of the studio model into the planetary scenes but, after he saw the CGI ship, he saw no reason to shoot motion control footage for the shots and abandoned this idea. He thereafter presented his case to the producers. " I'm saying, 'Guys we've got to see this,' " Stipes recalled. " I brought in storyboards to show them. I talked with David Livingston who was the director and he was very supportive, talked with Jeri Taylor and she said, 'If you can do it for the budget we have, then fine let's do it.' And [Producer] Peter Lauritson was tremendously supportive. " ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, p. 84)
  • The episode's final version includes five shots showing the ring system and three stock shots of Voyager alone in space. The design and execution of the shots required contributions from many different people. For example, although the shots involving the ringed planet were designed by David Stipes, Peter Lauritson also helped with the design. Stipes noted, " [He] made some suggestions on how to rearrange some of the shots. " Executing the shots subsequently drew on the combined skills of Amblin's entire staff. Grant Bouchet , one of two CGI supervisors at Amblin (the other being John Gross ), remarked, " One thing on 'Emanations' we are particularly proud of is that everybody was involved. All of us finessed motion, lighting, texture maps, planets. We all had a hand in every single shot. " One major contributor was David Jones . John Gross commented, " One of our animators, David Jones, worked full time on getting that planet to look like David Stipes wanted it to look. " ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, pp. 84 & 85)
  • Creating the look of the planet began with a standard sphere, a pre-existing part of the Lightwave software. For surface detail, a satellite photograph of Nevada was scanned, manipulated with use of the image processing program Adobe Photo Shop, then digitally wrapped around the sphere. With the planet surface complete, two more spheres were created around it to represent the atmosphere and cloud layers. The stars around the planet, at least some of which had originally been created for the film trailer for Star Trek Generations , were a variety of light points set at different distances within an extremely large sphere. ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, p. 85)
  • The planet's rings can most closely be seen in a shot that follows Voyager from a stationary position in front of the orbiting asteroids through a 180 degree pan, sweeping past the planet and its rings to a point where the ship warps away from the area. This shot was achieved entirely with the Lightwave digital modeling program. The planet's distant rings were a matte painting created by David Jones. However, the debris shown as being closer to the camera was rendered with the Lightwave program. " As we get closer and closer the rings are created using a particle system in Lightwave, " Gross explained. " We apply a bump map to it to make it bumpy. Closer still we break off into the big chunks. " Grant Bouchet commented, " At this point it was handed to me for throwing in the asteroids. In the distance we had a layer of very fine transparent particles, then the layer closer to us of a whole bunch of little bitty distorted spheres, thousands of them. These are not very complicated whatsoever, but when the light hits them you get these little highlights. Again the computer is doing all that work for you. The next layer up are medium size asteroids and they have a low level of detail. David hand-painted a matte of a rocky, bumpy surface. Then we used Lightwave's spherical mapping algorithm to apply that around the asteroids. " ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, pp. 85)
  • With the background complete, the Amblin staff inserted the CGI Voyager into the shots. The final movement of the particular shot wherein the ship departs the planet was programmed by John Gross, after which the team concentrated on finessing the shot. Two lighting methods were tried out. Voyager was back lit in the first lighting scenario but front lit in the second, the second example giving the ship an attractive painted look at the start of the shot but making the vessel almost completely blackened out by the end. Stipes ultimately decided upon the first lighting method. " Then it was a matter of [further] fine-tuning lighting, " Bouchet recalled. " Each element is lit from about the same direction, but at just a little different angle, maybe five degrees here or there. " ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, p. 85)
  • Ultimately, both David Stipes and André Bormanis considered this episode to be the high point for visual effects in Voyager 's first season. Bormanis said of the ringed planet, " I think that was one of the 'cutting edge' special effects that we had done on Voyager . Certainly, on television at that time, there was nothing else like it. And at that time, for us, that was really pushing the state of the art of the kinds of special effects we could do on the show. " ("Real Science With Andre Bormanis", VOY Season 2 DVD special features) For his part, Stipes enthused, " We were able to reflect what was in the script by bringing some of [its] flavor to the show visually. Because of the foresight of the producers having created a CGI ship, we were able to come in and deliver shots that up to now we couldn't have afforded to do. I'm not sure people at Paramount realize it, but this show would not have been possible a year ago. " ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, p. 85)

Continuity [ ]

  • This is the first time Harry Kim dies on Voyager . The next instance is during the episode " Deadlock ".
  • Voyager 's crew discovers the first stable transuranic element , element 247 ; we learn here that the Federation previously knew of 246 elements and, since Voyager discovers a new element in this episode, that number is raised to 247. By comparison, there were merely 111 elements known to science when the episode first aired, with the 111th of these discovered a few months before the episode's initial broadcast (specifically, on 8 December 1994 ). Physicists are unsure how many elements there could be; the extremely high energy makes it unlikely an atom with 247 protons could exist. At present, it is believed that 172 protons is the theoretical upper limit.

Reception [ ]

  • Brannon Braga was ultimately pleased with this episode's exploration of intellectual matters. He stated, " 'Our reality as an alien afterlife' was a catchy, high-concept SF idea. " Braga also described the episode's philosophical explorations as "very interesting." ( The Official Star Trek: Voyager Magazine  issue 5 , p. 48) Additionally, he commented of the installment's theme, " It is certainly one of my best concepts. Our reality being somebody else's afterlife and one of our people coming back from the dead in return for an alien was a good idea, solid sci fi, and an issue explored. My shows don't always deal with issues, but this one deals with issues of euthanasia. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , pp. 140-141)
  • However, Brannon Braga was also very disappointed that the sequence he wrote, literally showing Kim's point-of-view of death, could not be produced, a fact that Braga solemnly referred to as "my biggest regret." He further admitted of the loss, " For me, that was devastating. The show was crippled by the fact that we didn't follow Kim's point-of-view of death. Even if it had been nothing more than a light show, it would have been really neat. When that rod sticks into his neck, we should have seen his point-of-view. " ( The Official Star Trek: Voyager Magazine  issue 5 , pp. 48 & 49)
  • This episode ultimately won the approval of both Jeri Taylor and Executive Story Editor Kenneth Biller , Taylor believing that Braga had put his heart and soul into the episode's teleplay. She remarked, " The concept that our life is their afterlife was a very high-concept sci-fi notion, which I think is part of the best things that Star Trek does. " Taylor also stated, " Ultimately, it was an episode about something, and it was thought-provoking. " In addition, she said of Braga, " I thought he [ultimately] addressed [the story and characters] very nicely. " Stated Ken Biller, " A great notion and a notion that delivered on the promise of the series, which is weird stuff in a weird place far from home. Just the whole notion of somebody waking up in the middle of an alien funeral, realizing that we come from some other culture's afterlife is really fascinating, and it was a great personal story for Kim. It's about death and it's about a guy who has to be willing to take the plunge – be willing to die – to live again. Wonderful stuff. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 141)
  • David Stipes was also pleased with the episode's plot. " I got very excited about this particular script, " he reminisced. " I liked the idea of the afterlife, of going on to a different lifetime, and was very intrigued by the impact that Harry Kim was having on the other race […] It was wonderful. " ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, p. 84) Additionally, Stipes enthusiastically referred to the episode as involving a "wonderful concept" and "a tremendously great script." ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, p. 85)
  • One aspect of the episode that André Bormanis enjoyed was the inclusion of the planetary ring system, which he opined was "a lot of fun." ("Real Science With Andre Bormanis", VOY Season 2 DVD special features)
  • Michael Piller and Jeri Taylor were not entirely happy with the episode's final permutation, however. Piller still felt that the episode should have contained more drama and conflict. He remarked, " I always felt that it was more philosophical than dramatic. I don't think it quite realized its potential […] The show had a great deal of potential and was philosophically fascinating, but there's just too much conversation about philosophy, and it didn't have a strong enough character arc for my tastes. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 141) In fact, Brannon Braga felt that the story had suffered, as a result of his disagreement with Piller over the installment. ( Star Trek Monthly  issue 7 , p. 9) Jeri Taylor related, " I do have some quibbles about some of the production elements of it. I think some of the aliens on the other side were a little hokey. " She further complained, " I think that maybe some of what we saw of the other life was somewhat disappointing. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 141) Numerous individuals also felt that the aliens' belief in an afterlife was too spiritual for Star Trek but Braga disagreed, noting that the concept was embodied in a specifically alien culture. ( Star Trek Monthly  issue 7 , p. 9)
  • David Livingston ultimately regretted his initial decision to have the Vhnori emanation room as a bright place, calling it "a mistake on my part." He continued, " It should have been much moodier and darker and weirder. If I have any regrets, it's that. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 141)
  • Garrett Wang wished the episode had been broadcast later in the first season than it actually had been. " In terms of airing that episode, " he said, " it would have been nice to have it closer to the end instead of near the beginning. Think about it: this is a life-changing event, and maybe it would have been a smarter move to put this episode towards the end so Kim comes into the second season a wiser soul. Because it was placed closer to the beginning, I had a tough time trying to keep my 'green around the gills' image. " ( Star Trek Monthly  issue 19 , p. 88)
  • This episode achieved a Nielsen rating of 7.1 million homes, and an 11% share. [3] (X)
  • Cinefantastique gave this installment 3 and a half out of 4 stars. ( Cinefantastique , Vol. 27, No. 4/5, p. 47)
  • In their unofficial reference book Trek Navigator: The Ultimate Guide to the Entire Trek Saga (p. 69), co-writer Mark A. Altman rates this episode 2 out of 4 stars (defined as "mediocre") while fellow co-writer Edward Gross ranks the installment 3 out of 4 stars (defined as "good").
  • The unauthorized reference book Delta Quadrant (p. 32) gives the episode a rating of 10 out of 10.
  • In the lead-up to this episode's VHS release, Star Trek Magazine reviewer Stuart Clark reviewed the episode, referring to as "a gruesome story." ( Star Trek Monthly  issue 7 , p. 60) In Star Trek Magazine 's retrospective "Ultimate Guide", the magazine gave this episode 3 out of 5 Starfleet-style arrowhead insignias. ( Star Trek Magazine  issue 164 , p. 29)
  • Many viewers of this installment liked the fact that it tackles some weighty issues, such as euthanasia. " I got a great deal of response, " Jeri Taylor said, " from people who appreciated the effort to explore a subject of that magnitude. " ( Captains' Logs Supplemental - The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages , p. 141)
  • This is one of four episodes (the others being from Star Trek: The Next Generation ) that, in 1996 , were singled out at the Society for American Archeology annual meeting in New Orleans , at which Voyager and TNG received The Public Education Recognition Award. ( Star Trek Monthly  issue 19 , p. 4)

Links and references [ ]

Starring [ ].

  • Kate Mulgrew as Captain Kathryn Janeway

Also starring [ ]

  • Robert Beltran as Commander Chakotay
  • Roxann Biggs-Dawson as Lieutenant B'Elanna Torres
  • Jennifer Lien as Kes
  • Robert Duncan McNeill as Lieutenant Tom Paris
  • Ethan Phillips as Neelix
  • Robert Picardo as The Doctor
  • Tim Russ as Lieutenant Tuvok
  • Garrett Wang as Ensign Harry Kim

Guest stars [ ]

  • Jerry Hardin as Neria
  • Jefrey Alan Chandler as Hatil Garan
  • Cecile Callan as Ptera
  • Martha Hackett as Seska
  • Robin Groves as Araya

Co-star [ ]

  • John Cirigliano as Alien #1

Uncredited co-stars [ ]

  • Derek Anthony as operations ensign
  • Jasmin Bischoff as operations officer
  • Debbie David as Vhnori corpse in cave
  • David Clover as Cenotaph attendant
  • Kenneth David Ebling as command officer
  • Tarik Ergin as Ayala
  • Ermalene as Vhnori corpse in cave
  • Holiday Freeman as Ptera's mourner
  • Ptera's mourner
  • Vhnori corpse in cave
  • Norman Gibbs as operations officer
  • Julie Jiang as operations lieutenant junior grade
  • Vhnori corpse in engineering
  • Alta McGovern as Hatil's mourner
  • Louis Ortiz as Culhane
  • Chad Patterson as sciences officer
  • Beth Rogers as Jarvis
  • Richard Sarstedt as William McKenzie
  • Daunette Saunders as operations officer
  • Vhnori ceremony assistant
  • Simon Stotler as operations ensign
  • Vhnori corpse in Jefferies tube
  • John Tampoya as Kashimuro Nozawa
  • Piper Taylor as Vhnori corpse in cave
  • Chad Valchar as Hatil's mourner
  • Rod Wallace as operations officer

Photo doubles [ ]

  • Dan Swett – hand double for Jerry Hardin
  • John Tampoya – photo double for Garrett Wang
  • Michael Yamasaki – hand double for Garrett Wang

Stand-ins [ ]

  • Heather Ferguson – stand-in for Roxann Biggs-Dawson, Cecile Callan and Robin Groves
  • Sue Henley – stand-in for Kate Mulgrew
  • Cy Kennedy – stand-in for Robert Beltran
  • Nora Leonhardt – stand-in for Roxann Biggs-Dawson
  • Susan Lewis – stand-in for Roxann Biggs-Dawson
  • Lorine Mendell – stand-in for Martha Hackett
  • Lemuel Perry – stand-in for Tim Russ
  • Jerry Quinn – stand-in for Robert Duncan McNeill
  • Richard Sarstedt – stand-in for Robert Picardo and John Cirigliano
  • Jennifer Somers – stand-in for Jennifer Lien and Robin Groves
  • Simon Stotler – stand-in for Jerry Hardin and Jefrey Alan Chandler and for Ethan Phillips (deleted scene only)
  • John Tampoya – stand-in for Garrett Wang
  • Michael Yamasaki – 2nd unit stand-in for Garrett Wang

References [ ]

47 ; 23rd century ; 2368 ; ambient radiation ; antimatter ; asteroid ; asteroid field ; atomic mass ; bioanalysis ; biopolymer ; bioscan ; blind beam-out ; brace ; brain stem ; briefing room ; buffer tank ; burial ; burial site ; byproduct ; cadaver ; Cararian Mountains ; cancer ; career ; cenotaph ; class D ; Class D planet ; Class D planet star ; class M ; class 5 humanoid ; complex ; comra ; cordrazine ; death shroud ; decomposition ; depression ; Earth ; electromagnetic field ; element 247 ; emergency power ; emergency transponder ; emergency transport procedure ; epidermal layer ; Federation ; first contact ; garili tree ; generation ; grave ; Hatil's family ; Hatil's friends ; Intrepid class decks ; Klingons ; Ktaria VII ; Ktarian ; Ktarian corpse ; lesion ; magnetic interlock ; medical expert ; meter ; microcellular structure ; midbrain ; Milky Way Galaxy ; morgue ; netinaline ; neural energy ; neural tissue ; Next Emanation ; nucleon ; Ocampa ; Ocampa (planet); Paffran ; painting ; pattern complexity ; philosopher ; physical being ; planetary scan ; postmortem resuscitation technique ; prayer ; probe casing ; Ptera's brother ; Ptera's brother's children ; Ptera's father ; Qo'noS ; quantum density ; ring system ; scanner range ; scientific discovery ; scientific world ; sculpture ; spectral rupture ; Sto-vo-kor ; subspace distortion ; subspace phenomenon ; subspace scan ; subspace transponder ; subspace vacuole ; thanatologist ; theologian ; theology ; tomb excavation ; Toyan ; transference ritual ; transporter accident ; transporter beam ; transporter lock ; transporter log ; Transporter Room 3 ; tumor ; universe ; Varel ; Vhnori ; Vhnori homeworld ; Vhnori language ; writing

External links [ ]

  • " Emanations " at Memory Beta , the wiki for licensed Star Trek works
  • " Emanations " at Wikipedia
  • " Emanations " at MissionLogPodcast.com
  • " Emanations " at the Internet Movie Database
  • 1 Bell Riots
  • 3 Daniels (Crewman)
  • Show Spoilers
  • Night Vision
  • Sticky Header
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http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Recap/StarTrekVoyagerS1E8Emanations

Star Trek Voyager S 1 E 8 "Emanations" » Recap

Star Trek Voyager S 1 E 8 "Emanations" Recap

Voyager finds an asteroid belt that seems to be rich with a new element. Chakotay, Torres and Kim beam in to investigate and instead find a burial site of a humanoid species. Suddenly a subspace vacuole forms, and they try to beam out, but the transporter gets one of the bodies instead of Kim. They discover that the body still has life signs and can be revived, so they beam to sick bay to do so. Meanwhile, Kim finds himself in a coffin-like device in the middle of a funeral and breaks out, startling the participants.

Kim discovers that he's among the Vhnori, a species that euthanizes their dying in the device he's in to send to the Next Emanation. They therefore think he comes from their afterlife and are alarmed when he says he only found their species' corpses there. They subject him to a barrage of tests. In the process, Kim meets Hatil Garan, an invalid whose family has decided to send him to the Next Emanation. Kim's stories make Hatil doubt his enthusiasm to be euthanized, causing problems between him and his family.

On Voyager , the Vhnori woman awakens and, after some terrified confusion, introduces herself as Ptera. Janeway explains how subspace vacuoles are depositing her species' bodies in the asteroids. Ptera is horrified that her culture's afterlife appears to be a sham. Torres comes up with a possible way to send Ptera back to where she came from and beam Kim back aboard through the rift. Ptera agrees to try in spite of the risks, reasoning that she's already died once, but the experiment is a failure, and Ptera dies in the process. Janeway has her body transported back to one of the burial asteroids.

Kim is told that, far from being released, he'll be taken to a "secure location" because word of his stories about the Next Emanation are causing strife in Vhnori society. Kim convinces Hatil to skip out on his euthanization and instead hide out in the mountains, letting his family believe him dead. Instead, Kim will take his place in hopes of being returned to his world. Kim hides out in the euthanization machine, which kills him and delivers his body to the asteroid. Voyager identifies him and beams him to sick bay, where he's revived. Afterwards, he glumly sits in the mess hall thinking about the Vhinori's sham of an afterlife, but Janeway notes that neural energy from their bodies joins the complex energy field around a nearby planet, suggesting there might be more to their tale after all.

This episode provides examples of:

  • All Webbed Up : The cocooned corpses of people found on the asteroid by Voyager turn out to decompose that way naturally.
  • Always on Duty : Harry is ready to jump right back into work at the end, and Janeway has to remind him that he has been dead and might want to ponder that for a day or two.
  • Ascend to a Higher Plane of Existence : What the "next emanation" is supposed to be.
  • Attack Pattern Alpha : Emergency Transport Procedure 21-Alpha.
  • Author Tract : "Emanation" is a timely message about the pitfalls of euthanasia — in very broad stokes. The planet in question is honeycombed with "hundreds" of assisted suicide centers, to the degree that it is literally their one defining characteristic .
  • Black Comedy : Chakotay takes such care to avoid Desecrating the Dead , only to be told by the Doctor that the cobwebs were a by-product of their decomposition. "In essence Commander, you were strolling through dead bodies."
  • Captain Obvious : Chakotay believes the fact that the dead bodies they find are naked shows that Vhnori do not believe in dressing their deceased . That's actually a rather hasty conclusion, and it turns out to not be the case after all.
  • Cloning Body Parts : The Doctor resurrects an alien brain cancer victim by removing the tumor from her brain stem, replicating and implanting replacement tissue, and zapping her with the On-Button Hypospray.
  • Continuity Nod : B'Elanna mentions that the Klingons don't put any importance on disposing of the deceased's body (from TNG's "Heart of Glory").
  • Cramming the Coffin : Harry puts on Hatil's burial shroud so he can get into the transference sarcophagus.
  • Creepy Souvenir : Chakotay relates how he once removed a rock as a souvenir on an away mission, only to find it was a sacred stone placed in commemoration of the deceased.
  • Death Is the Only Option : Harry realizes his only hope of getting back to Voyager is by dying in the sarcophagus and hoping his crewmates can find and revive him in time.
  • Disney Death : Harry Kim, as he goes through the transference sarcophagus and risks being put to death so that he can transport back to Voyager and be resurrected.
  • Due to the Dead : Chakotay insists they not disturb the bodies, conducting scans with the Mark One Eyeball only.
  • Dutch Angle : In order to emphasize the aliens' home dimension.
  • Emotional Language Shift : A sort of reversal. Ptera was "adopted" by an alien species. Their way of procreating involves reviving corpses and somehow physically turning them into one of their own. However, Ptera flees from her new home, reunites with Voyager, and tries to re-adapt to her old life. It slowly turns out that this isn't going to work, hinted by the fact that she begins to lapse into her adoptive parents' language when stressed.
  • Freak Out : Ptera doesn't take it well when she first wakes up on Voyager instead of the afterlife.
  • Heaven Seeker : The crippled Hatil has been pressured by his family to proceed to the next emanation to ease their financial burden. Having Harry appear from the supposed 'afterlife' causes doubt.
  • He's Dead, Jim : There's a lot of pronouncing people dead in this episode. Sometimes they don't stay that way.
  • Indian Burial Ground : In Space . The Vhnori cave is similar to a Native American burial cave, with accompanying Aesop about respecting the site.
  • Irony : Chakotay refuses to allow Harry and B'Elanna to scan the bodies, in order to respect the Vhnori dead. Later, a Vhnori doctor remonstrates Harry for not doing so, as it would have given them some answers about their 'afterlife'.
  • It's the Only Way : Ptera and Harry both attempt to return to their point of origin. Only Harry survives.
  • Just Think of the Potential! : B'Elanna regarding the new element they've discovered. B'Elanna: Can you imagine what we could make with this stuff? Probe casings that could go into the core of a sun , ultra-thin reactor shielding.
  • The Lifestream : "The next emanation".
  • Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane : The episode hedges its bets after delivering the anti-euthanasia message by suggesting the aliens are passing onto an afterlife after all.
  • Milking the Giant Cow : The Vhnori priest.
  • Mythology Gag : An ensign beams down to a planet with several senior officers and dies . Fortunately he's brought back to life again.
  • The Nothing After Death : The Vhnori aren't happy about the possibility that the afterlife may not exist.
  • Only Mostly Dead : Ptera when she first appears on Voyager . And then Harry when he's sent back. Neither one is too dead for the Doctor to resuscitate.
  • Our Wormholes Are Different : The subspace vacuole.
  • Released to Elsewhere : Harry Kim pretends to be the next person who is scheduled to enter "the next emanation" while that person quietly disappears into the mountains to live with people who will take care of him.
  • Ripped from the Headlines : The episode was written after euthanasia became a hot news topic when the state of Oregon approved the Death With Dignity Act.
  • Saying Too Much : This can be a problem in a First Contact situation, as Harry belatedly realizes.
  • Techno Babble : The episode starts with the crew excitedly talking about all the sci-fi uses for a new element.
  • Harry gets swapped for a dead body. Well a lot worse could have happened on Star Trek!
  • Ptera gets killed trying to Do It Again Backwards .
  • This Isn't Heaven : The girl who was resurrected from death is surprised to find out that she is on board Voyager instead of in "the next emanation". Star Trek: The Next Emanation ?
  • The War on Straw : Neither Hatil nor Ptera embody the reasons why people would consider euthanasia. Hatil is not in constant physical pain; he's just been disabled and his family made the decision on Hatil's behalf because caring for him is inconvenient. Ptera has a condition that is easily cured with Federation medical technology, implying that the acceptance of euthanasia has also stifled medical research.
  • We Will Have Euthanasia in the Future : Hatil is encouraged to die because it's assumed he'll just move on to the next emanation.
  • With All Due Respect : Harry chiming in with his own opinion after Chakotay objects to their scanning the bodies. Contrary to what usually happens with this trope, respect is shown afterwards, with Harry thanking Chakotay for letting him voice his opinion.
  • Star Trek Voyager S 1 E 7 "Ex Post Facto"
  • Recap/Star Trek: Voyager
  • Star Trek Voyager S 1 E 9 "Prime Factors"

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star trek voyager emanations

An archive of Star Trek News

Retro Review: Emanations

  • Star Trek: VOY

Kim is transported to a way-station for the dying where the doctors believe he has returned from the afterlife.

Plot Summary: When Voyager discovers a powerful unknown element in an asteroid field, Chakotay takes Kim on the away mission to study it. On one of the asteroids, the team discovers that the element comes from decomposing alien bodies deposited there. A subspace vacuole opens just as the team tries to beam back, and Kim disappears, replaced by the body of a young woman. Since she has only just died, the Doctor is able to revive her, but the Vhnori woman Ptera is panic-stricken not to have been reunited with her dead relatives in the afterlife. At the facility that sent Ptera to the asteroid, a Vhnori doctor finds Kim and assumes that he must have returned from the afterlife, though a soon-to-die man named Hatil becomes as frightened as Ptera is to learn that their beliefs may be wrong. Though Janeway knows of the dangers, she agrees to a risky transport to send Ptera through a vacuole, which Janeway hopes will allow the crew to track Ptera back to her own planet and thus lead to Kim. But Ptera dies in the attempt, and because the vacuoles threaten the warp core, Janeway reluctantly agrees with Torres that they must move on. Meanwhile, Kim concludes that the only way he can get back to Voyager is via the device through which the Vhnori send their dead to the asteroid field. Since Hatil is not terminally ill but only disabled, not wishing to die so much as to please his family, Kim convinces Hatil to switch places with him and allows the alien device to transport him back to the asteroid field, killing him in the process. Voyager crewmembers scan the body, discover that it’s human, and beam it to sickbay so that Kim can be revived. Though he is saddened by the thought that the Vhnori die expecting a glorious afterlife they may never reach, Janeway points out that the asteroid field’s ambient energy as well as the unusual element come from the alien bodies. She reminds Kim that what they don’t know about death is greater than what they do know.

Analysis: I’ve thought of “Emanations” as one of the more forgettable installments of Voyager ‘s first season, and indeed I hadn’t remembered any of the details of the episode, so it was a nice surprise to discover that despite being rather slow and talky, it’s a pretty substantive concept. I appreciate it when Star Trek tries to tie spiritual beliefs to scientific facts rather than to dismiss all religion outright as barbaric superstition the way the original series tended to do, and though “Emanations” drops more questions about the Vhnori than it answers, it’s still a thoughtful and fairly unusual story. I wish that we’d seen more of Vhnori culture besides their death rituals, because on the surface they do seem rather horrible, kind of like the society on Kaelon II in The Next Generation ‘s “Half a Life” in which everyone is expected to commit suicide at sixty so that the elderly never become a burden on the young. Hatil has a bit of a limp, but we don’t see much evidence that he’s in pain and he’s certainly in full possession of his mental faculties. Given that they don’t seem to lack basic necessities because of the need to care for him, the idea that his family pressures him to die so that they can get on with their lives seems appalling, though we’re expected to accept that they believe he’s moving on to a better place and they’re making a sacrifice to let him go. I’m glad Kim strongly resists this use of euthanasia and wondering what an older Starfleet officer might do in his place – I could see Kirk saying to heck with the Prime Directive and trying to blow up the pods that send the Vhnori to decompose in the asteroid field, while I’d expect Picard not to open his mouth about the dead bodies he saw there before learning more about the culture and beliefs. Kim’s revelation that there may be no Next Emanation may significantly alter a status quo like the one on Kaelon where resources are preserved when the sick and elderly die prematurely.

It’s interesting to see the contrast between Kim and Ptera, who is also thrown amidst a culture she knows nothing about, in a state of far greater confusion because unlike Kim, who has no idea how he got where he ends up, she has a specific set of expectations about where she should be arriving. Kim’s approach is fairly calm and rational because he believes that he can return to his previous reality if he makes the right choices, whereas Ptera is faced with complete upheaval, not really believing she can go home again, unable to arrive at the happy afterlife she has always been promised. Despite her youth, Kes is evidently qualified to serve as a ship’s counselor as well as a medical assistant, for she has both the temperament and interest to help people in psychological distress. It’s interesting to learn that Chakotay, Torres, and Kes all come from cultures that believe in an afterlife, which along with Tuvok’s presumed belief in the Vulcan katra may make Janeway’s crew even more spiritually engaged than Sisko’s. I appreciate Chakotay’s immediate desire to pull back rather than desecrate an alien graveyard, though I wonder what he did in the archaeology classes that we learn later he nearly made his career instead of Starfleet. And I appreciate that Janeway listens to him, both out of sympathy for his background – presumably others among their ex-Maquis crew as well – and personally, because he asks her to leave the bodies in peace rather than press for scientific discoveries and even though she’s a former science officer, she appreciates his perspective. I wonder whether Kim’s contempt for the Vhnori belief system, which is focused largely on his experience with one person being forced to undergo euthanasia, reflects his opinion of other cultures whose beliefs he does not share, despite the training he presumably received at Starfleet in accepting and appreciating other cultures.

All the bodies appearing out of nowhere (and threatening the warp core) give “Emanations” a bit of a horror movie feeling that’s probably unintentional, since there are no other tropes of that genre in play, but the business with the away team walking through decaying corpses is phrased in a way that makes it sound more unpleasant than it looks onscreen. Maybe that’s why some of the crewmembers behave a bit oddly; I don’t like the fact that both Torres and Paris, each of whom Kim has saved from trouble on several occasions, are so quick to abandon him near the end, when it’s obvious that Janeway will avoid doing that unless it puts everyone else on Voyager at risk. I love her decision to let Harry take a few days to think about what he’s learned from his experiences, based on her own regrets about not having more time to do the same – I’m thinking now of the backstory we get on Janeway in the novel Mosaic (written by executive producer Jeri Taylor and integrated into several episodes, so I tend to take it as canonical, which is not true of the other Pocket Books spin-offs). Starfleet officers are supposed to be ready to face death every day, especially on a mission like this one, yet Janeway is willing to let Kim come to terms with his mortality and what could have been a very lonely life abandoned on an alien planet. I’m not entirely sure whether the writers have at this early point thought out Janeway’s perspective on her crew or whether Kate Mulgrew manages to make it look that way – whether she’s going by her gut deciding what balance of officious and parental works best to demonstrate Janeway’s command style. She comes with Kirk’s determination and Picard’s sensitivity, plus a sense of humor. I adore her throughout this first season.

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2 thoughts on “ retro review: emanations ”.

Great story idea and subject matter, but with just too many small issues here and there to make it a great episode. Still a good one though. My rating: 7/10.

Kim death #1

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Friday, January 23, 2015

Voyager re-watch: emanations.

star trek voyager emanations

3 comments:

Another funny thing about this episode: how does Harry fool the entire family when he's wrapped in the burial shroud? Hatil Garan looked at least 30 lbs lighter and several inches shorter than Harry!

One of the nine lives of Harry down, and at least four more to go over the course of the series. If I were of that race of aliens, I would likely take great comfort and wonder in discovering that my "energy" was to become a part of that planet's rings. I think that's just cool. I loved this episode far more than I ever remembered. Voyager is proving to be a wonderful show to revisit.

PS. Harry has the best hair in Starfleet. x-)

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Kim confronts life and death issues when he's held against his will by an alien race.

star trek voyager emanations

Martha Hackett

Jerry Hardin

Jerry Hardin

No image (yet).

Jeffrey Alan Chandler

Cecile Callan

Cecile Callan

Robin Groves

Robin Groves

John cirigliano, cast appearances.

Captain Kathryn Janeway

Kate Mulgrew

Commander Chakotay

Robert Beltran

Lt. B'Elanna Torres

Roxann Dawson

Kes

Jennifer Lien

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Neelix

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Garrett Wang

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Star Trek: Voyager – Season 1, Episode 8

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Kate Mulgrew

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Episode Info

Star Trek: Voyager/Emanations

Emanations is the ninth episode of the first season of Star Trek: Voyager .

Starring : Kate Mulgrew ( Captain Kathryn Janeway )

Also Starring : Robert Beltran ( Chakotay ), Roxann Biggs-Dawson ( B'Elanna Torres ), Jennifer Lien ( Kes ), Robert Duncan McNeill ( Tom Paris ), Ethan Phillips ( Neelix ) ( credit only ), Robert Picardo ( The Doctor ), Tim Russ ( Tuvok ), Garrett Wang ( Harry Kim )

Guest Stars : Jerry Hardin (Dr. Neria), Jefrey Alan Chandler (Hatil), Cecile Callan (Ptera), Martha Hackett (Seska), Robin Groves (Araya Garan)

Co-Stars : John Cirigliano (Alien #1)

Plot Overview

Kim is transported to the Uhnori home planet after the crew finds an Uhnori burial ground on an uncharted planet.

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Behind the scenes, allusions and references, memorable moments.

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Emanations Stardate: 48623.5 Original Airdate: March 13 1995

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"Emanations" was the 9th episode of Star Trek: Voyager , in the show's first season, first aired on 13 March 1995 . The episode was written by Brannon Braga and directed by David Livingston MA .

  • 2.1 Characters
  • 2.2 Starships and vehicles
  • 2.3.1 Shipboard areas
  • 2.3.2 Planetary locales
  • 2.4 Races and cultures
  • 2.5 Technology and weapons
  • 2.6 Materials and substances
  • 2.7 States and organizations
  • 2.8 Ranks and titles
  • 2.9 Other references
  • 3 Chronology
  • 4.1 Related stories
  • 4.3 Connections
  • 4.4 External link

Summary [ ]

Ensign Harry Kim is transported to another dimension while investigating an alien burial chamber within an asteroid . The Starfleet officer's appearance begins to throw the entire Vhnori belief in the afterlife into doubt.

References [ ]

Characters [ ], starships and vehicles [ ], locations [ ], shipboard areas [ ], planetary locales [ ], races and cultures [ ], technology and weapons [ ], materials and substances [ ], states and organizations [ ], ranks and titles [ ], other references [ ], chronology [ ], appendices [ ], related stories [ ].

  • VOY episode & novelization : Caretaker : The beginning of Voyager 's arc in the Delta Quadrant .
  • VOY episode & novelization : Endgame : The end of Voyager 's arc in the Delta Quadrant .

Episode image.

Connections [ ]

External link [ ].

  • " Emanations " article at Memory Alpha , the wiki for canon Star Trek .
  • 1 Ferengi Rules of Acquisition
  • 2 Odyssey class
  • 3 Typhon class

Star Trek: Voyager (TV Series)

Emanations (1995).

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I wish star trek: voyager gave the doctor more credit for 1 huge accomplishment.

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Jeri Ryan's Seven of Nine Costumes In Star Trek: Voyager Made No Sense

Jeri ryan would have turned down star trek: voyager because of 1 scene, this star trek: voyager episode subtly confirmed captain kirk broke a tos promise.

The Doctor (Robert Picardo) managed to pull off a huge accomplishment in Star Trek: Voyager season 4, and I wish he got more credit for it. As a long-time Star Trek fan, there are things I love about every member of Voyager 's cast of characters , but for me, the Doctor stands out above the rest. Robert Picardo and Voyager 's creative team managed to create a character that is both hilarious and heartwarming , and some of Voyager 's best episodes featured the Doctor as their main character.

The Doctor's arc throughout each of Voyager 's seven seasons is also truly inspiring. Beginning the show as a blank slate, he created a life for himself and a place on the crew that was impressive given his initial limitations as an Emergency Medical Hologram. Likewise, the Doctor was involved in some of the show's most important moments, including one huge victory in season 4 that he pulled off almost single-handedly. While this victory was celebrated at the time, the Doctor's credit for it now often goes to Reginald Barclay (Dwight Schultz) instead of to whom it deserves.

The Doctor Was The First Star Trek: Voyager Character To Establish Contact With Starfleet, Not Barclay

The doctor made contact with starfleet two full seasons before barclay was introduced.

While Barclay established verbal communication with the USS Voyager in season 6, it was the Doctor who, in season 4, risked everything to let Starfleet know that Voyager's crew was even still alive. Voyager season 4, episode 14, "Message in a Bottle," featured the Doctor traveling to the Alpha Quadrant through a Hirogen relay network to inform Starfleet of the ship's status, a mission in which he succeeded after a battle with some Romulans. Without the Doctor, Starfleet would have continued to think that the entire crew was dead , killed in action during their original mission in the Badlands.

"Message in a Bottle" was also the first appearance of the Hirogen on the show, a species who would go on to be one of Voyager 's most formidable enemies in seasons 4-7.

I understand why Barclay often gets the credit for connecting Voyager to Starfleet. The season 6 episode where Barclay finally establishes a comm link with Voyager, "Pathfinder," is an emotional rollercoaster, especially the final scene where Captain Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) and the bridge crew speak to Admiral Owen Paris (Richard Herd) before the link is severed. However, while Barclay's victory was incredible, it would never have occurred without the Doctor's initial contact with Starfleet. In fact, if it weren't for the Doctor, Barclay would never have gotten a job helping Voyager at all.

Barclay’s Star Trek: Voyager Role Was Important, But Wouldn’t Be Possible Without The Doctor

Barclay would never have been involved with voyager without the doctor.

The Doctor deserves much more credit for putting Voyager and Starfleet in contact and making it possible for characters like Barclay to even be part of the team working to get the ship home. By the time Barclay appeared on Voyager , the Doctor's accomplishment in "Message in a Bottle" was old news, another reason why he didn't get the credit he deserved. Despite this, it's still sad to me that Voyager 's crew was shown celebrating Barclay's victory when the same appreciation wasn't shown to the Doctor in season 4 .

Barclay's role in ultimately getting Voyager home was also undoubtedly important, but I'll always maintain that credit should be equally shared with the Doctor.

Barclay was certainly a fun guest star addition to Voyager seasons 6 and 7, and made it possible for other characters from Star Trek: The Next Generation , like Deanna Troi (Marina Sirtis) , to appear on the show. Barclay's role in ultimately getting Voyager home was also undoubtedly important, but I'll always maintain that credit should be equally shared with the Doctor. The Doctor was often an under-appreciated character, so his sidelining in this case isn't too surprising , but it is disappointing that Star Trek: Voyager shifted the praise for his victory in later seasons.

Star Trek: Voyager

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Star Trek: Voyager

Investigating the possibility of a new element detected in the rocky bodies comprising a planet's ring system, an away team beams down to one of the asteroids and finds the ground littered with dead bodies encased in a residual shell. As the away team conducts a visual survey - at Chakotay's request to avoid desecrating the ritually-disposed-of deceased - a subspace phenomenon occurs, prompting an emergency beam-out. But when the away team transports back to Voyager, Kim doesn't return, his place taken by a newly-arrived body. Harry finds himself among a race of ritualistic people who believe he has returned from their afterlife, and is constantly besieged with questions about 'the next emanation'. An alien named Patera, in the meantime, is revived about Voyager. She finds herself losing faith in the possibility of the next life, while Harry is the subject of intense curiosity and study by Patera's people.

Voyager, seizoen 1

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IMAGES

  1. Star Trek: Voyager (S01E09): Emanations Summary

    star trek voyager emanations

  2. Emanations (1995)

    star trek voyager emanations

  3. "Star Trek: Voyager" Emanations (TV Episode 1995)

    star trek voyager emanations

  4. Emanations (1995)

    star trek voyager emanations

  5. Star Trek: Voyager Rewatch: “Emanations”

    star trek voyager emanations

  6. Star Trek Voyager S 1 E 8 "Emanations" Recap

    star trek voyager emanations

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  4. Star Trek Voyager

  5. Star Trek Voyager S1.E09 “Emanations” recap breakdown part 6

  6. Voyager Reviewed! (by a pedant) S7E02: IMPERFECTION

COMMENTS

  1. "Star Trek: Voyager" Emanations (TV Episode 1995)

    Emanations: Directed by David Livingston. With Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Jennifer Lien. When the crew finds a mysterious alien burial ground within an asteroid, a unknown phenomenon that teleports the bodies suddenly transports Kim to another planet where an alien race believes he is a being from the afterlife.

  2. Emanations (Star Trek: Voyager)

    Star Trek: Voyager. ) " Emanations " is the ninth episode of Star Trek: Voyager, a science fiction television show about a spacecraft, set in the 24th century of the Star Trek universe. This episode centers on the experiences of Harry Kim, and is also noted for an exploration of afterlife concepts. "Emanations" is an episode of a science ...

  3. Emanations (episode)

    Investigating mineral deposits on an asteroid, Harry Kim is trapped on an alien planet. The USS Voyager is investigating a new element, the 247th one known to the Federation, on a ring of asteroids around a class D planet. Chief engineer Torres suggests that they get a look at the element, as many of the asteroids support class M environments. Captain Janeway agrees and orders that Commander ...

  4. "Star Trek: Voyager" Emanations (TV Episode 1995)

    "Star Trek: Voyager" Emanations (TV Episode 1995) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Menu. ... Star Trek: Voyager (Season 1/ 1ª Temporada) a list of 15 titles created 4 months ago Movies to collect. Watch nearly immediately.

  5. Emanations (Star Trek: Voyager)

    "Emanations" is the ninth episode of Star Trek: Voyager, a science fiction television show about a spacecraft, set in the 24th century of the Star Trek universe. The starship USS Voyager encounters an alien species and investigates. [1] This episode centers on the experiences of Harry Kim, and is also noted for an exploration of afterlife concepts.

  6. Star Trek Voyager S 1 E 8 "Emanations" Recap

    Harry Kim gets trapped in a funeral device of a species that believes in euthanasia and the next emanation. He tries to save an invalid boy and escape back to Voyager, while Janeway tries to help the revived alien woman.

  7. Retro Review: Emanations

    Analysis: I've thought of "Emanations" as one of the more forgettable installments of Voyager's first season, and indeed I hadn't remembered any of the details of the episode, so it was ...

  8. "Star Trek: Voyager" Emanations (TV Episode 1995)

    The away team discovers the asteroid to be a burial ground for an unknown culture. Chakotay, a Native American, advocates a respectful, unintrusive perusal of the bodies and their bizarre web-like enclosures. The unknown new chemical apparently is a bi-product of the bodies' decomposition process. The away team detects a peculiar phenomenon ...

  9. My Year Of Star Trek: Voyager Re-Watch: Emanations

    Emanations is pretty much an exploration of faith, life after death, and euthanasia. Voyager (still low on gas) believes they may have discovered a new element and head down to the asteroid where they're sensing it to check it out. The asteroid is chock-full of dead bodies and, before anyone can react, Harry Kim gets sucked through a subspace ...

  10. Emanations

    Episode Guide for Star Trek: Voyager 1x09: Emanations. Episode summary, trailer and screencaps; guest stars and main cast list; and more.

  11. Watch Star Trek: Voyager Season 1 Episode 9: Star Trek: Voyager

    46M MAR 13, 1995 TV-PG. S1 E9: In a crossing of transporter beaming, Harry Kim is swapped out for a corpse of the Vhnori people during one of their sacred funeral rituals. Getting him back creates tension by exposing the Vhnori's "Next Emanation" afterlife as simply subspace vacuoles -- or does it? Starring: Kate Mulgrew, Robert Beltran, Roxann Dawson, Robert Duncan McNeill, Ethan Phillips

  12. Star Trek: Voyager: Season 1, Episode 8

    Star Trek: Voyager - Season 1, Episode 8 Emanations Aired Mar 13, 1995 Sci-Fi Fantasy Adventure. Reviews ... Voyager Star Trek: Voyager Star Trek: Voyager View more photos Episode Info.

  13. Emanations

    Emanations Episode Guide/Review by Charlynn Schmiedt. Season 1, Episode 8 Stardate 48623.5 (2371) Episode 8 of 168 Released in Star Trek: Voyager Episode 8 of 168 Produced in Star Trek: Voyager Production Number: 109 Original airdate: March 13, 1995. Directed by David Livingston

  14. Star Trek: Voyager/Emanations

    Emanations is the ninth episode of the first season of Star Trek: Voyager . Starring: Kate Mulgrew ( Captain Kathryn Janeway ) Also Starring: Robert Beltran ( Chakotay ), Roxann Biggs-Dawson ( B'Elanna Torres ), Jennifer Lien ( Kes ), Robert Duncan McNeill ( Tom Paris ), Ethan Phillips ( Neelix) (credit only), Robert Picardo ( The Doctor ), Tim ...

  15. The Voyager Transcripts

    The Voyager Transcripts - Emanations. Emanations Stardate: 48623.5 Original Airdate: March 13 1995. Captain's log, stardate 48623.5. There are two hundred forty six elements known to Federation science. We believe we have just discovered the two hundred forty seventh inside the ring system of a Class D planet. [Bridge]

  16. Star Trek: Voyager season 1 Emanations

    Star Trek: Voyager follows the adventures of the Federation starship Voyager, which is under the command of Captain Kathryn Janeway.Voyager is in pursuit of a rebel Maquis ship in a dangerous part of the Alpha Quadrant when it is suddenly thrown 70,000 light years away to the Delta Quadrant. With much of her crew dead, Captain Janeway is forced to join forces with the Maquis to find a way back ...

  17. Star Trek: Voyager: Season 1

    Stardate: 48623.5. While investigating an asteroid belt containing a new element, Harry Kim is pulled into a 'subspace vacuole' and switched with a dead body. Soon after the body is revived the crew learn that the asteroid belt is the graveyard of an alien culture that transports its dead in the belief that they evolve into a higher state of consciousness. Harry's appearance on the homeworld ...

  18. Voyager "Emanations" (S1E09) is the Prologue to a Ghost Story

    Voyager "Emanations" (S1E09) is the Prologue to a Ghost Story Throughout the episode, we learn that the alien race Harry Kim finds himself stuck with--the Vhnori--believes that, at the moment of death, their bodies are transported to the afterlife by what the Voyager crew identifies as subspace vacuoles.

  19. Star Trek: Voyager · Season 1 Episode 8 · Emanations

    Stardate: 48623.5. While investigating an asteroid belt containing a new element, Harry Kim is pulled into a 'subspace vacuole' and switched with a dead body. Soon after the body is revived the crew learn that the asteroid belt is the graveyard of an alien culture that transports its dead in the belief that they evolve into a higher state of consciousness. Harry's appearance on the homeworld ...

  20. Emanations

    Star Trek. "Emanations" was the 9th episode of Star Trek: Voyager, in the show's first season, first aired on 13 March 1995. The episode was written by Brannon Braga and directed by . Ensign Harry Kim is transported to another dimension while investigating an alien burial chamber within an asteroid.

  21. Star Trek: Voyager: Emanations

    Emanations, an episode of Star Trek: Voyager on Philo. Kim is transported to alien world.

  22. "Star Trek: Voyager" Emanations (TV Episode 1995)

    "Emanations" is a very good but very inconsistent episode of "Star Trek: Voyager". I liked it on balance but felt like the writer didn't quite hit the mark. When the show begins, an away team beams to an asteroid within the rings of a planet below.

  23. Star Trek Voyager Episode Pushed Special Effects To Cutting Edge

    A Ringed Planet. The decision to make this Star Trek episode a special effects bonanza began in the planning stage, after the science consultant André Bormanis and others on the crew "decided that the rings of an alien gas giant planet would be a fun setting.". This behind-the-scenes "Emanations" planning reveals a unique problem that ...

  24. I Wish Star Trek: Voyager Gave The Doctor More Credit For 1 Huge

    The Doctor (Robert Picardo) managed to pull off a huge accomplishment in Star Trek: Voyager season 4, and I wish he got more credit for it. As a long-time Star Trek fan, there are things I love about every member of Voyager's cast of characters, but for me, the Doctor stands out above the rest. Robert Picardo and Voyager's creative team managed to create a character that is both hilarious and ...

  25. Emanations

    Investigating the possibility of a new element detected in the rocky bodies comprising a planet's ring system, an away team beams down to one of the asteroids and finds the ground littered with dead bodies encased in a residual shell. As the away team conducts a visual survey - at Chakotay's request to avoid desecrating the ritually-disposed-of deceased - a subspace phenomenon occurs ...

  26. Star Trek Voyager Season 1-7 DVD Red Hard Case Edition Complete ...

    When Starfleet Security Officer Tuvok, working undercover aboard a vessel commandeered by a band of renegade freedom fighters, disappears the U.S.S. Voyager, under the guidance of Captain Kathryn Janeway (Star Trek's very first female captain), is dispatched to find him.