One (Star Trek: Voyager)

"One" is the 93rd episode of Star Trek: Voyager, the 25th and penultimate episode of the fourth season.

"One"
Star Trek: Voyager episode
Episode no.Season 4
Episode 25
Directed byKenneth Biller
Written byJeri Taylor
Featured musicJay Chattaway
Production code193
Original air dateMay 13, 1998 (1998-05-13)
Guest appearance(s)

This episode's plot was later re-used in Star Trek: Enterprise for the episode "Doctor's Orders" with Dr. Phlox playing the role of Seven, and T'Pol playing the role of the Doctor. The episode was based on a premise by James Swallow, based on an invitation to pitch after he submitted a spec script.[1][2]

This episode originally aired on May 13, 1998.[3]

Plot

As Voyager enters a nebula, the crew begins to suffer from intense pain, and one crewmember dies from burns on his skin; only Seven of Nine is unaffected. Realizing that they cannot withstand the radiation emanating from the nebula for the month it would take to cross, the Doctor proposes placing the crew, save for himself and Seven, in stasis, allowing them to cross the nebula safely. Captain Janeway agrees, and soon, the crew is safely stowed into stasis chambers.

Seven adopts a daily cycle to assure the ship maintains its course and the crew remains healthy while in stasis, at times dealing with Tom Paris's fear of small spaces and placing him back in stasis with the Doctor's help. The Doctor attempts to engage Seven in human activities such as a simulated party on the holodeck, but Seven continues to try to keep working during these times. The ship's computer begins malfunctioning as it is affected by the nebula's radiation, generating a false-alarm report of an anti-matter storage failure. The Doctor discovers his mobile holographic emitter has started to fail as well, and is forced to stay in sickbay until the journey is complete.

As the ship nears the edge of the nebula, Seven begins feeling the effects of prolonged isolation, experiencing disturbing dreams. Another ship appears, helmed by Trajis Lo-Tarik, looking to trade for supplies. After Seven brings him aboard, he disappears into the ship and seems intent on destroying Voyager. Seven continues to suffer intense hallucinations, including Harry Kim and Tom Paris bursting into flames. The Doctor temporarily repairs his mobile emitter to try to help Seven, assuring her there is no one else on board—Trajis himself was a hallucination—before his emitter dies out.

As the hallucinations worsen for Seven, visions of the Borg tell her she cannot survive on her own. When the ship's engines begin to fail, she briefly cuts power to the status chambers to maintain propulsion, but thinks better of it and opts to route power from life support instead. Soon, she passes out.

Seven regains consciousness in sickbay, where the crew congratulate her on successfully getting the ship out of the nebula. Later, Seven observes Paris, Kim, and Torres at the mess hall. She asks to join them, feeling the need for companionship after her ordeal, and they invite her to sit down.

Reception

In 2013, We Minored in Film ranked "One" the fourth best episode of Star Trek: Voyager.[4]

In 2015, WhatCulture ranked this the 22nd best episode of all time in the Star Trek science fiction universe.[5]

"One" was rated the most overlooked of the best episodes of Star Trek: Voyager on Netflix by W.I.R.E.D in 2017.[3] In particular they praised the performance of actress Jeri Ryan as the Ex-Borg Seven of Nine, and noted it as a study of the impact of isolation.[6]

In 2017, Den of Geek included this episode, along with "Scorpion" (Part II), "Year Of Hell" (2-parts), "Message In A Bottle", "Living Witness", and "Hope And Fear" from Season 4, for their abbreviated viewing guide for Star Trek: Voyager.[7]

SyFy recommend "One" for their Seven of Nine binge-watching guide.[8]

gollark: However, you are *not* going to get 32 sockets in a single system.
gollark: Oh, that's practical, sure.
gollark: Wrong?
gollark: Unless you count Xeon Phi? But that got shelved.
gollark: You can't actually *have* 900 x86 cores per system.

References

  1. Jim Swallow (August 1998). "One in a Million". Star Trek Magazine. Titan Magazines. pp. 18–19.
  2. James Swallow (2001). "Star Trek Voyager: One". Archived from the original on 2007-05-27. Retrieved 2006-12-26.
  3. Kamen, Matt (22 September 2017). "Engage with the all-time best Star Trek episodes on Netflix". Wired.
  4. Konda, Kelly (2013-08-15). "Top 10 Episodes of Star Trek: Voyager". We Minored in Film. Retrieved 2019-07-15.
  5. Fisher, Matthew (2015-04-28). "30 Best Star Trek Episodes Of All Time". WhatCulture.com. Retrieved 2019-07-15.
  6. Kamen, Matt (22 September 2017). "Engage with the all-time best Star Trek episodes on Netflix". Wired.
  7. "Star Trek Voyager: An Episode Roadmap". Den of Geek. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  8. Fleenor, S. E. (2019-04-16). "The Seven of Nine binge guide". SYFY WIRE. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
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