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On November 9, 2004, "Drone" was released as part of the Season 5 DVD box set of Star Trek: Voyager. The seven-DVD set includes extra features, and the episodes have Dolby 5.1 Digital Audio tracks. [13] On April 25, 2001, the episode was released on LaserDisc in Japan as part of the half-season collection, 5th Season vol.1. It included episodes ...
Seven of Nine's backstory was explained during the course of Star Trek: Voyager. She was born on the Tendara Colony on Stardate 25479 to Magnus and Erin Hansen, and was named Annika. [ 28 ] At the age of four, her parents were given use of the research vessel USS Raven by Starfleet to help them investigate the presence of an unknown species in ...
Images associated with Star Trek: Voyager series. Images sorted by: Character's last name for people; Episode name for episodes (sans "A", "An", or "The")
"Unimatrix Zero" is a two-part episode of Star Trek: Voyager, the cliffhanger between 26th episode of the sixth season and the first episode of the seventh season. Starfleet 's USS Voyager , stranded on the other side of the Galaxy, once again encounters a race of cybernetic organisms called the Borg as the ship journeys back to Earth.
Star Trek: Voyagerended 20 years ago, which made it the franchise’s third consecutive series to run for seven seasons, following The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine. When the show came to a ...
This is an episode list for the science-fiction television series Star Trek: Voyager, which aired on UPN from January 1995 through May 2001. This is the fifth television program in the Star Trek franchise, and comprises a total of 168 (DVD and original broadcast) or 172 (syndicated) episodes over the show's seven seasons.
Robert Picardo, Roxann Dawson, Ethan Phillips, Tim Russ at a Voyager panel in 2009. Star Trek: Voyager is an American science fiction television series that debuted on UPN on January 16, 1995, and ran for seven seasons until May 23, 2001. The show was the fourth live-action series in the Star Trek franchise.
Star Trek: Voyager was the first Star Trek series to use computer-generated imagery (CGI), rather than models, for exterior space shots. [4] Babylon 5 and seaQuest DSV had previously used CGI to avoid the expense of models, but the Star Trek television department continued using models because they felt they were more realistic.