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Groups > rec.arts.startrek.misc > #1374
| From | Daniel <me@sc1f1dan.com> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | rec.arts.startrek.misc, rec.arts.startrek.fandom, rec.arts.sf.tv, rec.arts.tv, can.arts.sf |
| Subject | Re: AI/LLM reviews of Star Trek Voyager Barge of the Dead |
| References | <10snnva$121v$1@gallifrey.nk.ca> |
| Message-ID | <87340fzbwp.fsf@rpi3> (permalink) |
| Organization | Newshosting.com - Highest quality at a great price! www.newshosting.com |
| Date | 2026-04-28 02:12 -0700 |
Cross-posted to 5 groups.
doctor@doctor.nl2k.ab.ca (The Doctor) writes: > AI/LLM reviews of Star Trek Voyager Barge of the Dead > > Google Gemini > > 1. Barge of the Dead (Episode 6x03) > > Rating: 8.5/10 > > The Narrative Journey > > "Barge of the Dead" is a visceral, surreal exploration of B'Elanna > Torres’ dual heritage. The plot begins with B'Elanna surviving a > shuttle accident, but the true story unfolds in the metaphysical realm > of Gre'thor—the Klingon version of Hell. Upon seeing her mother, > Miral, on the Barge of the Dead, B'Elanna becomes convinced that her > own rejection of Klingon traditions has doomed her mother’s soul. To > save her, B'Elanna induces a near-death state to return to the Barge > and take her mother’s place. > > Thematic Analysis > > This episode is arguably the definitive B'Elanna Torres story. For > five seasons, her Klingon half was treated as a burden or a source of > temper. Ronald D. Moore (in his brief stint on Voyager) brings his > signature Klingon world-building to the fore, transforming > B'Elanna’s self-loathing into a literal battle for salvation. > > The imagery of the Barge is haunting and distinct from the sterile > corridors of Voyager. It represents the "Old World" baggage that > B'Elanna has spent her life trying to jettison. The core conflict > isn't actually about the afterlife; it’s about B'Elanna’s guilt > over her relationship with her mother. The hallucination sequences, > where the crew mocks her or Janeway appears as a judge, highlight > B'Elanna's internal perception of the ship as a place where she must > constantly hide her "true" self to fit the Starfleet mold. > > Conclusion > > The episode succeeds because it refuses to answer whether the Barge > was "real" or a neuro-chemical hallucination. By the end, the > distinction doesn't matter; B'Elanna finds a tentative peace with her > heritage, moving from a character who hates herself to one who accepts > her complexity. /snip I ought to rewatch Voyager. It's been too long. -- Daniel sysop | air & wave bbs finger | calcmandan@bbs.erb.pw
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AI/LLM reviews of Star Trek Voyager Barge of the Dead doctor@doctor.nl2k.ab.ca (The Doctor) - 2026-04-27 13:22 +0000
Re: AI/LLM reviews of Star Trek Voyager Barge of the Dead Daniel <me@sc1f1dan.com> - 2026-04-28 02:12 -0700
Re: AI/LLM reviews of Star Trek Voyager Barge of the Dead doctor@doctor.nl2k.ab.ca (The Doctor) - 2026-04-28 16:34 +0000
Re: AI/LLM reviews of Star Trek Voyager Barge of the Dead Daniel <me@sc1f1dan.com> - 2026-04-28 12:14 -0700
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