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   rec.arts.startrek.misc      General discussions of Star Trek      11,202 messages   

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   Message 11,109 of 11,202   
   The Doctor to All   
   Ai/LLM reviews of ST V Faces (1/2)   
   03 Jan 26 16:46:00   
   
   XPost: rec.arts.startrek.fandom, rec.arts.sf.tv, rec.arts.sf.tv   
   XPost: can.arts.sf   
   From: doctor@doctor.nl2k.ab.ca   
      
   AI/LLM Reviews of Star Trek: Voyager  Faces   
      
   Google Gemini   
      
   Synopsis   
      
   While on an away mission, B'Elanna Torres is captured by the Vidiians. Their   
   Chief Scientist, Sulan, uses an experimental procedure to physically separate   
   her into two distinct individuals: a full-blooded Klingon and a full-blooded   
   Human. Sulan's goal is    
   to find a cure for "The Phage" within the resilient Klingon DNA. The episode   
   follows the two B'Elannas as they struggle to survive their captivity and   
   reconcile their split identities.   
      
   Critical Analysis   
      
   The Duality of B'Elanna   
      
   This episode is the definitive origin story for B'Elanna’s character arc. By   
   literally separating her two halves, the show externalizes her internal   
   conflict.   
      
   Klingon B'Elanna: Represents the strength and aggression she usually tries to   
   suppress, but also a primal courage.   
      
   Human B'Elanna: Represents the logic and vulnerability she often hides behind   
   her temper.   
   The tragedy of the episode is that neither can survive without the other; the   
   Klingon half provides the physical stamina, while the Human half provides the   
   technical ingenuity.   
      
   The Horror of the Vidiians   
      
   "Faces" cements the Vidiians as perhaps the most tragic and horrifying   
   villains in Trek history. Sulan is not "evil" in a traditional sense; he is a   
   desperate man trying to save his race from a slow, rotting death. His "love"   
   for B'Elanna—exemplified    
   by him grafting a crewman's face onto his own to look more "appealing"—is   
   pure body horror that surpasses almost anything else in the franchise.   
      
   Performances   
      
   Roxann Dawson delivers a tour de force. Playing two distinct characters   
   interacting with each other is a difficult feat, but she manages to give them   
   different postures, speech patterns, and emotional weights. The makeup work to   
   differentiate the two is    
   also exceptional for mid-90s television.   
      
   Key Moments   
      
   The Grafted Face: The reveal of Sulan wearing Durst’s face is a genuine   
   "shock" moment. It highlights the absolute lack of morality the Vidiians have   
   reached in their quest for survival.   
      
   The Sacrifice: Klingon B'Elanna’s decision to sacrifice herself to save her   
   human counterpart is a powerful moment of self-acceptance.   
      
   The Final Reflection: The ending, where B'Elanna admits to Chakotay that she   
   actually misses her Klingon side, is a crucial step in her long-term character   
   development.   
      
   Pros and Cons   
      
   Pros:   
      
   Phenomenal Acting: A career-best for Roxann Dawson.   
      
   Effective Horror: Truly unsettling atmosphere and stakes.   
      
   Thematic Resonance: It perfectly illustrates the "ID vs. Ego" struggle.   
      
   Cons:   
      
   Convenient Science: The "separation" technology is a bit of a "magic wand"   
   even for Star Trek.   
      
   Pacing: The B-plot involving Janeway and the search party feels slightly   
   generic compared to the high-stakes drama in the lab.   
      
   Final Rating: 8.5 / 10   
      
   "Faces" is widely considered one of the best episodes of Voyager's first   
   season. It moved the show away from "Anomaly of the Week" and into deep,   
   character-driven territory. It is dark, disturbing, and ultimately moving.   
      
   Verdict: A must-watch for fans of character-centric sci-fi and one of the most   
   effective uses of the Vidiian threat.   
      
   ChatGPt   
      
   Here’s a **review of *Star Trek: Voyager – “Faces”*** (Season 1,   
   Episode 13) *based on the episode’s actual plot and critical/fan commentary*   
   (aligned with what you’d see on the *Chakoteya* transcript + reliable   
   summaries), along with a **   
   rating out of 10**:   
      
   ---   
      
   ## ⭐ **Episode Review — “Faces” (VOY S1E13)**   
      
   ### 📖 **Plot Summary**   
      
   In *Faces*, while exploring a planet with **Tom Paris** and a local guide,   
   **B’Elanna Torres** is captured by the **Vidiians**, a species ravaged by   
   the deadly **phage**. A Vidiian scientist named “Sulan” believes   
   **Klingons might be resistant to    
   the phage**, so he **splits Torres into two separate beings** — one **fully   
   Klingon**, the other **fully human** — by extracting and recombining her   
   DNA. ([Wikipedia][1])   
      
   The two Torres halves have very different experiences:   
      
   * **Klingon Torres** is fierce, aggressive, and confident, but lacking   
   restraint.   
   * **Human Torres** is more rational but physically weaker and fearful.   
     They must **reconnect and cooperate to escape** the Vidiian camp and reunite   
   into one complete person. However, Klingon Torres ultimately dies protecting   
   her human counterpart, leaving Human Torres to be restored — now with a   
   renewed sense of self-   
   acceptance and identity complexity. ([Jammers Reviews][2])   
      
   ---   
      
   ##    
    **What Works**   
      
   **✔ Strong Character Focus**   
   *Faces* gives **B’Elanna Torres** one of her earliest deep character   
   explorations by personifying the *internal conflict* between her human and   
   Klingon halves. This literal split allows the episode to explore her   
   **identity struggles and cultural    
   alienation** in a dramatic, visceral way. ([Manic Pixie Dust][3])   
      
   **✔ Original Concept**   
   Rather than a generic holodeck or nebula story, this episode presents a   
   **visceral sci-fi dilemma** with real stakes — a genetic experiment that   
   physically manifests a character’s internal struggle. It’s conceptually   
   bold for *Voyager’s* early    
   run. ([Jammers Reviews][2])   
      
   **✔ Acting & Emotional Beats**   
   Roxann Dawson gets to perform two distinct versions of Torres, offering a   
   standout piece of acting range. Many critics and fans appreciate the emotional   
   weight of the confrontation between her halves and the ultimate sacrifice of   
   the Klingon version. ([   
   Wikipedia][1])   
      
   ---   
      
   ## 👎 **What Falls Short**   
      
   **✘ Simplistic Treatment of Identity**   
   While the idea has potential, many critics argue that the episode reduces   
   complex identity and heritage issues to a **stereotypical “good human /   
   angry Klingon” binary**, rather than offering a nuanced psychological   
   exploration. ([Reddit][4])   
      
   **✘ Narrative and Science Weaknesses**   
   The Vidiian motive and the science behind splitting a hybrid into two   
   physically separate beings aren’t very well justified, and the episode works   
   more as *metaphor than credible sci-fi*. ([the m0vie blog][5])   
      
   **✘ Uneven Impact**   
   For some viewers the ending — especially the death of Klingon Torres and the   
   reintegration — feels like a trope (“one half must die so the other can   
   live”) rather than a meaningful evolution in her character arc.   
   ([Wikipedia][1])   
      
   ---   
      
   ## 🧠 **Audience & Critical Context**   
      
   * **IMDb rating ~7.2/10 – generally positive audience reception.**   
   ([imdb.com][6])   
   * Critics and Trek reviewers often list it among the **stronger    
   haracter-driven episodes of Voyager’s first season**, albeit with   
   reservations about its execution. Some call it a highlight of early Voyager.   
   ([Wikipedia][1])   
      
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