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   rec.arts.startrek.fandom      Star trek fandom, or a mental disorder      2,013 messages   

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   Message 1,979 of 2,013   
   The Doctor to All   
   AI/LLM reviews of ST V The Swarm (1/2)   
   04 Feb 26 16:09:27   
   
   XPost: rec.arts.startrek.misc, rec.arts.sf.tv, rec.arts.tv   
   XPost: can.arts.sf   
   From: doctor@doctor.nl2k.ab.ca   
      
   AI/LLM Reviews of Star Trek Voyager The Swarm   
      
   Google Gemini   
      
   "The Swarm" (Season 3, Episode 4) is an episode of two very different halves:   
   a high-stakes territorial "border crossing" thriller and a deeply moving,   
   existential crisis for the Emergency Medical Hologram. While the "alien of the   
   week" provides the    
   spectacle, the Doctor’s struggle to retain his identity provides the heart.   
      
   Based on the transcript from the source provided, here is a review and   
   analysis:   
      
   ### 1. The A-Plot: The Swarm   
      
   The episode introduces a nameless, xenophobic species that occupies a massive   
   region of space. Their ships are small but travel in "swarms" of thousands,   
   using interlaced energy beams to drain the power from their victims.   
      
   * **The "Short Cut":** In an attempt to shave 15 months off their journey,   
   Janeway decides to cross their territory. This leads to a classic "submarine"   
   style tension where *Voyager* must move silently to avoid detection.   
   * **Threat Level:** The Swarm is effectively creepy because they don't   
   communicate; they simply latch onto the ship like locusts. The visual of the   
   hull being covered by thousands of tiny, glowing ships was a high-water mark   
   for mid-90s CGI.   
      
   ### 2. The B-Plot: The Doctor’s "Alzheimer’s"   
      
   The more enduring part of the episode involves the Doctor's program beginning   
   to degrade. Having run for two years (far beyond his original design), his   
   memory buffers are full, and his personality subroutines are beginning to   
   collapse.   
      
   * **The Loss of Self:** Robert Picardo is exceptional here, portraying the   
   Doctor’s confusion and terror as he begins to forget his medical knowledge   
   and his friends. It serves as a poignant allegory for dementia or   
   Alzheimer’s disease.   
   * **The Diagnostic Tool:** The ship’s computer creates a "Diagnostic   
   Program" (also played by Picardo) to help. The friction between the arrogant,   
   "pure" medical program and our sentient, opera-loving Doctor highlights how   
   much the EMH has grown.   
      
   ### 3. The Sacrifice of Memory   
      
   To save the Doctor, the Diagnostic Program suggests a radical move: grafting   
   its own personality subroutines onto the Doctor.   
      
   * **The "Reboot":** The surgery is a success, but there is a tragic cost.   
   While the Doctor survives, he initially appears to have lost the "extra"   
   personality traits he developed—the singing, the hobbies, the ego.   
   * **The Ending:** The episode concludes on a bittersweet note. When Kes asks   
   the Doctor if he wants to practice his opera, he initially says he has no   
   interest, then hesitates and realizes the impulse is still there. It’s a   
   subtle "reset" that allows    
   the character to keep his growth without the immediate threat of death.   
      
   ### 4. Character Highlights   
      
   * **Kes as the Emotional Anchor:** This episode reinforces Kes's role as the   
   Doctor’s primary advocate. She is the one who refuses to let him be "reset"   
   to his factory settings, insisting that his unique personality is a life worth   
   saving.   
   * **Paris and B'Elanna:** The episode features some early, lighthearted banter   
   between the two (involving an "away team" encounter with the Swarm's sensor   
   net), continuing to lay the groundwork for their eventual relationship.   
      
   ### 5. Critical Analysis   
      
   * **The Tonal Split:** The transition between the high-action "Swarm" attacks   
   and the quiet, tragic Sickbay scenes is a bit jarring. The Swarm themselves   
   feel like a secondary concern compared to the threat of losing the Doctor.   
   * **The "Nameless" Enemy:** Because we never learn the name of the Swarm or   
   their motivations, they remain a bit one-dimensional as villains. However, as   
   a metaphor for the "hazards of the road," they work well.   
      
   ### 6. Key Themes   
      
   * **The Fragility of Sentience:** For a hologram, "existence" is just data.   
   The episode asks: if you lose your memories, are you still the same person?   
   * **Technological Obsolescence:** *Voyager* is a ship of limited resources;   
   the Doctor's struggle reminds the crew that their technology is just as   
   strained as their morale.   
      
   ### Final Verdict   
      
   **Rating: 3.5/5**   
   "The Swarm" is a solid episode that is elevated by Robert Picardo's   
   performance. While the alien conflict provides the necessary "Star Trek"   
   action, the exploration of the Doctor's mortality is what makes it memorable.   
   It’s a crucial episode for the    
   EMH's long-term arc, moving him away from being just a tool and toward being a   
   permanent, irreplaceable member of the crew.   
      
   ---   
      
   **Would you like me to continue with the next episode, "False Profits," where   
   *Voyager* encounters some familiar Ferengi faces?**   
      
   ChatGPt   
      
   Here’s a **review of *Star Trek: Voyager — “The Swarm”*** (Season 3,   
   Episode 4) based on the *Chakoteya* transcript structure and authoritative   
   sources summarizing the story, character beats, and critical reception.   
   ([Wikipedia][1])   
      
   ---   
      
   ## 📺 Episode Overview   
      
   *“The Swarm”* finds **USS Voyager** navigating through a dangerous region   
   of space controlled by a mysterious and highly xenophobic group known simply   
   as “the Swarm.” At the same time, **the Doctor’s holographic program   
   begins to fail**,    
   threatening his memories and personality. These two parallel storylines —   
   one action-oriented and one character-driven — define the episode’s   
   structure. ([Wikipedia][1])   
      
   ---   
      
   ## 🧠 Plot Summary   
      
   ### 🛸 Main Plot — Swarm Encounter   
      
   Voyager enters Swarm territory in search of a shortcut home, despite warnings   
   that ships never return. The crew soon encounters **hundreds of small alien   
   vessels** that attach to the hull, drain energy, and use tachyon pulses to   
   cancel Voyager’s    
   shields and render their weapons ineffective. ([Wikipedia][1])   
      
   The threat escalates when one of the swarm ships remaining attached to the   
   hull shifts Voyager’s shield frequency, making the entire ship visible to   
   the rest of the swarm. With conventional tactics failing, **Harry Kim   
   identifies a structural pattern    
   in the Swarm’s network**, allowing the crew to retune shields and destroy   
   one craft in a way that destabilizes the swarm and forces their retreat.   
   ([memory-alpha.fandom.com][2])   
      
   ### 💻 Secondary Plot — The Doctor’s Decline   
      
   Meanwhile, the Doctor starts losing memory and recalls incoherently. The crew   
   considers **reinitializing his program**, which would save the ship but wipe   
   all the Doctor’s memories gained over two years. Instead, B’Elanna Torres   
   calls up the **EMH    
   diagnostic hologram of Dr. Zimmerman**, whose program sacrifices itself to   
   stabilize the Doctor’s matrix. The Doctor is restored but initially behaves   
   like a newly activated EMH — obliging but stripped of much of his   
   personality — though faint    
   echoes of his character remain, such as humming opera. ([Wikipedia][1])   
      
   ---   
      
   ##    
    What Works   
      
   ### ⚔️ Action & Threat   
      
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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