Chakotay is captured by a young Kazon who is undergoing a manhood ritual.Chakotay is captured by a young Kazon who is undergoing a manhood ritual.Chakotay is captured by a young Kazon who is undergoing a manhood ritual.
Roxann Dawson
- Lt. B'Elanna Torres
- (as Roxann Biggs-Dawson)
Tim DeZarn
- Haliz
- (as Tim de Zarn)
Tarik Ergin
- Lt. Ayala
- (uncredited)
Heather Ferguson
- Command Officer
- (uncredited)
Julie Jiang
- Voyager Ops Lt. j.g.
- (uncredited)
Louis Ortiz
- Ensign Culhane
- (uncredited)
Rob Plaza
- Voyager Ops Officer
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe episode was partly written as an attempt to remedy the fact that Voyager's producers felt Chakotay had been underused in the first season.
- GoofsChakotay does not have his medicine bag on him when he is beamed back to Voyager. It was either on the Kazon ship or in the shuttle that exploded, yet he uses it when he is back on Voyager.
Featured review
Kazon = Delta quadrant Klingons
Well, when you thought you are done with Klingons and their stupid warrior codex, we will meet the Kazon in the Delta quadrant that look like some hippie Klingons and also follow some weird warrior and honor codex. One might think, that civilizations that can travel between stars have evolved beyond some warrior cultures. Who today is eager to fight wars and prove himself in battles? Wars are fought to conquer resources, territories, destroy threats or to show the power of a state or a dictator. There are no knights anymore, no Samurai or anything alike. And we are far from traveling through space, yet we don't send our children into wars as a rite of passage.
What is this obsession in Star Trek with honor and fighting?
In this episode we see Nog dressed as a Kazon child. To prove himself and earn his name he is sent to destroy Chakotay's shuttle but fails. And in Kazon culture this is something bad, and Nog has disgraced himself and the rest of the episode is all about whining how bad this is for him and that he wants to die and Chakotay is a dick, because he didn't let him kill him to earn his name. This whole honor in killing others thing gets old. Obviously writers in the 1990s could not imagine cultures that are different than what we had on earth during the middle ages.
What is this obsession in Star Trek with honor and fighting?
In this episode we see Nog dressed as a Kazon child. To prove himself and earn his name he is sent to destroy Chakotay's shuttle but fails. And in Kazon culture this is something bad, and Nog has disgraced himself and the rest of the episode is all about whining how bad this is for him and that he wants to die and Chakotay is a dick, because he didn't let him kill him to earn his name. This whole honor in killing others thing gets old. Obviously writers in the 1990s could not imagine cultures that are different than what we had on earth during the middle ages.
helpful•10
- tomsly-40015
- Dec 11, 2023
Details
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime46 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
- 4:3
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