Star Trek Voyager Full Movie In Hindi 720p

Star Trek Voyager Full Movie In Hindi 720p

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Star Trek: Voyager Full Movie In Hindi 720p

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Pulled to the far side of the galaxy, where the Federation is seventy-five years away at maximum warp speed, a Starfleet ship must cooperate with Maquis rebels to find a way home.
In the 24th Century the Federation star ship USS Voyager has just been released for take-off and for a Deep-Space mission to the Badlands. The Badlands is the hideout for so-called traitors to the Federation. They call themselves the Maquis. The Maquis are mostly ex-Federation and some freelancers. Anyone who pays their barging? is their leader. Captain Kathryn Janeway is the chosen captain for this mission because of her training and experience. She requests to speak a prisoner and former Maquis helmsman called Tom Paris. (Tomas Eugene Paris) Because of Mr. Paris, his experience and knowledge of the Badlands, he is the perfect advisor to go on the Deep-Space mission. Mr. Paris is also the Son of the Commander-Admiral Paris, Head of Starfleet. Setting off for the Badlands, they find no Maquis ship what so ever. Not even a trace. Some while later, they get swept away off their 'feet' and are carried to the Delta Quadrant - 75,000 light-years from home. There they find a stating? which belongs to the Caretaker who lately takes care of an entire race called the Ocampa. A friendly-suspicious person called Neelix is hailing them and warning them to stay away from his junk. She makes a deal with Neelix and he can come on board. If it isn't for Neelix, they couldn't save the abducted Maquis and Starfleet Operations Manager Harry Kim from the Ocampa world. This world is threatened by a race called the Kazon. Through the Caretaker, they meet the Maquis and decide to become allies because the situation doesn't look promising. They eventually will get at war with the Kazon since they want to have the - already dying - Caretaker's station and destroy the Ocampa. Captain Chakotay rescues Voyager from destruction by the Kazon and destroys his ship in the process, by colliding it with the Kazon ship. They will form one single crew and rescue the missing B'Lanna Torres and Harry Kim. Kes, Neelix's girlfriend and Nelix himself will stay on board and serve the captain by becoming part of the crew. Maquis and Starfleet bond together, they set off on a 75 year journey to the Alpha Quadrant, where Earth is. Since some of the crew of Voyager were killed in the progress of going to the Delta Quadrant, the Maquis will take their place. Also the Doctor is killed, which leaves them with activating the EMH. The Emergency Medical Hologram. Captain Janeway, Lieutenant Tuvok, Lieutentant-Chief Enegenier B'Lanna Torres, Helsman Tom Paris, Navigator Harry Kim, Commander Chakotay and the EMH sail off to a long journey to simply go home. During the seasons Kes will leave Voyager and a Borg, Seven of Nine, will take her place. Seven has much to learn since she was assimilated as a child and lost all of her humanity. This is not only one of the Captain's missions. She and her crew will endure much more difficult tasks at hand.
When I first watched "Voyager" I was very happy because there was a female captain. I was a getting sick and tired of these sexist, women-crazy men like kirk and picard. The guy on "Deep space nine" was cool. I like all the characters on "Voyager", but Neelix is the one who makes me laugh!
THESE COMMENTS ARE ABOUT THE CHARACTERS ONLY - not the actors who brought them to life... or put them six feet under.<br/><br/>Kate Mulgrew ... Captain Kathryn Janeway was wonderful. She was clear well spoken and not &quot;wishy-washy.&quot; A fresh change from the continual onslaught that is TV&#39;s characters.<br/><br/>Robert Beltran ... Chakotay couldn&#39;t be more annoying. He took up space on the ship.<br/><br/>Roxann Dawson ... B&#39;Elanna Torres couldn&#39;t be a Klingon, but a spoiled rotten brat? You bet.<br/><br/>Robert Duncan McNeill ... Tom Paris is best described as a Daddy&#39;s boy... if such a thing exists.<br/><br/>Ethan Phillips ... Neelix - I have to be careful here. I may lose my self-control and say what I really want to say about this &quot;character.&quot; Oh heck! I HATED HIM! Such a freaking sycophant mealy-mouth know-nothing serve no purpose except being cheery ... FLESH-BAG!<br/><br/>Robert Picardo ... The Doctor - I loved the &quot;Doctor.&quot; Intelligent, observant, helpful. Always ready to contribute. A real plus to the storyline.<br/><br/>Tim Russ ... Tuvok had no purpose other than to raise his one eyebrow - a real &quot;yawner.&quot;<br/><br/>Garrett Wang ... Harry Kim aka Tuvok&#39;s sister.<br/><br/>Tarik Ergin ... Lieutenant Ayala ... who?<br/><br/>Jeri Ryan ... Seven of Nine - she brought the series back to life when Janeway and the Doctor could no longer support it. It was a typical device, but cleverly executed and successful.<br/><br/>Jennifer Lien ... Kes - ... I think I hated this &quot;elf&quot; character more than Neelix... huh... I guess we do repress the more painful memories.<br/><br/>That&#39;s it. Janeway, Seven, and the Doctor. When they aren&#39;t on camera or at least talking, the show is so flat it deserves massive editing in order to be shown again.<br/><br/>--<br/><br/>Finally, I have to add this. I have seen Ms. Ryan on TV since and she is not the raving beauty that she was made up to be on Voyager. However, whenever it&#39;s on I do stop by the show to see her incredibly beautiful statuesque appearance (I mean her bust: a sculptured, painted, drawn, or engraved representation of the upper part of the human figure, esp. a portrait sculpture showing only the head and shoulders of the subject.). I wish I was an artist...

Voyager&#39;s nacelles were created in response to the discovery made in Episode 7.09 of Star Trek: The Next Generation &quot;Force of Nature&quot; that warp travel was damaging subspace. While never mentioned explicitly on Star Trek: Voyager, those who have worked on the show have stated that Voyager&#39;s variable geometry warp nacelles were not damaging to subspace. Despite this, the issue brought up in &quot;Force of Nature&quot; was ignored in Star Trek and essentially forgotten as it was seen to have been a limiting issue not conducive to the creation of good stories, specially in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine where ships were frequently seen cruising at over the warp limit enacted in &quot;Force of Nature&quot;. A non-canonical explanation of how existing ships were allowed to travel past the warp limit without using variable geometry nacelles may be that Starfleet engineers simply found a simpler way of making warp speed subspace-friendly without changing the nacelles drastically.<br/><br/>Besides - it LOOKS so damn cool! Yes, and it&#39;s all about the ranks of certain characters. From the beginning Tuvok was apparently meant to be a Lieutenant, but in the pilot episode &quot;Caretaker&quot; was given the rank pips of Lieutenant Commander - two silver, one black. This was allegedly a wardrobe error. Cashiered former Starfleet officer Tom Paris was given the rank of full Lieutenant (two silver pips) and Maquis crewmember B&#39;Elanna Torres was given the rank of Lieutenant Junior Grade - one black strip, one silver on her rank pin. She was seemingly promoted to Lieutenant Full Grade at the end of the following episode, &quot;Parallax&quot;, when she is made Chief Engineer (two silver strips on her rank pin). However, during the 12th episode of the first season, &quot;Cathexis&quot;, the mistake with Tuvok&#39;s rank was spotted and corrected. At the same time it was also evidently decided to &quot;demote&quot; Paris and Torres, both to Lieutenant Junior Grade. This was probably done to maintain a reasonable chain of command, and possibly because it was felt they should not hold the same rank as one of Captain Janeway&#39;s trusted and most senior officers. As a result there are several continuity errors as Tuvok and Paris&#39; ranks change back and forth due to the shooting schedule; they retain their original ranks for the sequences set on the bridge, but the revised ones are shown in all other scenes. Torres&#39; rank pin is revised in all her scenes, again a result of the shooting schedule.<br/><br/>From a story point of view, it has been inferred that Tuvok and Torres are both demoted as a result of their actions in the previous episode, &quot;Prime Factors&quot;, where they undermine Captain Janeway&#39;s authority and are summarily disciplined, though any demotions are never seen or referred to onscreen. While plausible, this theory does not account for the continuity errors in the following episode or the change in Paris&#39; rank, though. In the fourth season episode &quot;Revulsion&quot;, Tuvok receives an on-screen promotion to Lieutenant Commander, with no reference to any demotion. And to confuse the issue further, in another season four episode, &quot;Day of Honor&quot;, Paris takes the time to remind Torres that he actually outranks her, despite the pair seemingly having the same rank! This is because he had served longer on Voyager (even thought it was just by a few days) giving him Time in Service and Time in Grade seniority. During the USS Voyager&#39;s return to Earth, the ships lost around 15 shuttles. It was never explained or shown to us in the show how the Voyager crew were able to constantly create new shuttles despite being a medium sized ship thousands of lightyears from Federation space. It can be assumed that the crew replicated shuttle parts and constructed a new shuttle once one had been destroyed. This is one aspect of Star Trek: Voyager which has attracted a lot of negative attention many from fans who feel it was unrealistic for crew to be able to constantly replace shuttles/construct warp drives in their situation. Voyager originally had a complement of 40 torpedoes and Tuvok mentioned in Season 1 Episode &quot;The Cloud&quot; that there was no way to replace them once they were gone. By the end of the ship&#39;s seven year journey, Voyager had used 93 Starfleet standard photon torpedoes. The audience is never told or shown how Voyager was suddenly able to replace these supposedly &quot;irreplaceable&quot; torpedoes. However, it is possible that they obtained them through encounters with other species, both friendly (e.g. trade) and hostile (e.g. salvaged from wreckage after being forced into battle). Remember that the crew also obtained several forms of propulsion and defensive technology during the course of the series (the Borg seemed to be an exceptionally rich source for such things), so it isn&#39;t completely unrealistic to assume they got a hold of weapons they could modify for their own use. Or, being isolated from Starfleet, the crew just had to become creative in everything, and use the ship for purposes it wasn&#39;t originally designed for. Just as they had to regularly create dilithium for their engines, create a Stellar Cartography section, and started a Hydroponics bay and kitchen for growing and cooking food, they may have learned to create torpedoes from the raw materials. According to the numbers stated in the FAQ above, the crew also had to replace several shuttles with active warp drives, so reproducing topedoes would not be too far-fetched. Throughout Voyager&#39;s seven year journey, the crew count appears to go up and down several times without any apparent reason why. In season 2 episode 1 &quot;The 37s&quot;, it is mentioned there are 152 crew members on board. In season 3 episode 2 &quot;Distant Origin&quot;, alien sensors pick up 147 lifesigns. In season 5 episode 4 &quot;In the Flesh&quot;, the Doctor implies there are 127 crew members. In season 5 episode 13 &quot;Gravity&quot;, it is said there are 152 crew members. In season 5 episode 15 &quot;Dark Frontier&quot;, there are 143 lifesigns detected on Voyager. In season 5 episode 22 &quot;Someone to Watch Over Me&quot;, there are 146 crew members. In season 7 episode 20 &quot;Author, Author&quot;, there are still 146 crew members despite there being several deaths since the events of &quot;Someone to Watch Over Me&quot;.<br/><br/>Over the years, we saw that Voyager lost approximately 33 crew members. However this was not reflected in the crew counts we heard throughout the show, and an inshow explanation for how the crew numbers jumped up and down so much seems impossible as besides Kes, Neelix, Naomi, Seven and Icheb and the 5 Equinox crewmembers added in Season 6 Episode 1 &quot;Equinox Part 2&quot;, there were no permanent new additions to the crew throughout the show. It is far more likely that the writers simply did not keep tabs on the number of crewmembers. This is also reflected in other ways such as the surprise sighting of a female Vulcan on board Voyager in season 7 episode 4 &quot;Repression&quot; which directly contradicts the events of Season 3 episode &quot;Blood Fever&quot; and Season 5 episode &quot;Counterpoint&quot;. Yet in the Season 3 episode &quot;Flashback&quot; Tuvok does clearly mention there are indeed other Vulcan crew members aboard Voyager. Due to the nature of the shows premise being that the ship is small and far away from Federation space, such continuity errors are particularly jarring. It takes place in the years 2371-2378 A.D. a5c7b9f00b

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