Non Sequitur
- Episode aired Sep 25, 1995
- TV-PG
- 45m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Harry Kim wakes up in San Francisco having never been assigned to Voyager which Starfleet considers lost.Harry Kim wakes up in San Francisco having never been assigned to Voyager which Starfleet considers lost.Harry Kim wakes up in San Francisco having never been assigned to Voyager which Starfleet considers lost.
Roxann Dawson
- Lt. B'Elanna Torres
- (as Roxann Biggs-Dawson)
Jennifer Lien
- Kes
- (credit only)
Ethan Phillips
- Neelix
- (credit only)
Robert Picardo
- The Doctor
- (credit only)
Almayvonne
- Chez Sandrine Patron
- (uncredited)
Thomas J. Booth
- Starfleet Security Officer
- (uncredited)
Tracee Cocco
- Alien Visitor
- (uncredited)
Kevin Finister
- San Francisco Citizen
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaJennifer Gatti (Libby) also appeared in Birthright, Part I (1993)/Birthright, Part II (1993) as Ba'el.
- GoofsThe entire time Ensign Kim is running away from security, he has his communicator badge on and a security anklet. They should be able to lock on to either and beam him into a prison cell. In addition, there would be no need for security forces to respond at all. Simply add a program that call for beam out to a secure location as soon as the anklet is tampered with.
- Quotes
Libby: Where're you going?
Ensign Harry Kim: Marseille, France.
Libby: What for?
Ensign Harry Kim: I've got to see Paris.
Libby: But you just said you were going to Marseille.
- ConnectionsEdited from Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979)
Featured review
If I had your fiancé, I'd sleep late too
Harry Kim wakes up in an alternate reality.
This is a hit and miss episode with some decent moments.
The premise is good, with a nice bit of temporal shenanigans for Kim to deal with. In fact, it starts very well, with the first three scenes between Kim and Libby being quite good, but when he reveals his situation to her, the chemistry disappears, and we get his journey back to the reset button, I think it goes downhill. Garrett Wang and Jennifer Gatti do well initially, but when the conflict between the characters starts, they have fairly bland dialogue that they cannot elevate with performance.
I prefer Wang playing a supporting role, and in some instances I think he can carry an episode, but this type of story requires a stronger screen presence due to the emotional rollercoaster it should be for the lead.
The involvement of Tom Paris is good and I like the alternative take on the character. Robert Duncan McNeill injects his personality into the story nicely.
The action-adventure aspect is good in certain physical scenes, but there are several lazy plot contrivances that lead Kim and another character to points where they spend the majority of the time sitting or standing at workstations explaining everything that's happening in convoluted exchanges of technobabble.
I think the majority of the premise is wasted and would have been better to have had a simple Q clicking his fingers as explanation, as it takes less time, then focus the plot on the dilemma the lead character is put in, and make it about the very difficult decision they have to make.
For me it's a 5.5/10 but I round upwards.
This is a hit and miss episode with some decent moments.
The premise is good, with a nice bit of temporal shenanigans for Kim to deal with. In fact, it starts very well, with the first three scenes between Kim and Libby being quite good, but when he reveals his situation to her, the chemistry disappears, and we get his journey back to the reset button, I think it goes downhill. Garrett Wang and Jennifer Gatti do well initially, but when the conflict between the characters starts, they have fairly bland dialogue that they cannot elevate with performance.
I prefer Wang playing a supporting role, and in some instances I think he can carry an episode, but this type of story requires a stronger screen presence due to the emotional rollercoaster it should be for the lead.
The involvement of Tom Paris is good and I like the alternative take on the character. Robert Duncan McNeill injects his personality into the story nicely.
The action-adventure aspect is good in certain physical scenes, but there are several lazy plot contrivances that lead Kim and another character to points where they spend the majority of the time sitting or standing at workstations explaining everything that's happening in convoluted exchanges of technobabble.
I think the majority of the premise is wasted and would have been better to have had a simple Q clicking his fingers as explanation, as it takes less time, then focus the plot on the dilemma the lead character is put in, and make it about the very difficult decision they have to make.
For me it's a 5.5/10 but I round upwards.
helpful•21
- snoozejonc
- Jul 7, 2022
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
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- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime45 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
- 4:3
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