Death Wish
- Episode aired Feb 19, 1996
- TV-PG
- 46m
IMDb RATING
8.3/10
2.4K
YOUR RATING
As Voyager's captain, Janeway conducts a hearing for asylum tied to a suicidal Q's right to die.As Voyager's captain, Janeway conducts a hearing for asylum tied to a suicidal Q's right to die.As Voyager's captain, Janeway conducts a hearing for asylum tied to a suicidal Q's right to die.
Roxann Dawson
- Lt. B'Elanna Torres
- (as Roxann Biggs-Dawson)
Antony Acker
- Pinball Man
- (uncredited)
Kevin Marshall Brady
- Guard
- (uncredited)
John Copage
- Science Division Officer
- (uncredited)
Tarik Ergin
- Lt. Ayala
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaMaury Ginsberg played a character of the same name. The producers liked the actor's name so much that they decided to use it for his character.
- GoofsQ2's newspaper column (which can be read in freeze-frame) spells Continuum as "Conninuum."
- Quotes
Quinn: I was the greatest threat the Continuum had ever known. They feared me so much, they had to lock me away for eternity, and when they did that, they were saying that the individual's rights will be protected only so long as they don't conflict with the state. Nothing is so dangerous to a society.
- ConnectionsEdited from Star Trek: The Next Generation: Masks (1994)
Featured review
10/10 for casting alone.
It was not only brilliant casting de Lancie as the original Q...he has the perfect sense of play, humour and arrogance...but it was ingenious casting the wonderful and underrated Garrit Graham as a second Q.
Graham (Used Cars, the wonderfully campy Beef in Phantom of the Paradise, Class Reunion, MULTIPLE television appearances, genre films and sequels) was perfectly cast. Not only is he well known for humorous horror, and quite capable of playing a de Lancie-type trickster Q himself, he sold us on a sympathetic Q...an adorably selfless and philosophical Q.
He maintained the Q humour, but where de Lancie plays (to perfection) fun arrogance, he played sweet whimsy. I also give this episode kudos for showing a pathos side of (de Lancie's) Q. One that feels. One that understands immortality perhaps, even if he doesn't wish it upon himself like his counterpart.
Graham fits the Q family perfectly (above Bernsen or Plakson). He and de Lancie (along with some fun writing) showed a very entertaining yin and yang to the Q continuum.
Graham (Used Cars, the wonderfully campy Beef in Phantom of the Paradise, Class Reunion, MULTIPLE television appearances, genre films and sequels) was perfectly cast. Not only is he well known for humorous horror, and quite capable of playing a de Lancie-type trickster Q himself, he sold us on a sympathetic Q...an adorably selfless and philosophical Q.
He maintained the Q humour, but where de Lancie plays (to perfection) fun arrogance, he played sweet whimsy. I also give this episode kudos for showing a pathos side of (de Lancie's) Q. One that feels. One that understands immortality perhaps, even if he doesn't wish it upon himself like his counterpart.
Graham fits the Q family perfectly (above Bernsen or Plakson). He and de Lancie (along with some fun writing) showed a very entertaining yin and yang to the Q continuum.
helpful•172
- dodobassoon
- Jan 17, 2019
Details
- Runtime46 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 4:3
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