Search
Home
Mobile Site Caption Comp Monthly Poll Sudden Death Book Reviews Game Reviews Colour Key Statistics Cookie Usage
FED SHIPS OTHER A-K FLEETS WEAPONRY SPECIES PERSONNEL TIMELINE CALCULATOR GALLERIES TEMPORAL
STATIONS OTHER L-Z LINEAGE SIZE CHARTS BATTLES OTHER PEOPLE SCI-TECH STYLING POLITICS TEMP. SHIPS
ARTICLES REVIEWS LISTS RECREATION SEARCH SITE GUIDE WHAT'S NEW MAIL AUTHOR LINKS-AWARDS SHOPS FORUM

Battles

Introduction
Enterprise
Attack
Azati
Prime
Sphere
Bashing
Saving
Earth
Vulcan
Civil War
Romulan
Marauder
Empire
in Crisis
Romulan
Attack
The Deadly
Years
The Doomsday
Machine
The M-5
Debacle
The Wrath
of Khan
Khitomer
Crisis
The Battle
of Minos
Wolf
359
Klingon
Civil War
The
Odyssey
Death of a
Caretaker
A Flagship
Battle
The Omarion
Nebula
Deep
Space Nine
Shattered
Mirror
Kazon
Attack
The
Swarm
Borg /
8472 War
Sector
001
The
Dominion War
The Valley
of Death
The Chin'toka
Invasion

AR-558
Righteous
Insurrection
The Chin'koka
Retreat
Advance on
Cardassia
Vaadwaur
Battle
Workforce
Incident
Reman
Nemesis

Guest Review

Title : Doctor's Orders Rating : 2
First Aired : 18 Feb 2004 Stardate : Unknown
Director : Roxann Dawson Year : 2154
Writers : Brannon Braga, Rick Berman Season : 3
Rating : 1.0000 for 2 reviewsAdd your own review
Reviewer : Ben Rating : 2
Review : The main review hit on the biggest flaw in this episode - just lazy writing, and the twist comes too abruptly at the end. It does raise some questions though, such as how much of the episode was Phlox hallucinating, and how much was real? Trip's remarks about the engine make it appear that there was a crisis of some kind, and Phlox managed to avert disaster, but can we trust that the anomaly did in fact expand? If it did, why? How come they were so far off in their calculations? It did become obvious that Phlox was hallucinating fairly quickly - noises in the engine room are one thing, but the events soon took on the obvious shape of his fear of failure (eg the somewhat absurd transformation of Hoshi). Once it is established that Phlox is stark raving, anything in the episode is open to question - including the existence of T'Pol. I thought Blalock and Billingsley did admirable jobs carrying this episode, and I think Blalock showed remarkable restraint - I feel when T'Pol is, for whatever reason, on the brink of emotional display, it seems to come to easily. In this episode we got the feel that she was still partially in control, but on the verge of losing it. If this episode had not already aired (Voyager's "One"), it might deserve a higher rating.
Reviewer : Satan Rating : 0
Review : This episode is a rip off of Voyager's "One." And a crappy one at best. The writers didn't even try with this one. 0/5.
Add your own review

Copyright Graham Kennedy Page views : 583 Last updated : 1 Jan 1970