Series: Star Trek: Voyager
Season 3, Episode 17
Original Air Date: February 12, 1997
| via Memory Alpha |
During a shuttle mission, Chakotay and his pilot, Ensign Kaplan, respond to a distress call - and doesn't that always lead to trouble? When they land on the planet of the signal's origin, they are almost immediately attacked. Chakotay is knocked unconscious. When he comes to, the woman attending him is human, and a former Starfleet officer at that. Soon, it becomes apparent that she and the rest of her community are dis-assimilated Borg drones. They help Chakotay - indeed, they save his life. But they also need help from him, and the particular assistance required is a tough sell for Captain Janeway.
"Unity" provides an early glimpse of Voyager's most important story - I mean, apart from the obviously overarching long journey home. With the Hugh arc, NextGen raised important questions regarding the Borg: is it possible to separate a drone from the collective and what would be the consequences of doing so? Apart from the series premier, DS9 has mostly ignored the Borg in favor of other fruitful narrative paths. But soon, Voyager will explore these questions in depth via the character Seven of Nine.
It's difficult for me to look past my own eager anticipation of stories to come and judge "Unity" on its own merits. That said, I think the episode is genuinely important for revealing to Chakotay the power and the seductiveness of the collective. As part of his healing, he is joined with them and the experience of total connection is overwhelming. And beautiful. Yes, they manipulate him for selfish gain. But then they leave him alone and it's obvious he regrets that a little.
I also think it relates thematically with Captain Sisko's experience in "Rapture." The stories are separate, of course, and quite different from each other. But the power of connection is common to both. I think of where we are as a society nearly 30 years later. Many have theorized that Trumpism is a result of too many young men, in particular, feeling disconnected from... everything. Feeling a part of something larger than oneself: is it a universal human need? Generations of psychologists and sociologists have asserted that it is. Both "Unity" and "Rapture" support the thinking.
Acting Notes
| via Wikipedia |
Lori Hallier played the role of Dr. Riley Frazier, the former Starfleet officer turned Borg drone turned separated drone. Hallier was born in Victoria, British Columbia, July 8, 1959. She studied theatre at the University of Victoria, ultimately graduating from the National Theatre School in Montreal.
Hallier's films include My Bloody Valentine, Warning Sign and My Name Is Tanino. On television, she had recurring roles on Days of Our Lives and Santa Barbara and guest roles on The Dukes of Hazzard, Jake and the Fatman and Matlock.
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