Blink of an Eye (episode)
From Memory Alpha, the free Star Trek reference
(written from a Production point of view)
| "Blink of an Eye" | ||
|---|---|---|
| VOY, Episode 6x12 Production number: 233 First aired: 19 January 2000 | ||
| ← | 131st of 168 produced in VOY | → |
| ← | 130th of 168 released in VOY | → |
| ← | 590th of 727 released in all | → |
| Teleplay By Scott Miller and Joe Menosky Story By Michael Taylor Directed By Gabrielle Beaumont | ||
| Unknown (2376) | ||
Over time and generations, a world tries to uncover the mystery of a strange object in the sky.
Contents |
[edit] Summary
USS Voyager approaches a planet rotating 58 times per minute and, while investigating, the ship enters a gravimetric gradient pulling it into an orbit in which the crew becomes trapped.
The tachyon core of the planet has created a differential in space-time, meaning that time passes much more quickly on the planet than in the rest of space. Within "moments" of Voyager's arrival and entrapment many years have passed on the surface. The initial entry into orbit coincides with an earthquake interpreted by the inhabitants as an act of a new deity, the Voyager ship appearing as a new bright star in the sky. Chakotay asks B'Elanna Torres to reconfigure a Class-5 probe to take pictures every ten milliseconds, and to take surveys of the planet to help try to get Voyager out of orbit. Chakotay goes on to say that this could be the best anthropological find ever; it is one thing to dig and find the history, but to watch the civilization develop before your eyes is another thing entirely. After Torres tells Chakotay that it could take a few hours to reconfigure the probe, he says that they might miss the rise and fall of a civilization. Torres reassures him that they'll just have to watch the next one.
As time passes, the planet's inhabitants quickly change from a pre-medieval level of technology to enter an industrial age and gain technology to the point where radio transmissions are possible. The scientist that has made first contact with Voyager explains to a fellow scientist that the Sky Ship, the name the planet's inhabitants have given Voyager, is a prominent feature of all of the planet's culture. The scientist states that he even had the entire collection of "Sky Ship Friends" dolls. A message is received from the surface by Seven of Nine which tells the crew of their insinuation into the culture and mythology of the planet's people. For centuries the society lives with the constant ground-shaking effect brought about by Voyager and its effects on the natural poles and rotation of the planet. Cautious about first contact with a pre-warp civilization and aware of the accelerated aging causing by the time differential, Captain Janeway employs The Doctor to beam to the planet on an undercover mission to gather data in an effort to find a way for Voyager to escape orbit. As Janeway and Torres prepare to beam him back, the signal is lost.
By the time The Doctor is successfully located and beamed back on board, three years have passed on the planet. He explains that Voyager is a catalyst for invention and that a space race is in progress to make contact. Voyager is also used as a catalyst for religion, music, art, and even children's toys. He tells the captain that his roommate, which he shared an apartment with, even made a symphony about Voyager. He said the apartment was destroyed by a rival state's cannon shells when they started a war with the one he was in. The Doctor goes on to explain that the war was finished in six months when a new treaty was signed.
He also informs Janeway that he has committed to memory the last three hundred years of geological data from the planet. Using The Doctor's data, the crew attempts an escape, but after only 50 meters of ascent, seismic activity increases and the exercise is aborted. In the meantime, a space capsule from the planet's surface reaches Voyager and the two visitors find the crew in what appears to be some form of stasis. The time differential causes them to see microseconds on board the ship. As they reach the bridge, they enter Voyager's time-frame and collapse, to the surprise of the bridge crew. One of the pilots does not survive the transition.
The surviving pilot tells of how he has grown up always knowing of the Sky Ship. Although every minute spent aboard means years pass on the surface he agrees to help the crew interpret The Doctor's data and find a way to break orbit. As Seven scans the surface she detects warp experimentation. Soon after, Voyager is being attacked by antimatter torpedoes and a tricobalt device.
The pilot returns to his planet with Voyager's specifications, with Janeway hoping he can convince his planet's rulers to stop the attacks and help them leave orbit. After more attacks and a planet's year since the pilot returned, two ships appear next to Voyager and deploy a tractor beam to pull it clear. Using a temporal compensator invented on his planet, the pilot returns one last time to say goodbye before the sky ship leaves forever.
The pilot is shown as an old man sitting by the temple, looking up into the sky as the star that is Voyager winks out and vanishes. A tear runs down the pilot's cheek as the Sky Ship leaves his world.
[edit] Memorable Quotes
"How does this sound? 'The Weird Planet Where Time Moved Very Fast and so did the people who lived there,' by Naomi Wildman..."
"Your title is verbose. I suggest you try to condense it."
"The Weird Planet"
"Better, but it lacks precision. 'The Weird Planet Displaced in Time'"
"Perfect!"
- - Naomi Wildman and Seven of Nine, discussing the title of Naomi's astronomy essay
"If there's an intelligent species down there, we'll be able to track their development, not just for days or weeks, but for centuries."
- - Chakotay
"What if they're big purple blobs of protoplasm?"
"Then you'll be the best-looking blob on the planet."
- - The Doctor and Captain Janeway
"Captain, isn't it time we returned fire?"
"We've done enough damage to these people over the last thousand years."
- - Tom Paris and Chakotay
[edit] Background Information
- This episode was being prepped for shooting under the title "Wink of an Eye" when production realized that there was already a TOS episode, "Wink of an Eye". Furthering the coincidence, both stories feature aliens existing at a much faster rate who visit the ship and see the slower crew apparently "frozen".
- Obi Ndefo previously played Drex, Martok's son, in the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine season four premiere "The Way of the Warrior".
- One day on the planet is slightly more than one second long (1.03 seconds) in normal time, so three years on the planet would only be 18.9 minutes in normal time. This would mean that 100 years on the planet would pass every 31.5 hours. Since Voyager seems to have been in orbit for centuries of planetary time it is likely that the episode takes place over a week or two of time for the crew.
- This episode contains a scene in which a member of an alien species writes in English using a pen and ink. This is unusual considering most alien writing depicted in Star Trek is made up of alien-looking characters.
- Although Tuvok describes the planet as having a high rate of rotation "like a quasar", this property more accurately describes a pulsar.
[edit] Video and DVD releases
- UK VHS release (two-episode tapes, Paramount Home Entertainment): Volume 6.6, 14 August 2000.
- As part of the VOY Season 6 DVD collection.
[edit] Links and References
[edit] Guest Star
[edit] Co-Stars
- Obi Ndefo as Protector
- Daniel Zacapa as an Astronomer
- Olaf Pooley as a Cleric
- Jon Cellini as a Technician
- Kat Sawyer-Young as Astronaut
- Melik Malkasian as a Shaman
- Walter Hamilton McCready as a Tribal Alien
- Scarlett Pomers as Naomi Wildman
[edit] Uncredited Co-Star
- Tarik Ergin as Ayala
[edit] References
altar; ammonium; amplitude modulation; anthropolgy; antimatter torpedo; astronomy; cannon; carbon monoxide; carrier wave; Central Protectorate; Class V planetary probe; concert hall; confinement beam; docking port; doppler component; Doric; display buffer; dwarf star; elemental constant; fire fruit; god; gravimetric gradient; "Ground Shaker"/"Sky Ship"; holomatrix; hot-air balloon; internal combustion; iron; Jason Tebreeze; Kelemane's planet; Kelemane's planet sport; Kelemane's species; Kelemane, son of Kelemane; Lakeside; Launch Control/Tactical Command Center; Mareeza; mathematics; Mountain (team); multiple-choice exam; mythology; observatory; opera house; orbit; Orbital 1; Prime Directive; prime number; Protector; protoplasm; quasar; radio transmission; Red River; Sky Ship Friends; Station 004; tachyon; Tactical Air Command; Tahal; technology; telescope; temporal compensator; Torelius; tricobalt device; Tureena; ultra-high frequency; weather coordinator
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