Warning: SPOILERS for Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 5, Episode 7 - “Fully Dilated"Star Trek: Lower Deckshas remade one of the best episodes ofStar Trek: Voyager, with absolutely hilarious consequences.Star Trek: Lower Deckslatest “girl’s trip” episode brings together Lieutenants Beckett Mariner (Tawny Newsome), D’Vana Tendi (Noel Wells), and T’Lyn (Gabrielle Ruiz) for an away mission to Dilmer III. The USS Cerritos lieutenants are tasked with clearing the artifacts left behind by an alternate universe’spurple USS Enterprise-Dto maintain the Prime Directive of non-interference with pre-warp civilizations. There’s just one caveat:one second on the Cerritos is a week for the away team.

InStar Trek: Voyagerseason 6, episode 12, “Blink of an Eye”,the USS Voyager encounters a planet where time moves much more quickly than it does on Voyager. While Voyager is locked in the planet’s gravitational field, entire civilizations rise and fall. Whenthe Doctor (Robert Picardo)is sent on an away mission to investigate the extent of Voyager’s cultural contamination, a momentary glitch turns three seconds into three years. The similarities between these stories is no accident – with theLower Decksremake resulting in a hilarious parody of a classicStar Trekepisode.

Star Trek: Lower Decks Season 5 Official Poster

A Mishap Leaves The Cerritos Away Team Stranded On Dilmer III

Star Trek: Lower Decksseason 5, episode 7, “Fully Dilated” is a hilarious take onStar Trek: Voyagerseason 6, episode 12, “Blink of an Eye”, with Lieutenant Tendi even saying she’s familiar with the planet the USS Voyager encountered. Lieutenant Brad Boimler (Jack Quaid) spills his drink on the transporter console, like a shrimp-covered variation onVoyager’s temporary glitch, leaving the Cerritos away team stranded for nearly a year. WhileVoyagersticks with B’Elanna Torres (Roxann Dawson) fixing the mishap,Lower Decksshifts the perspective to Mariner, Tendi, and T’Lyn making the best of their extended trip.

“Fully Dilated” actuallyshowswhat it’s like for Mariner, Tendi, and T’Lyn to live out that year together.

By flipping the script from the starship to the planet,Star Trek: Lower Decksexpands and humanizes the story thatStar Trek: Voyagercontained to a single beat.In “Blink of an Eye”, the Doctor comes back with stories about the rich life he built when he thought the Voyager crew forgot him. “Fully Dilated” actuallyshowswhat it’s like for Mariner, Tendi, and T’Lyn to live out that year together. WhileT’Lyn grows giant melonsand Mariner searches for a “probe life”, Tendi accidentally drives an Orion dagger into her friendship with T’Lyn and has to fix it.

Why Stories About Star Trek Characters On Primitive Planets Work So Well

Star Trek Characters In Fish Out Of Water Stories Are (Usually) Fun

Stories aboutStar Trekcharacters on primitive planets are usually guaranteed hits, so nearly everyStar Trekseries has at least one. More often than not,it’s just funny to watchStar Trekcharacters in situations that are familiar to us, but tricky for them. There’s a lot of humor in fish out of water stories that highlight the quick thinking and competence ofStar Trekcharacters figuring out how to work with old technology or blend in. When the primitive planet is actually Earth or a close approximation,Star Trekcan comment on our current cultural climate more easily.

BesidesStar Trek: Voyager’s “Blink of an Eye”,Star Trek: Lower Decks'“Fully Dilated” shares similarities with:

Interacting with primitive societies reveals the true nature ofStar Trekcharacters in fascinating ways. These stories put characters in a position of power with advanced technology that might be misinterpreted as magic by locals. Anything that’s accidentally left behind could contaminate the natural development of pre-warp societies from either a techological or theological perspective. Whether characters choose to break or upholdStarfleet’s Prime Directive, or find a workaround that lets them quietly help others while accomplishing their goals like T’Lyn did inStar Trek: Lower Decks, we get to see who they truly are.