Star Trek: Voyager (1995–2001): Season 3, Episode 8 - Future's End - full transcript

A timeship from the future who tries to stop Voyager gets thrown with Voyager into the twentieth century. His timeship is found in the 1960's and Voyager finds a company that has benefited from its technology exists in 1996.

The temperature in downtown Barstow
is 75 degrees.

Far out!

Come in.

Oh, sorry. I was practising my serve.

- Your serve?
- Tennis.

After 19 years, I'm taking it up again.

I'm a little rusty.
I played in a holodeck tournament.

I lost my first match in straight sets.

Maintain eye contact with the ball

at the apex of its trajectory,

and your serve would be more effective.



You play tennis?

Simple physics.

Not as simple as high school tennis.

What can I do for you?

I've completed my security evaluation...

Red Alert. Captain to the bridge.

Report.

Some sort of spatial rift.
It opened in front of us.

It's a distortion in the space-time
continuum but it's got a graviton matrix.

- It's being artificially generated.
- By whom?

Sensors can't get inside.

The distortion field's fluctuating.

Something's coming out.

It's a small ship,
approximately six metres in length.



Magnify.

Sensors are reading one occupant,
human.

He is at the perimeter of the rift.

There's a subspace signature
emanating from the ship.

Captain...

It's Federation.

Hail them.

No response.

- They're charging weapons.
- Shields up. Hail them again.

- Shields are down.
- Get us out of here.

- Helm control is off-line.
- He's firing a sub-atomic disruptor.

- Return fire.
- Full phasers.

No effect.

Voyager is coming apart!

Divert all power to the deflector.

Send out a polaron pulse
to disrupt his weapon.

Emitting deflector pulse. Now.

- It's working.
- We are being hailed.

On screen.

I'm Captain Braxton
of the Federation timeship Aeon.

I've come from 500 years
into your future.

- Disengage your deflector pulse.
- Why are you firing at us?

Your vessel causes an explosion
that will destroy Earth's solar system.

I've come to prevent that. My mission
is your destruction. Do not resist.

- I'll need more information before I...
- Debris from your hull was found.

- Captain, I...
- No time!

He's remodulating the subatomic
disruptor. Our deflector is losing power.

- If he's telling the truth...
- I won't sacrifice us without proof.

We're not going to get it.

Match the frequency of his weapon.
Try to overload his emitter.

It's working. His weapon is off-line
and his ship has been damaged.

The rift is destabilising
and he is being pulled back inside.

Re-establish helm control.

We're caught in some sort of graviton
distortion. We're being pulled in, too.

Status.

Primary systems are back on-line.

The weapons grid
and power array are damaged.

- The temporal rift is closed.
- Where are we?

Home.

- We just cut across half the galaxy.
- The rift must have originated here.

Hail Starfleet Command.

No response on standard frequencies.

Curious. I am picking up a multitude of
narrow-band EM signals.

Let's hear.

The question isn't where we are.
It's when we are.

- Mr Kim.
- According to astrometric readings...

...the year is 1996.

The late 20th Century.

They had surveillance satellites then.

Maintain a high orbit and modulate
the shields to scatter their radar.

We don't want to alarm them.

Is the timeship here, too?

There is no sign of it.
Scanning the planet's surface.

I am picking up readings
from the northern hemisphere.

Subspace technology shouldn't exist
for another 100 years.

Could be our friend
from the 29th Century. Localise it.

North American continent.
Pacific coast.

The city of... Los Angeles.

We've got to go down there.

If it is Captain Braxton,
he's the key to all this.

His ship is the only way
to get back to our own century.

Chakotay, Tuvok, Paris, you're with me.

- Mr Kim, you have the bridge.
- Yes, Ma'am.

You are something of an aficionado
on 20th Century America.

What will we need to pass as locals?

Simple. Nice clothes,
fast car and lots of money.

We could have worn
our Starfleet uniforms.

No one would have noticed.

The readings are coming
from within 100 metres,

but I can't pinpoint the source.

I can't believe a 29th Century ship
could have landed here unnoticed.

We don't know what kind of technology
they have. Maybe it's cloaked.

Let's spread out.
Tuvok, Paris, go check the shoreline.

Chakotay and I
will search the boardwalk.

- Well, Kathryn, you got us home.
- Right place, wrong time.

- But it is good to be back.
- I should look up some ancestors.

One was a school teacher in Arizona.

I don't know what
my relatives were doing.

For all I know, she could be my
great-great-great-great-grandmother.

- She has your legs.
- Have you ever been to California?

No.

After the Hermosa Quake in 2047,
this entire region sank under water.

It became home to thousands
of different marine species.

Some interesting species
in this century.

- Subspace readings are weaker here.
- Let's head up to the boardwalk.

- The sun feels great.
- Radiation is at hazardous levels.

Lighten up, Tuvok.

This was a great time and place.
You're seeing it first-hand.

- Take off your shirt.
- And risk dermal dysplasia? No.

Oh, Vulcans...
Deep down, you're all hypochondriacs.

The readings are coming
from over there. 10 metres.

There.

So much for the timeship.

There's no doubt. The subspace
readings are coming from him.

No way.

Way.

It's crap. The component density
is too low, the voltage variance is out

and I don't like the colour.

We've got less than six months
before we introduce the Hyperpro PC.

With a chip like this driving it,
we'll have to change the name to Edsel.

I gave you this contract
because you're the best.

Next to us, of course.

Go home, Jim. Lose some sleep
over this. I want a full report next week.

- What am I doing?
- You're in a meeting.

- And...
- I know I'm not supposed to interrupt.

But there's a woman calling
from Griffith Observatory.

Rain Robinson.
She says it's urgent.

Put her through.

- Henry Starling.
- Hi. I don't know if you remember me.

I'm an astronomer
at the SETI lab you're funding.

- We met at the Griffith restoration party.
- Yes. What is it?

It was my understanding you wanted
to be notified immediately

if I picked up a gamma emission that
matched the frequency you gave me.

Well... I did. So I am.

- Are you certain?
- Positive.

I tracked the emission
and the source is in orbit right above us.

When did it show up?

Er... according to the raw data,
about 90 minutes ago.

I'm not picking up anything
from the standard search parameters.

No one else knows there's something
up there. We've got to call NASA!

That's a little premature, don't you think?

This could be a close encounter,
but it could be a flock of geese.

Hmm, geese don't park themselves
20,000 kilometres above North America.

Let's send a message up there.

No! We don't know what we've found.

Until we do, I won't risk embarrassing
myself or the observatory.

Track the emission, collect more data
and keep my informed.

I'm going to put
a bottle of champagne on ice.

Do you think ET likes Chateau Coeur?

- If he doesn't, I've got a six-pack.
- Good work. Stay in touch.

What the hell?

Anyone up there?

That trip through the rift is affecting
our primary systems.

Weapons are off-line,
we blew three EPS conduits

and our main transporter buffer
just crashed.

- We've got an away team down there.
- I know.

We've only got short-range
emergency transporters.

How close would we have to get
to beam them up?

- Less than 10 kilometres.
- Somebody would see us.

I'm picking up an EM signal
from the planet's surface.

- It's directed at our coordinates.
- On screen.

Greetings from the people of Earth.

- Shall I respond, sir?
- Absolutely not.

He appears to live on the street.

That pushcart seems to contain
all his belongings.

He spends most of his time putting up
literature about the end of the world.

- Janeway here.
- We've got a problem.

We received a signal from the surface.
It's a greeting for extraterrestrials.

- We've been detected?
- It looks that way.

It came from 20 kilometres
from your location.

Transport Paris and Tuvok there.

I can't do that without
going into a lower orbit.

The main pattern buffer is off-line.
It could take days to repair.

Then transmit the coordinates
to Tuvok's tricorder.

He and Tom will have to get there
using more conventional means.

Aye, Captain. Kim out.

Nobody walks here and they
don't have much public transport.

- We'll need wheels.
- Do what you have to.

Find out who sent that message.
How many people know about us?

We cannot risk contaminating
the time line.

See you later.

Who are you? This is my stuff.

We don't want your stuff. We just want
to ask you a few questions.

No! No more questions.
No more surveys.

Damn social workers
coming around all the time!

I don't need your advice.
I don't need your...

Voyager!

I knew you'd show up.
This is all your fault.

Captain Braxton.

I told you to turn off your deflector pulse
but you wouldn't listen.

Voyager. Fools!

The last time we saw you...

I was a younger man, confident in my
mission! But you wouldn't listen to me.

- You were trying to destroy us.
- I was trying to save lives!

Trying to stop a chain reaction.

It's too late now.
All things are set in motion.

The temporal explosion will occur.
The end is coming. The future's end.

How long
have you been in the 20th Century?

Too long. 30 years too long.

And yet we just arrived. Why?

Pure chance. You knocked
my navigational system off course.

There's no telling where
we would have ended up!

Who took my pencils?

Oh, always something missing.

Always wanting to steal things.

Greedy people!
Post-industrial barbarians!

Captain, we want to help you, but you've
got to give us more information.

You said Voyager causes the explosion.

Yes.

No... Hmm, yes.

That's the paradox, my dear.
A leads to B, leads to C, leads to A.

Your juvenile minds.
How can I make you understand?

A. There's an explosion
in the 29th Century.

Debris from Voyager is found.
I go back in time to destroy you.

B. You try to stop me,
disabling my weapon,

which causes me to crash-land
back here in the 20th Century.

C...

Someone in this century
steals my timeship and launches it.

They go into the future, and once there
they make one critical mistake,

which causes a temporal explosion

that takes us all the way back to A.

An explosion in the 29th Century.
The cycle of causality is complete.

How do you know all this?

What evidence do you have
that your timeship causes the disaster?

I've spent 30 years answering
that very question.

Yes. When the explosion first happened,

my sensors recorded a variety
of chronometric data.

The pulses were highly chaotic.
I thought it was a warp core implosion.

But then I found debris from Voyager
and my theory seemed to be confirmed.

It was you. But then someone here
stole my timeship and it dawned on me.

If someone were to fly my timeship
into the future,

without recalibrating the temporal matrix,

that could cause the kind of explosion
that I witnessed.

- So it wasn't Voyager after all.
- No.

No. I reconstructed all the chronometric
data, as best I could remember it,

and it proved that I was right.

My ship causes the catastrophe.

Which raises the question,
who has your timeship?

Starling. Henry Starling, CEO,
Chronowerx Industries.

Philanthropist, entrepreneur,
outstanding citizen, huh!

Before I crashed in the year 1967,
I made an emergency beam-out.

But he found my ship before I did,
in a mountain range,

I've been following this corrupt little man
ever since, tracking his movements.

He's become too powerful.
I can't get close to him.

You can't accomplish anything
in this wretched century.

Nobody here listens.
Once, they put me in a mental institution,

and filled me with
primitive pharmaceuticals.

Maybe we can help you find
Starling and your ship.

- I wouldn't do that.
- Why not?

- Haven't you listened? A leads to B...
- Leads to C. Yes, we heard you.

- Why shouldn't we try to stop him?
- You're involved in the disaster.

That's why I found debris
from Voyager at the explosion.

You will be destroyed as well.

Now that we know
what's going to happen, maybe...

Hey, Captain. How are you doing?

I understand you've been
putting these signs up again.

No, not me. I... I would never do that.

- Walk over here.
- Stay where you are!

- Quasi-Cardassian totalitarian!
- We just want to talk about the signs.

- People have complained.
- Captain, tell him I'm not crazy.

Tell him I'm from the future.

They came from the future too.
They came in on a starship.

Al right.

Traitors!

We'll worry about him later.
Right now, we've got to find Starling.

We're not at the little green men stage
yet, but you'll be the first to know.

What I think we have is
an over-enthusiastic young lady.

She's exaggerating.
We don't have anything. Not yet.

Thank you, Professor.

You know what that little brat did?

She e-mailed a friend of hers at JPL,
who called his professor at Cal-Tech.

She's a security risk. Go to Griffith,
get the data, get rid of her.

- Yes, sir.
- Dunbar.

If it's true, if they're here, it's only
a matter of time before they find me.

There's no telling
what capabilities they'll have.

- You may have to use the weapon.
- I understand.

Perhaps we should find a more secluded
parking place. This is a stolen vehicle.

Nobody's around, Tuvok. We're fine.

A taxi cab would have been
less worrisome and more ethical.

We didn't steal. We borrowed a car.
We'll return it when we're done.

I was referring to the ethics
of time travel.

Taking a test drive won't
alter the course of the universe.

Over here.

These are radio-wave readouts.

It looks like radio telescope
transmission. It's pretty basic.

Lieutenant, you are being careless.
I will not lighten up on this matter.

I have tolerated your impulsive methods.
At times, they work to our advantage.

But discretion is also a virtue.

We must leave things
exactly as they were.

They found us, all right. The orbital
schematic matches Voyager's position.

They are tracking the warp emissions
from our engines.

They don't know about warp emissions.

They've configured their telescope
to scan for them.

Excuse me. "Do not enter.
Employees only." The sign on the door.

I'm sorry. I think we're lost.

We were on the tour and we took
a wrong turn at the Saturn exhibit.

Perhaps you could tell us
how to get back to the lobby.

Take a left at Mars,
right at Halley's Comet,

then straight ahead
past the soda machine.

This lab is pretty groovy.

- "Groovy..."
- What do you do here?

- We watch the skies.
- For what?

Signs of extraterrestrial life.
Nice meeting you.

- My name is Tom Paris, by the way.
- Rain Robinson.

- Your curves don't look so great.
- Excuse me?

- This is a Fourier spectral analysis?
- That's exactly what it is.

You might get better resolution
if you adjust your amplitude parameters.

- You're probably right.
- Or try using a theta-band filter.

You know a lot for someone
who can't find his way past Saturn.

- I majored in astrophysics.
- Where?

- Starfleet Academy.
- Never heard of it.

East coast school.

"Orgy Of The Walking Dead"?
That's a classic!

Did you see the sequel,
er..."Bride Of The Corpse"?

- You minored in B-movies?
- Something like that.

Pardon me, Tom. We should be going.
Our friends are waiting for us.

Yeah, right.

Gotta go.

Hey!

Er... I do the planetarium show
Tuesday nights.

You guys should come by, check it out.
Bring your friends.

"The best stars in Hollywood
are right above us."

Yeah, great.
But I think we're busy on Tuesday.

Thanks anyway.

No problem.

I downloaded her data into the tricorder
and disrupted her data storage device.

- I hope she doesn't get into trouble.
- It will look like a computer malfunction.

She was about to make
the biggest discovery in history.

- It could have changed her career.
- And ended ours.

I am curious.
What does it mean, "groovy"?

- Hey, you guys!
- Red Alert!

Hey!

Just wait a minute. What the hell
did you do to my computer?

- The hard drive is wiped.
- I don't have time to explain.

Who are you? And what is
that thing in your pants?

- I beg your pardon?
- What is it? A demagnetiser?

Get down!

- What?
- Do you have a car?

- Over there.
- We'll need to use it.

Operations officer's log, supplemental.

We've been looking for signs that
anyone else has detected Voyager.

I've also asked Neelix and Kes
to monitor all media broadcasts.

We've set up a computer algorithm
to search for keywords about Voyager.

- Anything so far?
- Not yet.

But we have come across some
very intriguing televised broadcasts.

Take a look at this. It's a form of
entertainment called a soap opera.

The exploration of human relationships
is fascinating.

I can't imagine watching the story
and not being a part of it.

You've been spoiled by the holodeck.

There's something to be said for
being swept away in the narrative.

Oh, I can't wait to see if Blaine's twin
brother is the father of Jessica's baby.

Good work. Keep me informed
and don't get too swept away.

Nobody will know the difference.

I'll know. How can I face my brother
knowing that our son is his son?

All you need to know, Jack,
is that I love you.

So far, so good.
We haven't set off any alarms.

Mr Starling has built himself
quite a corporate empire.

Looks like he's got wealth, celebrity,
and an ego to match.

I see you never learned to type.

Turn-of-the-millennium technology
wasn't a required course.

- This is like stone knives and bearskins.
- This isn't.

I'm detecting a force field.
I can't scan beyond this wall.

I don't see an access port
or control panel.

Maybe there's something
in his computer.

He's got a massive database but it's
protected by an encryption sequence.

I'm going to try interfacing my tricorder.

Looks like a series of pictographs.

They used symbols to represent
the computer's functions.

Let's see what Henry has been up to
all these years.

The transtators were disrupted
by that weapon.

Our communicators are useless.

So we can't call the... our friends.
What do we do now?

Take a right at the next light
cos you're taking me home.

And you're not keeping the van.

That is not possible.
Your life may be in danger.

I'll start screaming
until you tell me what's going on.

Who are you? What is that thing
in orbit? Why did that guy try to kill us?

- I told you. We're secret agents.
- I'm opening the hatch.

We saved your life.
Isn't it obvious we're on your side?

I'm standing up.
I'm taking a deep breath!

Don't scream! You've seen
some strange things but trust me.

We're not going to hurt you,
and I will explain everything.

That, or take your chances
with the guy who tried to vaporise you!

The UFO. What is it?

It's a Soviet spy satellite.
Part of a massive KGB operation.

- We're trying to stop it.
- Soviet?

The USSR broke up five years ago.
The KGB doesn't even exist any more.

- That's what they want you to think.
- We've said enough for now.

What about you, Agent Tuvok?
What's up with those ears?

Thought I didn't notice? I did.

What about your weapons?
What are they? Lasers?

That information is classified.

And as for my ears,
they are a family trait.

- He's very sensitive about them.
- Ugh, whatever.

We must find a way
to contact our... friends.

Starling's computer designs were
inspired by technology from the timeship.

He introduced
the very first isograted circuit in 1969,

two years after Braxton's ship
crash-landed.

And every few years there's been
a revolutionary advance in computers,

all from Chronowerx Industries,

all based on Starling's understanding
of 29th Century technology.

- Are you thinking what I'm thinking?
- I wish I weren't.

- That the 20th Century computer age...
- Shouldn't have happened.

But it did. And it's part of our history.
All because of that timeship.

Look at this. Gantry,
power conduits, telemetry console.

- This looks like a launching bay.
- The ship's going to be launched.

We've got to send this to Voyager
for analysis.

- Janeway to Voyager.
- Kim here.

Establish a com-link with my tricorder
and upload Starling's database.

We'll need a few minutes
to reconfigure to their binary system.

Acknowledged. Let's see if we can
find out where that launch pad is.

- You're getting the hang of this.
- I'm quick.

In a way, Braxton was right.

If we hadn't fought him
when he tried to destroy Voyager,

his ship wouldn't have crash-landed on
Earth and this wouldn't have happened.

Time travel. Since my first day
as a Starfleet captain

I swore I'd never get caught
in a godforsaken paradox.

The future is the past,
the past is the future.

Hold on. This looks promising.
Try "timeship security portal”.

Maybe it's linked
to a surveillance system.

An image of the launch bay
would give us a clue to its location.

I see you've made yourself at home.
Welcome to the 20th Century.

I know who you are.

You're from the future.
I knew you'd come back one day.

I detected your vessel in orbit, and
Mr Dunbar had a run-in with your friends.

- You're here to take the timeship.
- Mr Starling...

You're about to cause a terrible disaster
that will affect the 29th Century,

an explosion
that will cost billions of lives.

- We're here to stop you from doing that.
- What are you talking about?

If you travel to the future,
it will destroy Earth's solar system.

- How do you know this?
- We talked to the ship's previous owner.

If its temporal matrix
isn't precisely calibrated,

you'll trigger a temporal explosion.

That ship belongs to another century.
We have to take it back.

- What's that?
- Someone's trying to contact me.

Answer it.

- Janeway here.
- We've established a com-link.

- Ready to upload on your signal.
- Do it.

My database!
Stop or I'll kill your captain.

- Who is this?
- You've got five seconds.

- Break the link.
- Done.

- What's our transporter status?
- The pattern buffers are still off-line.

We can try an emergency transport.

The captain ordered us not to.
We'd be risking detection.

- Their lives are in danger.
- And if somebody sees a starship?

The captain put you in charge.
It is your decision.

Helm, get a fix
on Chakotay and the Captain.

B'Elanna, stand by transporters.
Get ready to beam them to the bridge.

Take us down.

You've taken over
3,000 gigabytes of information,

including my launch plan.

But that won't be a problem.

I'll make a few changes to my itinerary.
You're not going to stop me.

If you don't give us that ship,
we'll take it by force.

In case you haven't noticed,
I'm holding the gun.

Not for long.

I've got a starship that could vaporise
this building in the blink of an eye.

- And you along with it.
- If necessary.

Captain, you've got some cojones.

Kill them!

Damn!

Helm, keep us within transporter range.

Disable the force field
around that timeship.

Prepare to lock onto the timeship
and beam it to cargo bay 2.

Kim, you have an impeccable
sense of timing.

Not bad for your first
day in the big chair.

The force field's down.

Sir, the timeship!

They're trying to teleport the ship!

The matter stream is remodulating.
He's disrupting transport.

Yes!

He's using our transporter beam as a
downlink. He's accessing our computer.

Whenever I try to disable his downlink
he uses a new command override.

He's using 29th Century technology.
We may not be able to keep up with him.

Inertial dampers are off-line.
He's gotten into our propulsion systems.

- Disengage transporters.
- Destabilising matter stream.

Transporters off-line.

We've terminated the downlink,
but he got 20% of our main data files.

- Get us back into orbit and...
- Captain Janeway.

- Henry Starling here.
- This is Janeway.

U.S.S. Voyager, Intrepid class. Bigger
than I expected. And less advanced.

Says here your ship was launched
in the year 2371.

You're from the 24th Century?
And I thought you were from the 29th.

Looks like I have
the home-field advantage.

What's this? This is interesting.

Damage reports are coming in.
Power fluctuations in the impulse drive

and burned-out circuits
in the main computer core.

- Nothing we can't handle.
- Captain, I can't find the Doctor.

- Is his program off-line?
- No. His program is gone.

Where am I?

- Who are you?
- Welcome.

Captain, there's something on the
television I think you should see.

It's a current events program.

I asked Neelix to monitor
Earth broadcasts.

I'm transferring it to the main viewer.

Incredible footage
was caught an hour ago

by a man using his camcorder
to tape a barbecue.

The massive unidentifiable object

is not a meteorite,
weather balloon or satellite.

One aviation expert we've spoken to.

Has said it's not any kind of
U.S. aircraft currently in use.

We're awaiting investigation
by authorities

and we'll keep you updated
as news develops.