I recently watched that episode and I don't think his voice has changed at all. I wasn't 100% sure though until I saw this meme!
To give you the 101: the actor of the clown went on to play Chuck in Better Call Saul. Chuck at one point went on a rant about the misdoings of his little brother, Jimmy. Jimmy once had an incident with a certain car's sunroof.
The meme really is a lot better if you've heard the rant before (major spoilers for Better Call Saul): youtube or piped
I am following what the directors put there for me. The dramatic music is going wild and nobody's saying a word. This is not normal. This is not as simple as you'd like it to be.
I seriously regret engaging with this thread, which is a first for this server. I'm done. Goodbye.
... Sorry, I guess?
We are both claiming the very same things to mean very different things. If there is no emotion in the scene, then why is it in the episode at all? If Janeway made the decision and everyone is A-okay with it, then why show their reaction at all? I think a dead stare conveys much more than a thousand words could.
Tuvix is inches from Toms face and Tom doesn't show a single shred of emotion.
Tom is sitting there with his mouth half open, not being able to say anything. I think the directing was clear there. For four entire minutes we follow as Janeway carries out the "death sentence". We start with Tuvix protesting it, then the silence is only broken by Janeway's orders, and the Doctor's short objection. Nobody is okay with this, and everybody knows this.
On top of that, Paris and Kim both voice their concerns repeatedly throughout multiple episodes.
Exactly. Which is why this scene is as heavy as it is. Do you really think Chakotay has no issues with what's happening? No. Everyone had already voiced their concerns. The decision has been made. There is nothing left to say.
I've seen Tuvix mentioned a lot here recently. Are we all just in denial about what went down there?
Necro, but I watched it recently and I thought she might die. I guess I didn't understand Beverly's absence, and generally didn't like her that much, so I thought this was it for her.
I generally work under the assumption that nobody who we have seen before has any chance of dying, but in that episode I felt she might get the no good deed goes unpunished treatment.
At first I couldn't believe they actually killed off Tasha. They went at it pretty dramatic, so it didn't take that long, but I needed some time to realize that this is actually happening for once.
Literally have Lwaxana paused on my screen right now and I still thought of Riker.
Judging by the ship's voice, it's definitely down for some shenanigans.