enterprise.blogdrive.com




enterprise.blogdrive.com

Fridays at 8/7c on UPN
Enterprise Cancelled!
(last episode May 13, 2005)
SaveEnterprise.com

About

This blog will chronicle my thoughts and opinions of each episode of Star Trek Enterprise. I will post a new entry as soon as I can after a show has aired. Also I will try to add at least one blog entry between episodes.

I am not a big Trekkie (or Trekker), but I have followed the franchise ever since I was a kid in the early 1970's and watched reruns of the original series.


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Friday, July 22, 2005
Sulu Remembers Scotty

Sulu Remembers Scotty

George Takei (Mr. Sulu) wrote about his good friend James Doohan (Scotty) who passed away recently. You can find it at George's web site: Tribute to Jimmy .


Posted at 01:24 pm by mydree
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Monday, July 18, 2005
Trek's problem? It wasn't enough like Galactica


Trek's problem? It wasn't enough like Galactica

July 14, 2005, www.signonsandiego.com

It's tantamount to heresy.

A panel of Star Trek experts and enthusiasts said Thursday at San Diego Comic-Con that the reason the now-canceled Enterprise series cast the future of the franchise in doubt was that it wasn't enough like the gritty new Battlestar Galactica.

"Galactica is made like a contemporary television show. It can measure up to any show on television right now," said Jeff Bond, author of The Music of Star Trek and executive editor of Eon Magazine.

Star Trek shows -- even the critically acclaimed Star Trek: Deep Space 9 -- never evolved much past the episodic, alien-of-the-week approach of the original 1960s series, panelists said.

And, unlike the original series, which reflected the social turmoil of 1960s America, later Trek shows became increasingly about spatial anomalies and other oddities, said Robert Meyer Burnett, director of Free Enterprise, a 1999 feature film about a pair of dysfunctional Trek fans.

"Battlestar Galactica is basically a naval show set in space. It's World War II," Burnett said. "Star Trek used to be about our world. Now, it's not 'real'."

"That's because the Cylons look like us now," quipped Daren Dochterman, producer of the special edition of Star Trek: The Motion Picture, referring to Galactica's switch from the chrome-plated robots of the 1970s show to humanoids such as the seductive No. 6.

"Daren, the Cylons don't look anything like you or I," Burnett retorted.

Episodes of the survival-epic Galactica have dealt with contemporary issues such as suicide bombers, civil rights, torture and the paranoia of a society fearing infiltration by those who wish to destroy it.

"We need to ask the tough questions because the press isn't," Burnett said. "And Galactica has attempted to do that."

Much of the audience of roughly 800 Trek fans shuffled uneasily at the criticism of their iconic show. A few booed at the praise for Galactica and applauded when Deep Space 9 was heralded.

One problem with Enterprise was its bait-and-switch marketing, promising to bridge the gap between today's Space Shuttle technology and the star-spanning era of Captain Kirk and Spock, said Bill Hunt, editor of digitalbits.com, which focuses on DVD technology. And Enterprise quickly dropped that premise.

Another was the lack of joy among the characters, Dochterman said.

"When Captain Kirk is sitting there in the command chair, leaning forward, he looks like he's enjoying himself," Dochterman said. Whereas Scott Bakula's Captain Archer always looked like he wanted to be somewhere else.

A meandering plot and lack of character development for the first three seasons didn't help, Bond said.

"It wasn't a show where I felt like I wanted to tune in and spend time with these people," he said.

And by the time Manny Coto revamped the show as executive producer during its fourth and final season, it was too late.

Panelists said it seemed unlikely Paramount would revive Trek within the next few years, though the network might be pressured by the growth of independent fan films distributed over the Internet.

"We need to let Star Trek die for now. We know it will come back, just like Spock," Dochterman said.


Posted at 12:16 pm by mydree
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Enterprise Relaunches

Enterprise Relaunches
(from StarTrek.com)

Star Trek: Enterprise will enter the world of syndication in the United States commencing the weekend of September 17, 2005.

With the majority of the country already committed — virtually every major media market — Enterprise will get a strong second wind in syndication following its run on UPN. (After June 12, there are no more scheduled broadcasts on the netlet.) In syndication, one episode per weekend will air, with individual affiliates determining the day and time, either Saturday and/or Sunday.

The first scheduled episode to air will be the pilot, "Broken Bow," with the remaining schedule to be confirmed. STARTREK.COM will publish a more complete episode list once we have it.


Posted at 12:12 pm by mydree
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Friday, May 20, 2005
Is the "Trek" Over?

Is the "Trek" Over?

By Joal Ryan, E Online Fri. May 13, 9:26 PM ET

Something approaching good, cold Vulcan logic tells the son of Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry that there's nothing to worry about with Friday's final voyage of Enterprise.

"Star Trek will never die," Eugene W. Roddenberry says. "It's a cash cow for Paramount."

At present, though, the cow is tapped out.

Star Trek: Enterprise signs off after posting record-low ratings for the series and the franchise. Heading into the finale, the four-year-old UPN series has averaged 2.7 million viewers, paltry even by the netlet's standards.

Elsewhere, the Trek universe doesn't look any brighter. There's no new series in the offing. There's no new movie in the can.

For the first time since the late-1970s, when Paramount Pictures turned a failed NBC series into the then-most expensive movie ever made, 1979's Star Trek: The Motion Picture, the wheels have fallen off Gene Roddenberry's "Wagon Train to the stars."

But even as obituaries are written, it's hard to find a Trekker, insider or outsider, who really, truly believes the journey is over.

"The fact that we're going two or three or four years without a television series, and the fact that the specifics of the next movie are not locked down, in no way means that Star Trek as a franchise is over," Rick Berman said in a telephone press conference last month.

Berman is executive producer of Enterprise, a credit he's had on every Trek series since The Next Generation.

To the current keeper of the franchise flame, Star Trek isn't dead or dying--it's tired.

For 18 years, Paramount cranked out new Trek adventures, from Next Generation to Enterprise, with two other shows (Deep Space Nine and Voyager) and six big-screen movies in between. In some TV markets, Berman said, Enterprise competed against the reruns of sister series past.

"The audience began to have a little bit of overkill with Star Trek," Berman said.

Fans like Candice McCallie, a 25-year-old Texan who worked on a grassroots campaign to spare Enterprise, says it's the studio powers that be who are tired of Trek, and not the audience.

"I think Paramount has grossly mistreated the franchise," says McCallie, spokeswoman of the SaveEnterprise effort.

The videogame maker Activision made a similar claim in a 2003 lawsuit. It charged that Viacom, Paramount's corporate parent, had allowed the Trek franchise to "decay." The dispute, which resulted in a countersuit and focused on licensing, not artistic, issues, was settled in March. The terms were undisclosed

Activision might have let up, but the SaveEnterprise faithful haven't.

"Star Trek is going to live on," McCallie says. "There's no doubt about that."

This past spring, SaveEnterprise raised a remarkable $3 million and secured a Canadian production company in the hopes of convincing Paramount to keep Enterprise alive.

The $3 million was returned to donors in April when Paramount said it wasn't interesting in the group's creative financing plans. But the group, reformed as TrekUnited (www.trekunited.com), remains committed to bringing the show back to life--somehow, some way.

Says McCallie: "Things in Hollywood can change in a minute."

On Friday night, McCallie plans to be in Los Angeles at an Enterprise viewing party hosted in part by Trek United and the Roddenberry family.

If there's anything McCallie's not optimistic about, it's the final episode. She's heard Enterprise star Jolene Blalock's comment to the Toronto Star about the finale being "appalling."

Not a fan of the writing of Berman and Brannon Braga, who penned the last episode, McCallie says she tends to believe Blalock.

"Maybe I'll be surprised," McCallie says.

Braga, fellow Enterprise executive producer and longtime Trek scribe, acknowledged that the final episode, "These Are the Voyages...," made some crew members "slightly uncomfortable." In the same telephone press conference as Berman, Braga explained that there was grumbling because it's a "different kind of episode"--set six years in the series' future and featuring appearances by Next Generation stars Jonathan Frakes, as Commander Riker, and Marina Sirtis, as Counselor Troi.

"Under normal circumstances, most people probably would have thought this was a very cool episode because it has a great concept driving it," Braga said. "But when it's the final episode of a series, emotions are running very high."

Rumors that the final episode had Riker revealing that Enterprise's run was nothing more than a vision of the holodeck were unfounded. The spoiler warning here is that there is no spoiler warning--no Pam-finds-Bobby-in-the-shower moment.

And so Enterprise dies with arguable dignity.

Eugene W. Roddenberry, who had no involvement with the series, either as a regular viewer or creative force, says he'll see out the show at Friday night's party to support fans and crew.

Now at work on a documentary about his father, Trek Nation (www.treknationdoc.com), the younger Roddenberry is unfazed about an ending he doesn't view as the end.

Says Roddenberry of Enterprise: "Perhaps one day, I'll get the box sets."


Posted at 04:47 pm by mydree
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Tuesday, May 17, 2005
These Are the Voyages . . . (episode 22)

I have mixed feelings about this episode, the last one ever in the Star Trek Enterprise series. Six years in the future, the Enterprise is back on Earth to be decommissioned and to celebrate a coalition of planets that Earth is about to join. It’s a precursor to the Federation of Planets in later Star Trek series.

I liked the story about the Enterprise crew helping their old friend Shran (the Andorian). Shran’s daughter has been kidnapped and our heros help him get her back. Shran’s an interesting character. He’s not the nicest of friends but somehow he’s friends with the Enterprise crew.

The nostalgia in this episode I felt was a bit forced. Riker was using the holodeck in the Next Gen Enterprise to research Archer and the first Enterprise’s last mission. He was able to put himself in the role of the ship’s cook and an average crewman here and there.

All in all, not a bad final episode for Enterprise


Posted at 06:42 pm by mydree
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Terra Prime (episode 21)

A well done conclusion to an interesting story that started last week in Demons.

Terra Prime has a “laser” on their secret Martian base (the Alan Parson’s Project). They are threatening to blow up cities and Starfleet headquarters if all aliens don’t leave Earth. Archer leads a crack commando unit to neutralize the Terra Prime threat.

As you might have guessed, the half-human half-vulcan baby was made from DNA from Trip and T’Pol. It seems that they got their hands on the DNA through Terra Prime spies on Enterprise.

You may have seen this cliche coming too: the self-hating bad guy. This is where the villain hates something despite being that which he hates. Paxton, the leader of Terra Prime, has had alien DNA grafted inside of him to treat a genetic disease. I should have seen it coming but I didn’t.


Posted at 06:20 pm by mydree
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Wednesday, May 11, 2005
Series Final Friday & Podcast

The final two hours of Star Trek Enterprise air this Friday starting at 8:00 pm ET. I’m sure it being Friday the thirteenth has nothing to do with the end of the series. The first hour continues the story that started last week and the second hour looks to be laden with Star Trek nostalgia.

Audio Commentary Podcast, iPod not required
The writers of Terra Prime will post their comments about the final episodes of the Enterprise series. There are also commentaries available for the In A Mirror, Darkly episodes as well. They recommend you tape or Tivo the shows and then follow along with their commentary (sounds like commentaries on DVDs).

If you have a Podcast application here’s the URL:

http://www.startrek.com/custom/headlines/podcast.xml

I like and use iPodder. Versions of it are available for Mac, Windows and Linux. (It’s available free of charge.)

Otherwise visit the web page for more information: Enterprise Commentaries. You can listen online with Quick Time, Windows Media Player or MP3 player.

Terra Prime UPN Fri. May 13, 8:00 pm ET
A human isolationist leader threatens to destroy Starfleet Command unless all aliens leave Earth immediately. (Why don’t they just build a wall all around Earth to keep out the aliens?)

In the first steps towards the foundation of the Federation, Captain Archer and the crew must stop Paxton (RoboCop’s Peter Weller), a well-armed, radical human isolationist leader, who is threatening to destroy Starfleet Command unless all aliens leave Earth immediately.

These Are the Voyages . . . UPN Fri. May 13, 9:00 pm ET
Six years in the future, an emotional Captain Archer and the crew return to Earth to face the decommission of Enterprise and signing of the Federation charter, ratifying the newly-formed alliance of planets they helped forge, but first the officers must mount a daring, dangerous rescue to save Andorian Commander Shran's kidnapped daughter. "Star Trek: The Next Generation's" Jonathan Frakes and Marina Sirtis guest star.


Posted at 12:54 pm by mydree
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Monday, May 09, 2005
Demons (episode 20)

I liked this episode; it looks like the series is going to end with some good stories.

The Enterprise crew is back on Earth to witness the founding of a coalition of planets. The isolationist and xenophobic1 Terra Prime, a secret underground organization, wants to stop the coalition from forming. Archer asks Reed to contact his old spy masters for information to help stop Terra Prime. In the midst of all of this is the first half-Vulcan half-Human baby.

The baby’s parents are T’Pol and Trip! T’Pol swears that she was never pregnant. Leave it to Star Trek to take the fun out of babies. “And just remember, the best thing about kids... is making them!” Thorton Melon (Rodney Dangerfield’s character in Back to School).

Stating the Obvious
It seems that in the future racism has been overcome but xenophobia1 is a problem. Terra Prime’s members, black and white, hate aliens. A white woman having a romantic relationship with a black man doesn’t raise an eyebrow with anyone in Terra Prime yet a half-Vulcan half-Human infant is an “abomination.” The moral of the story: you can be technologically advanced but still consumed with hatred.

1. xenophobe (from Meriam Webster)
one unduly fearful of what is foreign and especially of people of foreign origin


Posted at 12:18 pm by mydree
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