Enterprise's failure had everything to do with it being part of the production process that had been used to create all the modern Trek shows - including the increasingly involved and restrictive continuity - and represented the final bottoming out of a ten year-long downward curve in viewership.
I agree like 99% with you here. Enterprise failure was because it was the same exact people who had been making Trek for over a decade. They had no new ideas and decided recycling TNG and Voyager but in a new century would reverse ratings decline. I don't get why you single out the restrictive canon. Enterprise is notorious for totally ignoring previously established facts to tell the stories they wanted to tell. The stories just weren't very good. Do you actually think if I renamed Scott Bakula's character Kirk and called it a reboot the show would have been any better, or any more popular?
Squiggy said:Not directly. But it was held back because they had to write stories that made sense given the previous 24 seasons of television that told them what already happen.
A good writer wouldn't be restricted by writing a prequel that doesn't involve ANY established characters. They had literally the entire universe to play with still and all they could do was bring back things we'd already seen. Writers write stories set in the past allllllllll the time. it's not that restrictive. If you write a story in WWII you can't have the Germans win the Battle of Britain, but it doesn't mean it can't be exciting and interesting.......