^ Yeah, studio politics played a big role as well. UPN was a lousy network. Perhaps it was inevitable that ENT, or any Trek show, would have suffered no matter the ratings or concept.
Well, there's a pitfall in that, as the Star Wars prequels kinda sucked for the most part!IENTERPRISE was an opportunity to correct that. I love the show, myself, but I'm also intrigued by the possibilities that could've existed. A STAR TREK as radically different from the rest as STAR WARS: The Phantom Menace was from A New Hope ...
It would've gotten gutted after UPN and the WB merged to make CW.
You joke, but Paramount was actually pushing a "band of the week" idea for Enterprise...Rick Berman put his foot down on that, which says everything there is to say on how shitty an idea this was.Now there's something to think about.
A CW influenced Star Trek Enterprise
Maybe younger cast members and pop songs to close out episodes
I actually would like to see the relaunch books brought to thr screen. (The ones that take place during/after TATV) But it would only work for me with the original cast. So that will never happen....although, I'd think that Anthony Montgomery may go for it, as the books gave him more to do!
Now there's something to think about.
A CW influenced Star Trek Enterprise
Maybe younger cast members and pop songs to close out episodes
I really didn't care for Archer in season one for this reason. He really came off as a petulant child and his childlike grudge against T'Pol for existing wore thin. Eventually, I sought out Quantum Leap and saw what SB was capable of, and it's a damn shame he got saddled with such a shifty character.To the original question, while it does suck that Enterprise got canceled just when it was gelling, I can't say we were robbed. The series should've been better from jump. I mean the first couple seasons had some really boring episodes and the character-work, even during the much better later seasons, wasn't all that great. I like Scott Bakula but his Archer always came off as constipated. I didn't find him an inspiring leader so all the times they said he was great or important it felt more like telling than showing.
We certainly needed his passion, for sure.I just wish Manny Coto had been there from Season 1, heck during the development of the show's Bible. I think we would have gotten a much better show that might have made it season 7.
I'm reminded of a review by a poster named @Samuel T. Cogley , where he mentioned this. He made mention of how a few other shows had ended their seasons in 2003 (the end of ENT's second season) and how their fandoms were talking and speculation on the effects of such plots. As one example, on Smallville--one of our direct competitors--Clark Kent's physiology was somehow responsible for his adoptive mother's miscarriage. Shows like Alias of course had their own big game changers.Outside of that, Enterprise had the misfortune of premiering during a golden age of television drama and it looked stodgy beside shows like Alias, 24, Battlestar Galactica, and even some of failed sci-fi shows like Threshold and Invasion.
At the time it would not have worked to have a more "serious" show there. It's only recently that the CW has "matured". I've seen all seasons of The 100 and I quite enjoy it. It's much darker than you might expect from a channel skewed to a younger audience.Though seriously, CW is doing well with genre programming and The 100 (which I haven't watched) seems to be doing well.
I never really liked Archer, although he became more tolerable as the seasons progressed. In fact I've never quite cared for most of the Trek captains, with the exception of Kirk and Sisko.I really didn't care for Archer in season one for this reason. He really came off as a petulant child and his childlike grudge against T'Pol for existing wore thin. Eventually, I sought out Quantum Leap and saw what SB was capable of, and it's a damn shame he got saddled with such a shifty character.
The reason they did what they did in season four is that finally a great Trek fan, Manny Coto, was in charge and he could do more or less what he wanted. And he probably saw the writing on the wall and decided to pack the season with all that prequellian stuff because it was now or never. Ideally yes, it would have been better to space the stories out over the show's run, but given how Bermaga ran things, and what the studio mandated, that was, alas, never in the cards.I think I get what you're saying about Season 4, but I just really liked that season because the show was finally delivering on its promise of being a prequel to the original series. That being said, if they had done a better job of spacing out those homages and linkages throughout the shows run instead of packing them all in during the final season in a desperate attempt to regain viewers or to stanch the bleeding then maybe it would have felt more organic to Enterprise. But be that as it may I enjoyed Season 4 a lot more because of those linkages.
I know, but it's still irritating.Just gotta remember, though: Starfleet isn't 'the military' It's Starfleet.
@Kevin Thomas Riley , I highly recommend watch Bakula in any non-Enterprise role. He got a shit deal with this show.
In the ten years since we were regular posters here together, I've actually served in the American Navy. For all my problems with the clusterfuck that our military leadership has, there's no way that a guy who was such an open bigot and so reckless to ignore good advice and put his crew in needless danger as Archer did would be relieved of command in quick fashion....assuming he'd manage to keep a career in the military that long. I had the misfortune of having leadership that was at odds with each other, and it's not fun, least of all when people would override others in front of junior enlisted.
Military knowledge has made the early seasons of this show pretty difficult to watch.
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